His incompetence is inherent in his strategy.

1 posts · 2006-08-17 17:57:00 to 2006-08-17 17:57:00

#36300027971 08/17/2006 17:57 His incompetence is inherent in his strategy.

PART TWO of Zippy's "The Evil of the Matrix" rants. Here is part one. http://forums.station.sony.com/mxo/..._id=10400152926

All redpills are susceptible to human nature. It is a fundamental flaw in their brains. Everyone falls to greediness, lust, etc.

The Machines are cold, heartless, calculating. The choice to allow Redpills into their higher ranks will ultimately be their downfall, for one *cough* could supposedly exploit Human Nature to get straight through the ranks to the Source.

If the Architect had any competent strategy within him, he would have detected this inherent flaw in this system. His failure to do so implies of his incompetence.

A smart person remarked to me, "To defeat the Oracle, you would need to operate outside of her field - Time and Choice. To even plan to do this would ultimately result in failure."

 But then again...

"The only way to destroy something that exists in a world you cannot control, is to either control that world, or destroy it."

Despite Smith's sadistic nature, I believe he was actually on to something. If it wasn't for Human Nature, he might have succeeded.

The Architect's biggest failure - out of the many, many failures (does this guy EVER succeed at anything?) -  is his incapability to Control his own Creation. Doesn't this mean that he's failed to comply with his own programming? Should he not be deleted?

This, of course, brings us back....to Her....