User blog comment:Adelina Le Morte March/Why are so many people taking Kara and Mordred's side?/@comment-4650675-20121216101956/@comment-5659316-20121216200812

Camelot's cells are not hotel rooms. They couldn't have kept Kara there forever. Even if they somehow managed to imprison her for many years, look what happened with Kilgharrah! Eventually, Merlin got sort of backed up against a wall until he was bound by a promise to release the dragon, in spite of what he might do to Camelot. Mordred wouldn't have let his sweetheart (whose faults he is completely blind to for some reason) rot in prison. He eventually would have done something about it, provided Kara wasn't able to use her magic to get herself out. I also find it interesting, on Kara's part, that she was being all witchy, shouting for Mordred to use his magic to kill Arthur, Merlin, and co. but she never uses hers (assuming she has some because she's a Druid) to do so. She just goes around stabbing people like a runaway killer character from Criminal Minds or Grimm or something.

Also, how was Arthur wrong in The Disir episode? Way I see it the ONLY thing he screwed up on was killing their servant and letting his knights run amuck in their cave (letting them bring weapons). The Disir were unreasonable. If they said simply that he had to accept magic users as his subjects, it would have been fine, and they could have, if they really were all knowing just reminded him of his promise in regards to the shrine boy (why I keep having to reverence this when I almost hated that stupid ghost episode in season four I have no idea, but it supports my point, so I digress). Forcing him to bow to a goddess he has no connection to, aside form magic being used to help him be born, which he had no say in, is wrong. You can't force religion on somebody. Arthur probably isn't religious, period. There is no mention of Arthur being a supporter of a 'New Religion' on the show, nor does he or Queen Guinevere, mirco-manage the faiths of those without magic in his kindgom. Also, this isn't like in the novel Mists of Avalon where Arthur swore an oath to follow Avalon and the goddess forever in return for a sword and then turned his back on it because Guinevere nagged him about it. He got his magic dragon-sword in Merlin without knowing what it was (Merlin lying to him when he 'pulled it from the stone'), and Guinevere doesn't boss him around very much in this version aside from when he really needs it. The Disir had no right to force their faith down his throat. Acceptance and freedom would have been enough, and he's a reasonable guy. I believe he would have given them that in the end if they hadn't been so demanding.