I’ve been thinking a lot about Tolkien.

It is often remarked that a central thesis of his books is that evil provides the means of its own defeat. Sauron crafted the One Ring that killed him, Shelob impaled herself of Sam’s blade, Smaug exposed his belly to Bilbo and let him see the weak point.

I think it is less often commented on that the corollary to that is that good must still act to use those weaknesses. The Ring did not cast itself into the fires of Mt Doom but was brought by the Hobbits. Shelob was only able to impale herself because Sam kept his arm strong and held it out. The black arrow still needed to be shot into Smaug’s belly.

And a final point that I don’t see often enough is that Tolkien clearly believes good only loses if it surrenders to hopelessness. Denethor’s suicide driven by fear would have broken Minas Tirith if not for the Fellowship, Frodo would have fallen to despair if Sam had not been there to carry him, if Bilbo had seen the shot as hopeless then he never could have warned of the weak spot.

But because in those cases someone provided hope, good triumphed.

I don’t know. I’ve just been thinking about that a lot lately for some reason.

@estrogenandspite At the risk of summoning a lot of haters haha you might even say "That's how we're gonna win: not fighting what we hate, but saving what we love.." This is evident in Sam especially but really in every hobbit-as-hero.
@estrogenandspite @gwcoffey rose tico was a hobbit
@andrea_smandrea @estrogenandspite Yes! Rose Tico was the best thing to happen to Star Wars since Empire and the way the did her wrong was the worst part of that terrible third sequel movie.
@gwcoffey @estrogenandspite my big problem was they killed ben solo!

@gwcoffey @estrogenandspite

I love this Geoff, and I am seeing it for the first time the day Iranians line up around their power plants and on their bridges in the faint hope that the U.S. will back off the war crime threats.