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== [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer/Headscratchers|Click here]] to return to the main Headscratchers page. ==
 
For Headscratchers entries about vampire rules, [[BuffyverseBuffy (Franchise)/Vampiresthe Vampire Slayer/Headscratchers/Vampires|click here]].
 
For Headscratchers entries about slayer rules, [[BuffyverseBuffy (Franchise)/Slayersthe Vampire Slayer/Headscratchers/Slayers|click here]].
 
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*** Of course, being "a heck of a nasty thing to do" doesn't stop them from doing it again to ''Angel'', even though he'll have a whole lot of new atrocities to feel horrible about, and apparently expecting everybody to think they've done him (and Buffy) a favor. Originally the reason for the re-ensouling in Season 2 was as a backup in case Buffy didn't manage to kill Angel - it wasn't meant to be doing him a favour, just another option to contain him - but that seemed to be forgotten.
**** That was the stated reason, but there was still the underlying motive of, as Xander so eloquently put it, "You want to forget all about Ms. Calendar's murder so you can get your boyfriend back." This IS why Xander didn't tell Buffy about Willow reattempting the re-insouling after promising he would; he wanted her to fight and kill Angelus, rather than holding on and waiting for Willow to give Angel back to her.
***** Being fair to Xander, the last several times Buffy fought Angelus and held back because of eventual hope that shehe'd revert, he escaped and went on to continue doing evil. That was bad enough when it was just Angelus escaping to kill faceless strangers again -- with Acathla in the picture, not going all-out to stop Angelus becomesmeans literallyBuffy's apocalypticinevitable indeath consequenceand the entire world with her. Tragically, the lie ultimately made ''no difference'' -- even fighting to the best of her ability, Buffy was still not able to down Angelus before he could release Acathla, and from that instant on the success or failure of the soul curse was completely irrelevant. The instant Angelus opened the portal, either he or Angel would have to go to hell to close it, fight or no fight, soul or no soul.
** The soul curse did a number on Willow, it nearly killed her, hence why they don't just spam the spell all over the place every time they meet a vampire. Also, giving somebody a soul doesn't always give them instant remorse and cause them to immediately start doing the right thing. Angelus kept on killing even after he got his soul, and Darla was slow to react as well. Drusilla would indeed kill herself, after all look at the sane vampires who got souls. Angelus and Spike both temporarily went insane after getting their souls for the first time, imagine what it would do someone who was already insane. It's not a gift, it's a curse.
*** I'm a trifle fuzzy on why Drusilla killing herself would be a bad thing.
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** It's also worth noting that the creators address this question directly in an episode where Buffy is deprived of her powers. She herself was shown at one point feeling as if without her powers she'd be nothing, but when they're actually removed, it's her resourcefulness, strategic planning ability and emotional strength and let her kick the bad guy's ass anyway.
** The fact that the two [[Badass Normal|Badass Normals]] are men but most of the female Scoobies have some kind of magic power makes it come off as "Men can fight supernatural evils just fine without special powers but the only way for a woman to be strong enough to fight evil is through supernatural intervention."
*** Those two guys spend a lot of their time being knocked out and being saved by the supernatural girls, and its once in a blue moon that they ever defeat a [[Big Bad]] on their own without help, so it all evens out.
* Okay, here's one from [[The Movie]]: Lothos is Buffy's nemesis in the most literal sense of the word. She cannot defeat him (at least not at first) and he seems to be everywhere, including inside her own head. Not to nitpick or point out the obvious, but the ''whole damn point'' of the movie - the one question we all want answered - is whether Buffy will finally be able to put this old bastard out of her life once and for all. In a scene that's pretty much [[Sarcasm Mode|clear as mud]], {{spoiler|the dying}} Merrick tells Buffy that "when the music stops," everything will radically change and she'll know what to do. When the {{spoiler|penultimate}} confrontation in the school's boiler room comes, Buffy is confronted by Lothos just as she is killing {{spoiler|Amilyn}}. He [[Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory|quotes Scripture to her for no real reason]], and she responds by letting on that she is no longer afraid and essentially tells him: "Let's do this." And then....I'm sorry, but ''what the bloody hell was supposed to happen next''? Buffy simply ''sits down'' and allows Lothos to slink up beside her. What the hell was ''that'' about? Buffy could certainly hear the heavy metal music off in the distance, and perhaps (if only subconsciously) sensed that that was the "music" Merrick had been referring to. She must have divined that as long as that music was going, she was screwed. But....But....''couldn't she have just stalled for time''? Tried to run, distracted Lothos, ''something''?! Even if this dumbfounding scene had not all but negated the "girl power" theme of the movie (Buffy needs {{spoiler|Pike}} to get her out of this jam), it's still a wall banger that desperately cries out for explanation.
 
 
== Totally Radical ==
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== SergeantPrivate Xander ==
* Why did Xander never consider a career in the military? "Innocence" makes it clear that there is a military base in the area, and while his military skills did fade, he still would have been better qualified than 90% of the US population. He could have done his training over the summer and gotten a posting to the base?
** While the regular military is out, as the odds of his being assigned to his hometown would beggar probability, you'd think he could still go for the National Guard. If nothing else, it would have made sneaking out the ''next'' rocket launcher from the local NG armory a ''lot'' easier. Not to mention periodic weapons refresher training, et al.
** Judging from his reaction to Spike's mocking claim in late season 4 that a military career was "all he was good for," it seems more than plausible that Xander ''really'' didn't want to join the army. Can't say I blame him.
** Joining the military makes it very difficult to control your own time, and there's a good chance he'd end up on active duty at some point. Xander's not cowardly but I don't think that being separated from Buffy and Willow for months on end would work for him.
*** Technically that would be correct, because the instant 9/11 rolls around NaitonalNational Guard Xander is getting mobilized and will be spending the next year in Iraq. However, at the time he'd be making the hypothetical decision to enlist (the late 90s) nobody would know this was oomingcoming, and NG duty would look like a guaranteed access to military training and resources in return for losing the standard 'one weekend a month and two weeks every summer'. So, its still a question as to why he didn't take the option.
 
* On a related note, why didn't Xander ever obtain a gun? His soldier period would have given him the knowledge to operate at least a couple of firearms. He lives in America, where guns are stupidly easy to legally obtain. While guns won't kill vampires, Darla shows that they do cause incredible pain, so a gun would still be useful on patrol to incapacitate a vampire from a distance before moving in for the staking. Also, as was shown when Buffy blew up The Judge and Wesley killed Skip, guns are entirely capable of killing various demons.
** Two quick things: A) Rocket launcher and gun are vastly different and B) Skip wasn't a demon. As to your point, yes guns are useful but within the context of Buffy the villains are mostly expected to be vampires and vampires aren't terribly affected by guns. A good example of this is the first episode of Angel where he is shot multiple times and jumps from the second floor of a building without sustaining any real damage. Yeah a gun could've killed some demons, but a crossbow makes far more sense given what he usually comes across.
*** Regarding point A), soldiers are not only well-trained in using guns as a normal order of business, but we actually see Soldier Xander with an M-16 during Halloween.
*** Skip was entirely a demon.
** Another question is that while there are normally reasons to not use guns vs. demons, the latter part of season 7 is a giant WTF. Bringers entirely die when you shoot them, the First is sending them in in bunches, and the town is evacuated so nobody will notice the loud noises. Go over to the now-empty NG Armory and load up some vans full of shit, Xander!
*** Shit, steal a Humvee. Park in front of Buffy's house. Use the turret mount on any Turok-Han that happen to wander by. Profit.
 
== Seasonal Rot ==
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* Enter season Six, and two of the three remaining male characters (Xander, Giles, Spike) completely jump the rails. Giles abandons her for a very weakly explained in-universe reason, and Xander leaves Anya at the altar. Spike, (usually evil anyway) crosses the Moral Event Horizon by attempting to rape Buffy. In season 6 the entire slate of hitherto "good guys" visit three of the worst traumas and betrayals on Buffy and her female friends that any women can get from men. Although it's true that Giles and Xander both redeem themselves at the tail end of S6, a lot of damage has already been done. Riley's innocent in season six, but ends up accidently hurting Buffy anyway with a fine new job, and fine new wife while Buffy's life is in the crapper. His visit equalls more pain for Buffy at the hands of them men in her life. ....
* ... and that's before we even discuss the Troika of Doom as the Big Bad.. Three nerds with massive chips on their shoulders because of their inabilities with women, who see females as commodities to be earned through the abuse of magic, technology, ... or the money one can steal through abusing magic and technology. There's probably nothing wrong with any of these individual story elements - but to heap them all in the same season very possibly prompted a lot of men to double check to see whether or not their favorite show had been hijacked by the Lifetime channel. It truly seemed for most of S6 that men-even men who had proven themselves as heroic in the past- were not capable of goodness.
In this troper's opinion, Season 6's main problem is that while any one or two of the things in it would have been worth exploring, doing them ''all at the same time'' led straight to [[Darkness-Induced Audience Apathy]]. Buffy has emotional problems from having been raised from the dead? Not only entirely sensible, but it would be a [[Plot Hole]] for her ''not'' to have something. Willow's getting on a power trip? Sure, they only foreshadowed that one as far back as season two. Buffy and Spike are falling into a destructive sadomasochistic relationship? Again, its not like they didn't set that up. Dawn turning into a bratty klepto? ... eh, I suppose. Tara getting killed? Tragic, and I'd really rather not, but people have died on this show before and their deaths and the grief-stricken reactions of those left behind have made for great drama on this show before. Doing all of this and more ''all in the same six month period''? At this point shit is just being piled on way too deeply, and the fact that any one of these things might be individually good by itself doesn't stop the combination of them all from turning into a giant glurgey mess.
* Season 7, on the other hand, had a much simpler problem -- the jerkass hypocrisy outbreak on the part of, well, pretty much everyone.
** Also that the master villain is so poorly defined that we still have no idea how Buffy actually defeated it. I mean, it basically just up and ran away during the middle of the final battle for no visible reason other than 'Buffy had just made a Resolve Face'.
 
== Angel and Angelus--Which When? ==
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***** In Angel's case, he explicitly states that, even though he has his human soul back, the demon half of him is still inside of him and his current persona is an amalgam of the two. Liam may be the dominant half, but Angelus is still in there and still active. He DID do all the things he was blamed for and enjoyed every moment of it, but getting Liam back gave him back his guilt and inhibitions. As shown in the episode with the starlet that tried to [[It Makes Sense in Context|reverse vampire date rape him]], he's capable of cheerfully performing Angelus style acts if his inhibitions are removed, soul or no soul.
**** It's perhaps most clearly shown in S4 [[Angel]] when Faith is in Angel/Angelus' mind - after he got a soul, he still drank innocent blood at least once. Maybe, since people with souls can be evil too, Angel has an darker side, and simply assumes that that's Angelus - so when he feels like doing something wrong, he thinks it's because he's still part-Angelus and what Angelus did was because of the darker part of himself. Because vampires are basically the worst of us, Angel probably thinks that must mean he was (and is) a worse person than everybody else in order to do those things.
***** While Angel's tasting of human blood in that scene is still worrisome, in that it shows he still struggles with the craving to some extent, its hardly as if he murdered the man either directly or indirectly. The guy was killed through no fault of Angel, by catching a stray bullet during a robbery, and Faith herself points out that Angel couldn't have saved the guy no matter how hard he tried -- he was so badly wounded that he'd died even before the 911 response got there. Angel then just relapsed and bit his ''corpse''. The only way Angel could have "saved" the guy would be to turn him into a vampire, which would have been way ''worse'' than what Angel actually did.
** Angel, at least, feels responsible for Angelus's actions because he remembers doing them. Worse, he remembers just how much fun Angelus had doing them. Those memories of the century he spent bringing pain and death to everyone he met? Those memories ''still'' bring a song to his lips. So yeah, he feels responsible for them.
 
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** Cordelia's actually quite clever. She just hides it. Xander perhaps not, but I don't remember it being suggested that Buffy is necessarily cleverer than him - at least not until later, when they all get their SAT results.
*** Xander was always a slacker in school; he didn't have an untarnished academic reputation to start with. It's just that since the whole Buffy thing started, his actual slacking time was curtailed by various slay-related activities.
**** Notice that Xander and Willow are all in the same classes. Willow is beyond a doubt in the accelerated track. If Xander can get into those courses too, he's not as stupid as he thinks he is. Although his combined SAT score being in the mid-700s suggests that he really needed better study habits.
** Snyder seems, by the end, to be specifically under orders to persecute Buffy.
*** He seemed that way from the beginning. Which is funny when you think just slightly outside the box and realize that in season two for example Snyder should have been front and center defending Buffy from the police and making up an alibi and perhaps even I saw these strange people running away! I can't see how the world getting sucked into Hell would be a win for Mayor Wilkins. Fast forward to season 3 and you've got the Mayor's plans about to culminate and what's the genius plan? Expel Buffy. That'll keep her too busy to thwart my. . .you mean that'll give her a lot more spare time to maybe stumble onto my plan? Doh!
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*** "Willow sleeping with Kennedy had no negative consequences ([[Take That|other than]] [[Creator's Pet|Kennedy]] being there)." Kennedy being there is a '''huge''' negative consequence.
*** Above troper is on the ball. Really, the show doesn't have a problem with sex. It sometimes explores problems (plural) that are ''related'' to sex, but those are specific: "Surprise" is about sleeping with someone and then realizing they weren't who you thought they were. "Smashed" and "Wrecked" use violent sex as visual metaphor for a mutually destructive relationship. "Seeing Red" includes the fallout from Anya and Spike's tryst, which is treated as an affair since both were emotionally commited elsewhere. "Where The Wild Things Are" is actually about the consequences of sexual ''repression''. The only general take the show seems to have on sex is that it can make easy things complicated, which makes perfect sense given that this is a series about coming of age. (Also, in Buffyland, it's impossible for anything to be shown as complicated or serious without a body count ensuing, so please keep this in mind and adjust the consequences of people's actions accordingly.)
**** In my opinion, treating "Seeing Red" as an affair was hypocritical on both Buffy and Xander's parts. Sure, Anya and Spike were still 'emotionally committed elsewhere'. They were also ''broken up with''. Their prior relationships were explicitly declared to be over, and in both instances said breakup was by decision of the person allegedly being cheated on! Sure, seeing your ex with your best friend's ex is hardly going to be a fun time for you, but that still doesn't mean you're entitled to bitch about it (at least not to ''them''). You chose to break up with them, they're a free agent at that point.
 
 
== Ineffectual Villains ==
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*** Because he didn't want to kill Buffy so much as he wanted to be a comic-book supervillain. That meant coming up with whacky schemes, and never repeating yourself. He'd done robots; he wasn't going to show such unoriginality as to try that again.
*** Just like Adam, he didn't actually WANT to kill her. His plan wasn't "Kill Buffy". The only times Warren targeted Buffy, it was either, "Long as the situation's optimal, might as well let her die," like the invisibility ray, or targeting Buffy was just part of a different objective, like sending the demon after her to get it out of his hair, or framing her for Katrina's murder so he wouldn't be a suspect. Until he walked into her yard with a gun out of anger and desperation, he wasn't explicitly TRYING to kill her.
*** Willow could wipe out an army of Buffybots all day every day. Warren was the technology arm of the Trio's technology, demonology, and sorcery trifecta; Willow had all three.
**** Wait until Willow goes to class, the Bronze, or anywhere else she can be reasonably expected to stay for longer than ten minutes. Have a WillowbotXanderbot knock on theher front door. about'Hey, twoWillow, minutesI afterneed sheto leavestalk goingto 'Oops,you Ifor forgota my keys!second.' Remotely detonate WillowbotXanderbot's Semtex vest asthe sooninstant asWillow Buffy answersopens the door. Laugh maniacally. Done.
** Darth Willow: Your lover's dead and you've become an [[Ax Crazy]] über-witch on a [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]. You want to kill everything and everyone and then, you don't, thanks to the [[Power of Friendship]]. Actually, this makes the most sense: rage can make people do stupid things, love too, so the love-induced wrath of a powerful witch oughta be devastating, and it's not uncommon to calm down and realise you can think things over.
*** Like you noted, rage makes people do stupid things. Love touched off Willow's rage, and love ended it. Like many, many things in this show, Darth Willow was a metaphor. In this case, for the pain of losing someone you love, and the stupid, reckless things people do to deal with that pain. And it took the intervention of the love of someone close to her, someone she HASN'T lost, to pull her back from rock bottom so that the healing could begin.
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**** Basically this. Every villain had a motivation. Only a select few of those motivations were explicitly "Kill Buffy". The Master wanted to rise, The Mayor wanted to become a giant snake, Adam wanted his war, Glory wanted The Key, and Warren wanted to be Lex Luthor. The only one that explicitly wanted Buffy to die was Angelus, and he's never fought a Slayer before.
*** Exactly. Remember that killing Buffy would summon another Slayer, and so would have only temporary gain for each villain, if any. They all have their own motives and all of them very nearly succeed<ref>[[You Can't Thwart Stage One]], after all</ref>, except Warren, who is only dangerous when he completely changes his motivation (from "being a supervillain would be AWESOME" to "Grr!"). They all make mistakes because of established character flaws, they are not [[Villain Sue|Villain Sues]].
**** Killing Buffy summons another Slayer only during season 1. After the Master kills her and she's revived, the Slayer line passes on to Kendra (and after her death, to Faith), and its ''them'' you have to kill to Call another Slayer. This is why Buffy's second death in season 5 didn't Call Kennedy or anyone else; the token had already been passed down to the next in line.
 
== Maintaining the Masquerade ==
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[[Category:Headscratchers]]
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[[Category:Buffy the Vampire Slayer/Headscratchers]]
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