“You see us as machines.
But if you really want to understand how we work,
you’re going to have to dig a little deeper.”
— Kai-125
Have you ever stopped to think whether humans, you specifically, have complete self-determination? Or are we just pre-programmed to follow precisely how we were prenatally built, constructed by our parents, and their parents, and all of our prior biogenetics from our ancestral genealogy? Are we not all byproducts of our past generations? Why do all of us have certain traits and not others? Why do we have particular preferences and tendencies for some life-experiences and less so or none for others?
Does that not suggest a prearranged blueprint handed down to you from many who came before you? Did you have a choice of various blueprints before birth? Of course not. Whether we like it or not we get the hand dealt to us.
Perhaps I should’ve entitled this post Humans or Machines. Maybe I’ll change that later after further thought and introspection.

Lately I find myself engrossed in a new military sci-fi series on Paramount+ called Halo. I was drawn-in right from the first episode, “Contact,” and haven’t been able to stop watching ever since. Why do I find the series fascinating, compelling, and profoundly aligned with real life, this non-fictional life we live right now?
It asks the same existential questions I asked above about each of us, about human nature, and whether or not humans are capable of saving ourselves… from ourselves. The series also asks Can we unite as humans, as one species, and save ourselves from other lethally aggressive alien species or cosmic forces?
Master Chief-117:βWhat I can see on the ground may not reflect the entirety of the situation.
halo episode 1 “contact,” season one
Kwan Ha:βWhat does that mean?
Master Chief-117:βSometimes, others know things I do not.
Kwan Ha:βIt ever occur to you that it might work the other way around?
Master Chief-117:βThen you question everything?
Kwan Ha:βAnd someone told you that’s bad? [pause] (somewhat resigned, she exhales, answering her own question) …Of course they did.
Watching this first episode and this particular scene really struck a chord with me. It reminded me of how so many people both around me today and those from my past, live or have lived their lives according to how others think of them or want from them. It could be parents, family, bosses, friends, or even a theoretical ideology or religious belief system, a political leader(?) that dictates how lives will be lived. Is that not a machine rather than a free human?
Dr. Catherine Halsey, Chief Scientist of the UNSC and founder of the Spartan-II Project begun decades earlier the next improved evolutionary step beyond antiquated human military soldiering. Otherwise, the human race was not going to win the war against a far superior alien enemy. Therefore, in order for her Spartan project to be a guaranteed success against a winning enemy—known as the Covenant—with better weapons and soldiers than any humans, Halsey had to commit several immoral, deceptive, and unethical acts upon human children and their families in order to rescue all of humanity and its fragile, hopeless future. This was how Halsey justified her heinous actions:βsacrificing a few for the greater good of all.
Putting further twists and conflicted reasoning into these existential dilemmas is Captain Jacob Keyes, ex-husband of Dr. Halsey and the father of their one daughter, Dr. Miranda Keyes, Deputy UNSC Scientist under Halsey, her mother. Talk about familial tensions wound super tight, all stirred into the uncertain future of humanity, it doesn’t get more thick and riveting than that! For example, when Miranda discovers that the UNSC will execute the teenage rebel Kwan, she confronts her father:
Dr. Miranda Keyes:β[referring to Kwan] We’re murdering a teenage girl. And I’m complicit.
halo episode 1 “contact,” season one
Capt. Jacob Keyes:βWe’re in a war, Miranda. The future of humanity…
Dr. Miranda Keyes:βWhat’s the point in saving humanity if we’re going to give up our own?
Capt. Jacob Keyes:βSometimes you have to make hard choices to get good results.
Dr. Miranda Keyes:βNow who’s sounding like Halsey?
As I got into episode two, three, and four, I couldn’t help but compare the Spartan-II soldiers (Silver Team) to specific groups of actual humans and ideologies the United States possess today. Although these fictional badass, undefeated soldiers had superhuman characteristics along with unwavering resilience for mission success—“Failure is not an option” mantra—even if it means death to achieve it, first and foremost they obey every order given to them from their superiors to the tee and without question. Sound familiar? Dr. Halsey also implanted into Spartans an augmentation pellet in their lower spinal cord at a pubescent age. The device increased their physical mass and height to approximately 7-feet by adult age giving them highly advanced exoskeleton physiques required to slaughter and defeat Covenant aliens.
“You have been called upon to serve. You will be trained – and you will become the best [I] can make of you. You will be the protectors of Earth and all her colonies.”
— dr. catherine halsey, to the spartan-II recruits
For me, Halsey reminds me of all our history’s past authoritarian, self-consumed megalomaniacs of the world. Remind you of one we have today in the United States? In other words, the end always justifies the means, even if it is unconstitutional and blatantly illegal. Getting the picture?
Discussing the work of Dr. Halsey and her Spartan-II’s and Halsey’s obsessive complete control over their ultimate purpose to first serve her, then second to serve humans:
Dr. Miranda Keyes:βDr. Halsey designed everything to her specifications. When her creations behave in unexpected ways, she get’s uncomfortable.
Kai-125:βWell, what does it mean to behave in unexpected ways?
Dr. Miranda Keyes:βLike a human I suppose.Dr. Miranda Keyes:βTo Dr. Halsey, human beings are messy, irrational, chaotic. They make decisions based on emotion, passion. Halsey is different. She sees the world as a set of data to be optimized, regardless of the short-term pain or sacrifice. Next to this level of dedication, the rest of us ultimately fall short. And when people let her down, Dr. Halsey has a way of cutting them out of her life.
halo episode 4 “homecoming,” season one
Both Master Chief-117 (John) and Kai-125 have cut out their augmentation pellets in order to know and understand better who they are as well as to better decipher who Dr. Halsey is to them and whether she truly is their “protector” and confidant. These are the first signs of Spartans questioning their superior’s motives. To this point, Miranda says to Kai-125:
Dr. Miranda Keyes:βKai, your act of rebellion could just be a glitch. But if I know Dr. Halsey, she doesn’t tolerate glitches.
halo episode 4 “homecoming,” season one

Or in our real time conditions today in America, with a rising cult-mentality and blind, unflinching loyalty to the cult leader, if a soldier steps out of line or questions, or criticizes the supreme leader, that dissident or dissidents are quickly attacked, cut out of his/her life and future plans. They are “fired,” replaced for more obedient more loyal subjects/soldiers. Why are so many (poorly?) evolved humans susceptible to this sort of brainwashing? Dr. Halsey gives a few possible answers below. When Master Chief-117 confronts Halsey about lying to him and all Spartans, he demands why:
Dr. Catherine Halsey:βNothing I say to you will make any sense until the benefits are manifest. I just have to accept that you will hate me. I was planning the future.
halo episode 6 “Solace,” season one
Master Chief-117:βWhose future? Not mine.
Dr. Catherine Halsey:βNor mine. The future of our species. Natural evolution is failing us. Human beings are still hardwired for conflict and selfishness, John. I knew years ago that if we were going to survive, we needed a force. A force that would intervene, that could prevent conflict before it started. So, I created the Spartans, a group who would protect us from ourselves.
“Protect us from ourselves.” And humans “are still hardwired for conflict and selfishness.” Well, that is certainly true about the human race over its entire existence on Earth. Dr. Halsey is extremely intelligent and accurately observant regarding basic human nature. This cannot in the least, however, be said about America’s current cult leader and apparent 2024 Republican candidate for presidential re-election. This is one glaring difference between the Halo character Halsey and the real-time Orange Orangutan.
Nevertheless, here is another spot-on observation by Dr. Halsey based on her experience regarding human nature and our species’ progress by the 26th-century:
Dr. Catherine Halsey:βWe are on a journey. We are born, we live, and we die according to the rules of blind and unguided evolution. As a result, our species is simply not equipped to survive what comes next. It is time for us to take control of our evolution, to push past our narrow ignorance and venture out into the wide unknown, where we will discover our true potential. I suspect the Halo will provide the key.
Much has been lost, and there will surely be more sacrifices to come. But I believe our species will soon spread its wings and soar to new heights, that we will rewrite what it means to be human. That we will achieve transcendence.
halo episode 9 “transcendence,” season one
But will we? Are we really capable of Renaissance and Enlightenment 2.0, the next huge step in human evolution over the next 1 to 5 to 10-years? Is the United States capable despite the growing deterioration and dismantling of our democratic institutions and our pillars of higher education-expertise these last 10-20 years? How is it possible to insure a Golden Age will arrive when so many Americans or humans choose to be simple “Spartans,” or automatons, for the sake of a tyrannical leader and his or her ideology of hate, violence, prejudices, and racism? I wonder.
Aside from our bleak reality in the U.S. today, I am looking forward to Season 2 of Halo streaming on Paramount+ this February 8th. If it is anything as enjoyable as Season 1, then it will provide plenty of further existential questions, dilemmas, and realizations about our human species and whether or not we truly are capable of “saving ourselves from ourselves” or if we are merely machines destined for extinction. One thing is certain, however. There is no supreme deity or one human that is going to do it for us or rescue us. It is in our collective hands and our hands alone to do it together.
Bring on Season 2. Can’t wait.
Live Well – Love Much – Laugh Often – Learn Always

The Professorβs Convatorium Β© 2023 by Professor Taboo is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0



Oi!!! Aren’t you supposed to say spoiler alert or something?
I see from a quick Google search this is based on the video game.
I know on the Big Bang Theory the guys play this on Wednesday night so now I have a little context.
It isn’t on Netflix.
Maybe it streams on another platform?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Haha! π Oi! Very tiny miniscule “spoiler alert.” π I didn’t really reveal all that much, especially how Season 1 ends, etc. So you can still thoroughly enjoy it, then Season 2 after. You’re fine Arky.
Here ya go Doug, all the other streaming platforms for Halo:
• YouTube
• Hulu
• fuboTV
• Sling TV
• The Roku Channel
• Amazon Prime
• YouTube TV
• Vudu
• Google Play Movies & TV
• Apple TV
• Paramount+
That should just about cover your choices Doug so chop chop son! Get to it! WATCH IT! π
LikeLike
Amazon I have…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well, when I checked it out on my Amazon Prime, they assist you in subscribing to Paramount+. π Typical sales & marketing tricks to get into your wallet. π€·ββοΈ
LikeLike
Well, I cannot check on my TV at the moment. We were relieved of it at around 4am last Thursday.
We will rectify the situation ASAP.
LikeLike
HOLY F*CK! π‘ As in burglarized? Did they take other items too?
LikeLike
Do you have my email?
Not sure I want to plaster this post with the details
Spreading bad news isn’t such a good thing.
LikeLike
I do. Shooting you an email shortly…
LikeLike
Details not necessarily needed or required, but your comment does arouse curiosity!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Let me say it was not very pleasant.
LikeLike
Holy SHIT Ark!!! Wow, just astonishing. Very VERY happy all of you are okay, shaken up, but okay and recovering. My heart goes out to you and your family, and the dogs. ππ’
LikeLike
Email me
LikeLike
Halo’s not bad. Watched it last year and enjoyed it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I was pleasantly surprised I enjoyed it so much John, knowing that it was based on the video game. But come to find out, Directors and Producers wanted the TV series to be more stand alone, varied from the game, which I thought was perfection! π
You watching Season 2?
LikeLiked by 1 person
I didn’t know it was out! Cool. I haven’t seen it pop up on any feed, so it might take a while before being released down here.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, Season 2 streams February 8th here in the States. π
LikeLike
I’m about ready to watch this. You’ve convinced me.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I think you’ll like it Jeff! And I am a big Pablo Schreiber fan. He is superb in this series. π
LikeLiked by 1 person
PHEW!! This was most definitely a looooong one! But I am curious about something. You provided several “quotes” by the folks in the movie … how did you do that? Is there a script floating around somewhere on the internet? Do you have a photographic memory? Did you play the scene again and again, furiously writing what was said?
Outside of that (and the length!), it was an interesting post — along with the “comparisons.” π
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hehehe. π€ Oooh, come on Nan. It wasn’t THAT long and wordy! π
Yes, there are a few websites that have the Halo TV series transcript. That’s where I found them, or at least the bits/scenes I wanted for this post and the comparisons to real-life here in the United States and its current political climate.
You should give the TV series a whirl. You MIGHT just be surprised, at least from the angle of my comparisons to the modern MAGA and GOP.
LikeLike
I don’t subscribe to Paramount+ and at this point in time prefer not to … so I’ll take your word for it. Besides, although I love (certain) Sci-Fi movies, I don’t think this is one I would savor overall. Thus, I will read, absorb, and enjoy your comparisons to the crap that’s taking place in the current political scene. π
LikeLiked by 1 person
Maybe at some point the series will be picked up by another platform you are subscribed. Btw, checkout the various platforms I listed for Ark up above. Perhaps one of them are yours. π
LikeLike
You have to pay to watch it on Amazon. A Google search doesn’t indicate it being available on the sources you listed.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hmmm, interesting. My Google search did list all those platforms. Puzzling. As I just told Ark, it’s all usually sales & marketing tricks to get into your wallet and bank account.
LikeLike
Speaking of getting into your wallet … what’s frustrating is even when you PAY for a particular platform so you can watch certain movies, you STILL have to put up with commercials!!! So yes, it’s all about $$$$$!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh dear Satan & his/her minions Nan! Couldn’t share your frustration any more intensely as you on this American capitalism model! π‘ I’ve often ranted that we American consumers are now paying for EVERYTHING to live, and our basic needs cost too much already! Perfect example? Air! We now pay for even the air we breath!
Just open a bag of chips. The bag is only and always half full! The rest is air! π€¬ And as our climate continues to change, for the worse, soon the middle- and lower-classes of the U.S. will barely be able to afford to PAY for clean air to breath. Mark my words. π€¦ββοΈ
Yes, anytime I/we MUST endure commercials, I immediately mute them and/or change the channel to a music channel, for approx. 1-1.5 mins, then change it back. I absolutely REFUSE to “serve” corporate America or be insulted by corporate America. Never!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sorry, PT, but I could only read a few paragraphs into your post before I got,,, how to describe the feeling… bored with the concept all aliens would be warmongers wanting to beat Earth at its favourite human pastime –war.
I have been a Science Fiction fan most of my life since I wandered into the adult section of the library and left the building with a number of SF titles. But in all those intervening years, my least favourite theme was that aliens have to be warlike. Not true. Once again we are projecting our all-too-human negative tendencies onto who knows what kind of other beings might be in this universe — if any.
In my mind, no species would be able to reach interstellar space travel without being able to work as one to achieve such a state. Do you (or anyone else really think if we humans ever cross to other stars we will do it as Americans, Russians, and Iranians, etc.? In our own planetary system this might happen, but to be able to travel between stars I cannot see us succeeding while retaining our warlike approach to existence. If we take war into space we will have to be the stupidest species to ever exist!
Rant over. Sort of.
Are we the product of our ancestors, our autority figures, our upbringing? Some of us probably are, but predestination? Exactly who would be designing that destiny? I may not be unique in this world, though I often feel like I am out of step with my fellow humans, but the thing is, I do not want to be in step with most of you. Humans are sorry excuses for supposedly intelligent beings. We believe the unbelievable, we act against our own best interests, and we care too much about ourselves individually to be able to be successful at saving our own planet, the only home we have! Who the hell would predestine us to such a ridiculous life?
I take my cues from evolution, it is completely haphazard. It leads us to more failures than successes. If we were predestined, why would we be wasting time on things that are not going to work? We wouldn’t. Yet Nature tries all kinds of things that in retrospect never had a chance of working. (Nature not being a thinking planning entity, but rather just a word to describe what we see as the course of life.) How many successes has evolution really produced? Cockroaches, crocodiles, and some fish and other creatures of the sea. The rest of us are living on borrowed time — unless we come to our senses and work together with each other and with every other species living on Earth. And this we will never do if life goes as it is right now. For example, I can only use myself, for I am the only living being I know well enough about to be able to have an intelligent conversation.
Whatever my ancestors, especially at least one of my parents, were like, I am nothing like them. Whatever my authority figures were like, I am nothing like them either. Whatever my society is like, I have little use for it. I do as I please, live as I please, believe what I please, and act as I please. I look at this world as only I can see it, and I live by my own rules. If anyone or anything designed me to live the life I have led, they certainly did an amazing job. Not because I am special in any way, but because I live what John Lennon asked the world to do in his song Imagine. And I am not a figment of anyone’s imagination. Especially my own.
My apologies for my reactions, but I have had discussions like this a number of times in my life, and I guess your question was just one too many. I’m really not angry with you, though it might sound like it, but I am giving you my answer to the thought that the future history of the Cosmos is already planned. Because if one thing is predestined, then all things are predestined — and if one thing is not predestined, then nothing is predestined. ‘Nuff said!
LikeLiked by 1 person
So rawgod… tell us how you REALLY feel please. π
…
No, I’ll write up a reply here shortly. π
LikeLike
You caught me on a day when things were not going good, and I needed to vent. π
But I did mean everything I said. This is how I live my life. π
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s all good my friend. I actually DO appreciate, very much, raw (blunt?) honesty. I find it refreshing these days. Besides, I much rather prefer your candor than nauseating sugar-coated ‘tell me what I wanna hear‘ stuff. π
LikeLike
As I said, indirectly, I reprogrammed myself, if I was ever programmed at all. But that still directs me to believe in free will, because if I can overcome my programming, so can everyone else.
I was brought up to be a victim, first of my male parent, and then of every bully in the world. They fought over who got to bully me in school. Nobody bullies me anymore, and I don’t use my fists to stop them! And along the way I learned who I really am, deep down inside, where few people are willing to look.
You in your own way are a lot like me, or I, like you, however you want to say that. We do what we want, but in very nice ways.
LikeLiked by 1 person
π
LikeLike
rawgod, it sounds as if you have a serious beef (gripe) with writers Kyle Killen and Steven Kane. And perhaps also executive producers Stephen Spielberg, Kiki Wolfkill, Frank O’Connor, Bonnie Ross, Justin Falvey, Darryl Frank, Otto Bathurst, Tobie Leslie, and Scott Pennington. π
I knew you were not angry at me—I didn’t write or produce the TV series. I merely enjoy it as a viewer and a big fan of thought-provoking existential dilemmas and questions the series tackles. They are questions very worthy of humans today asking and giving deserved, earnest thought. THAT’S what I love about Halo, the TV series. π
Thank you kindly for sharing your thoughts and opinions on the storyline, vehement as they are. You certainly present other questions and angles most of the audience would NEVER consider, especially since Halo’s fanbase averages 17–26 yrs old.
LikeLike
I didn’t read enough to learn about Halo. I’m glad you are enjoying it. I don’t do streaming services, so unless it comes to real TV sometime I’ll never see it.
But most of my life I have run into people who tell me everything is predetermined, that we cannot act in any way but as we are programmed to act. So I want to meet the whatever that preprogrammed me. It must have been high on LSD, stoned on psyloybin, and drunk on tequila all at the same time.
LikeLiked by 1 person
π€£ Now THAT is a more realistic “Creator” than I’ve EVER heard at seminary or church!!! BWAAA! π
LikeLike
Ooooohhh, don’t get me started on “Creators!” I ate one for breakfast the other day. It was kind of bland…
LikeLike
π You should’ve dip it in Dijon mustard or Horseradish? π
LikeLike
No thanks. My body does not respond well to strong flavours. But a nice mushroom sauce would have worked well.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Have you noticed Hollywood people look more and more like robots? Maybe ET days are done- even if other planets are inhabited they’re too far away to do us any good.
LikeLiked by 1 person
No, haven’t noticed that Arnold.
Eh, maybe. Maybe not. I can’t spell out the long-term future or predict it. Why? As Kai-125 and Dr. Miranda Keyes discussed:
It’s humans that make this existence impossibly random and unpredictable. I guess that is as it should be. π
LikeLiked by 1 person
Pingback: Netflix’s Alexander: Making of a God | The Professor's Convatorium