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History Recap / StargateSG1S9E5ThePowersThatBe

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* PrecursorKillers: Implied. While SG-1 has long known that the Ancients got wiped out by a plague, the origins of the contagion itself have been lost to history. Indeed, SG-1 had no reason to believe it was anything other than a naturally occurring contagion -- until now with the debut of the Prior Plague. Given the similarities between it and the Ancient Plague, Daniel and Vala both speculate it's possible it was actually an Ori-engineered bioweapon deployed to wipe out their ancestral enemies.

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* PrecursorKillers: Implied. While SG-1 has long known that the Ancients got wiped out by a plague, the origins of the contagion itself have been lost to history. Indeed, SG-1 had no reason to believe it was anything other than a naturally occurring contagion -- until now with the debut of the Prior Plague. Given the similarities between it and the Ancient Plague, Daniel and Vala both speculate it's possible it was actually an Ori-engineered bioweapon deployed to wipe out their ancestral enemies. However, it's never definitively answered before the end of the Ori Arc.
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* PrecusorKillers: Implied. While SG-1 has long known that the Ancients got wiped out by a plague, the origins of the contagion itself have been lost to history. Indeed, SG-1 had no reason to believe it was anything other than a naturally occurring contagion -- until the debut of the Prior Plague. Given the similarities between it and the Ancient Plague, Daniel and Vala both speculate it's possible it was actually an Ori-engineered bioweapon deployed to wipe out their ancestral enemies.

to:

* PrecusorKillers: PrecursorKillers: Implied. While SG-1 has long known that the Ancients got wiped out by a plague, the origins of the contagion itself have been lost to history. Indeed, SG-1 had no reason to believe it was anything other than a naturally occurring contagion -- until now with the debut of the Prior Plague. Given the similarities between it and the Ancient Plague, Daniel and Vala both speculate it's possible it was actually an Ori-engineered bioweapon deployed to wipe out their ancestral enemies.
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* PrecusorsKillers: Implied. While SG-1 has long known that the Ancients got wiped out by a plague, the origins of the contagion itself have been lost to history. Indeed, SG-1 had no reason to believe it was anything other than a naturally occurring contagion -- until the debut of the Prior Plague. Given the similarities between it and the Ancient Plague, Daniel and Vala both speculate it's possible it was actually an Ori-engineered bioweapon deployed to wipe out their ancestral enemies.

to:

* PrecusorsKillers: PrecusorKillers: Implied. While SG-1 has long known that the Ancients got wiped out by a plague, the origins of the contagion itself have been lost to history. Indeed, SG-1 had no reason to believe it was anything other than a naturally occurring contagion -- until the debut of the Prior Plague. Given the similarities between it and the Ancient Plague, Daniel and Vala both speculate it's possible it was actually an Ori-engineered bioweapon deployed to wipe out their ancestral enemies.
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* PrecusorsKillers: Implied. While SG-1 has long known that the Ancients got wiped out by a plague, the origins of the contagion itself have been lost to history. Indeed, SG-1 had no reason to believe it was anything other than a naturally occurring contagion -- until the debut of the Prior Plague. Given the similarities between it and the Ancient Plague, Daniel and Vala both speculate it's possible it was actually an Ori-engineered bioweapon deployed to wipe out their ancestral enemies.
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* {{Foreshadowing}}: Daniel remarks to Vala that while the Ori ''are'' bad, the part he can't figure out -- the thing that's been bothering him since "Avalon" and "Origin"-- is ''why'' they're doing all this. Daniel doesn't understand why the Ori are so obsessed with forcing people on the lower planes to worship them. This mystery and the Ori's motive will eventually be answered in the mid-Season finale.
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-->''(Cut to Vala being locked in a jail cell)''

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-->''(Cut -->''(GilliganCut to Vala being locked in a jail cell)''
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* DownerEnding: The episode ends with the local population giving in and bowing to the Ori while the team are hopeless to do anything about it.

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* DownerEnding: The episode ends with the local population giving in and bowing to the Ori while the team are hopeless helpless to do anything about it.
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* CrisisPointHospital: Due to the sheer contagiousness of the disease, infectees rapidly overwhelm the confines of buildings, and forcing the modest field hospital to start moving the patients outdoors - and thanks to the mortality rate, it's not long before they're forced to start leaving the bodies there too.
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* ShownTheirWork: Dr. Lam mentions that she happy with her new place in Cimarron Hills, which is an actual unincorporated community in Colorado Springs. Considering how little the show gets correct about the Springs, it's a nice touch.
* StylisticSuck: The play that the locals put on to honor "Qetesh".

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* ShownTheirWork: Dr. Lam mentions that she she's happy with her new place in Cimarron Hills, which is an actual unincorporated community in Colorado Springs. Considering how little the show gets correct about the Springs, it's a nice touch.
* StylisticSuck: The play that the locals put on to honor "Qetesh"."Qetesh."
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Vala convinces Mitchell, Daniel and Teal'c that she has a rapport with the people on one of the planets visited by the a Prior, but they are appalled to discover that she has been posing as Qetesh, the Goa'uld she was once host to, in order to exploit the planet's naquadah mines. She is put on trial for her crimes after Daniel persuades her to come clean with the locals, and things go from bad to worse when [[Recap/StargateSG1S9E3Origin the Administrator]] shows up and infects the native population with a deadly plague as incentive to convert to Origin.

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Vala convinces Mitchell, Daniel and Teal'c that she has a rapport with the people on one of the planets visited by the a Prior, but they are appalled to discover that she has been posing as Qetesh, the Goa'uld she was once host to, in order to exploit the planet's naquadah mines. She is put on trial for her crimes after Daniel persuades her to come clean with the locals, and things go from bad to worse when [[Recap/StargateSG1S9E3Origin the Administrator]] shows up and infects the native population with a deadly plague as incentive to convert to Origin.
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Added DiffLines:

* ShownTheirWork: Dr. Lam mentions that she happy with her new place in Cimarron Hills, which is an actual unincorporated community in Colorado Springs. Considering how little the show gets correct about the Springs, it's a nice touch.
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->''"Tell others what you have seen today."''
-->'''-- The Administrator'''

Vala convinces Mitchell, Daniel and Teal'c that she has a rapport with the people on one of the planets visited by the a Prior, but they are appalled to discover that she has been posing as Qetesh, the Goa'uld she was once host to, in order to exploit the planet's naquadah mines. She is put on trial for her crimes after Daniel persuades her to come clean with the locals, and things go from bad to worse when [[Recap/StargateSG1S9E3Origin the Administrator]] shows up and infects the native population with a deadly plague as incentive to convert to Origin.
----
!!"The Powers That Be" provides examples of the following tropes:
* BulletDodgesYou: Vala unloads a clip from Mitchell's P90 into the Prior, only for the bullets to stop in mid-air in front of him and clatter harmlessly to the ground.
* CallBack: Vala uses a voice modulator while posing as Qetesh, similar to that used by Daniel and Carter for a training exercise in [[Recap/StargateSG1S5E13ProvingGround "Proving Ground"]].
* CirclingMonologue: Daniel and the Prior do this when they go head-to-head during Vala's trial.
* ContinuityNod:
** Daniel reminds Vala that he's [[Recap/StargateSG1S8E12PrometheusUnbound already seen her naked]]. From the same episode, it's revealed that Vala was telling the truth when she claimed to have once been a host, though this was fairly obvious anyway as she's already been showing using Goa'uld technology.
** The Prior who shows up on the planet is [[Recap/StargateSG1S9E3Origin the administrator who tried to have Daniel and Vala executed on Ver Eger]].
** It's mentioned that the Prior plague is similar to [[Recap/StargateSG1S6E4Frozen that which wiped out the Ancients]]. Daniel goes so far as to speculate that the Ori may have been responsible for it back then.
* CourtroomEpisode: Not all of it, but a good portion of the episode involves Vala being put on trial for her crimes while masquerading as Qetesh.
* DeathIsCheap: The natives killed by the plague are brought back to life by the Prior at the end of the episode, after the planet capitulates to the Ori.
* DontCreateAMartyr: Discussed; Daniel mentions that he's studied enough religions to know that killing the missionaries rarely kills their message.
* DownerEnding: The episode ends with the local population giving in and bowing to the Ori while the team are hopeless to do anything about it.
* FigureItOutYourself: During his argument with the Prior, Daniel suggests that maybe this is the whole point of enlightenment, which is something of a departure from his usual stance on the matter.
* GoodFeelsGood: Subverted; Daniel invokes this to convince Vala to come clean about pretending to be Qetesh, but she's not particularly inclined to agree with him when telling the truth gets her thrown in jail.
-->'''Daniel:''' Look, for once just do the right thing here, okay? You'll feel ''so'' good about it afterwards. Trust me.
-->''(Cut to Vala being locked in a jail cell)''
-->'''Vala:''' So, Daniel, when does that warm and glowy feeling from doing the right thing kick in? 'Cause... not there yet.
* HealingHands: Vala uses the Goa'uld healing device on the natives when they start to fall ill, but before long it becomes apparent that she's fighting a losing battle. Then the Prior steps in and heals everyone at the end, cementing the Ori's status as "true gods" in the eyes of the local population.
* HiddenDepths: Vala is visibly affected by the plight of the people she ruled over as Qetesh, and openly cries when the man who tried to have her executed dies.
* ListOfTransgressions: Vala's trial starts with the prosecution reading out a list of the charges against her; the first two being mass murder and mass torture, which Vala and Daniel both object to since those were carried out by Qetesh, not Vala. After some deliberation, the prosecution agrees to only press charges for the things she did while in control of her own body, and the modified list opens with "planetary-wide forced labor", which Vala seems to agree is fair.
* LukeIAmYourFather: It's revealed that Dr. Lam is General Landry's daughter, though this is only a reveal to the audience, not the characters. They're not on the best of terms.
* TheMedic: Dr. Lam is shown going offworld for the first time, in order to try and help control the plague.
* NamesakeGag: A trial on the planet where Vala ruled is apparently known as a "Mal Doran".
* ThePlague: The Prior plague makes its first appearance.
* RevealShot: Used when Lam is shown in close-up talking about a patient she can't do anything for, and the camera pans away to reveal that the patient in question is a very sick-looking Mitchell.
* StylisticSuck: The play that the locals put on to honor "Qetesh".
-->'''Daniel:''' Not exactly Shakespeare.
* WhyDontYaJustShootHim: Vala half-jokingly suggests this as a tactic for dealing with the Prior, pointing out that when all is said and done, they ''are'' more or less human. Then she actually tries it at the end of the episode, with predictable results.
* YouDidEverythingYouCould: Daniel tells Vala this when she is visibly upset by her inability to cure the plague victims with the healing device.

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