This is important for obvious reasons, the most important being you dont end up with a moral of the story that goes "There's a price for doing good, in this case apprehending a rape" . “The world is what we make it” the saying goes, and one place we could start with is in the stories we tell. It's very hard to convince people of the value of morality, justice, virtue, and kindness, when at every turn in storytelling and narrative you try and convince others its directly related to suffering and pain. Worser still and more importantly that it has to be that way. Sometimes people pay for their crimes, sometimes they don't, sometimes taking an ethical stand is less than rewarding and mostly painful, sometimes, maybe most times in some way shape or form it's worth it. Jaime himself found this out, having the favor returned to him by Brienne in the early portion of the final season. Drawing and connecting these threads, whether by happenstance, or intent is where the writers, directors and Benoiff and Weiss were at their best, but at their worst they sold out on "Game of Thrones " as a cynical rote concept of power, and a cliff notes version of relational dynamics that created an audience who learned to root for oppression in the form of majesty, and bemoan the best of us and in us. Because what was created was a completely imagined world where good dies young, so too did the best possibilities for Game of Thrones. Making the promise Game of Thrones once showed of revolutionary television as empty as Daenerys’s own revolution. What Benoiff and Weiss practiced was narrative entrapment. Luring viewers into these two’s own limited conception of freedom, hope, and change to convict the audiences favorite characters, and in some ways indict their own values in the stead of the highest ideals in fantasy. They peddled a view so reductive, it began to limit the audience. A view best summed up as when you play the game of thrones you play to win, or you die. With that as its sort of mantra we were bound to be both disappointed, and beguiled. For me I’m left with one of my favorite quotes from Quentin Tarantino’s Jackie Brown…