Stargate canon question
Aug. 8th, 2006 12:27 amIt concerns mind control in the Stargate universe, and references events in "Insiders," so it goes behind the cut. There.
OK, we know that in early season of SG-1, Hathor and Seth both used nish'ta to exert mind control and leave people in a suggestible state that could be reversed by a mild electric shock.
Is that what Ba'al did to Agent Barrett, or has he pulled some other form of mind control out of his snaky ass? I can't find a reference in Stargate Wiki at Solutions nor at Wikipedia proper. :(
I fear my geek cred is in jeopardy!
And while we're asking canon questions, has the goddess Ma'at ever been used in Stargate canon?
OK, we know that in early season of SG-1, Hathor and Seth both used nish'ta to exert mind control and leave people in a suggestible state that could be reversed by a mild electric shock.
Is that what Ba'al did to Agent Barrett, or has he pulled some other form of mind control out of his snaky ass? I can't find a reference in Stargate Wiki at Solutions nor at Wikipedia proper. :(
I fear my geek cred is in jeopardy!
And while we're asking canon questions, has the goddess Ma'at ever been used in Stargate canon?
no subject
Date: 2006-08-08 05:22 am (UTC)And nope, no Ma'at.
Thanks!
Date: 2006-08-08 01:51 pm (UTC):D Ma'at is a favorite of mine, and may be coming soon to a fic near you!
Thanks for helping out!
no subject
Date: 2006-08-08 02:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-08 05:18 pm (UTC)Googling "stargate mind control" got me to a regular Wikipedia article about Ba'al & his antics over the course of the series (not nearly enough pictures, though) and it was a non-specific mind control he was using on his post-rebellion Jaffa.
no subject
Date: 2006-08-08 11:24 pm (UTC)But actual mind control by Ba'al doesn't seem to come up until Stronghold (9.14), where the Jaffa Council members are brainwashed. I'm unclear if it's the same method used to make a Zatarc (the infamous "Divide and Conquer") or not. In those cases, apparently the person was programmed to kill someone and the memory of the procedure was covered up. What's in use now seems much more complex than that was.