Squire James said:
I'm not going to answer all of them - some because I don't feel like it and others from sheer ignorance (like not having read the Pinnochio book).
If you have the time, read Pinnochio. It's an interesting read, especially in the context of Harry Potter.
Squire James said:
My opinion of her is not as good as yours. I wouldn't hesitiate to call her a Good Writer, but I'm not ready to put her up on the pedastal with Tolkien and Asimov (the two I would put on top of the fantasy/sci-fi rankings, respectively) quite yet. She's certainly Great at her strengths, but here weaknesses are Average or even Poor. I don't begrudge her riches; she pretty much deserved to do well.
Each to their own, of course. Only time will tell on that.

(heh, get back to you in about 50 to 100 years on this!)
Squire James said:
I beg to differ - magic is certainly not 100% the subject of the stories, but it is hardly 0% either! The stories seem to me to be all about a study of how magic might exist in a modern society without mimicing or replacing technology.
I just got the overwhelming impression that the books were primarily about growing up, about responsibility and accepting it, about the pitfalls and problems of the world, and about consequences. Just my take.
Yes, of course it's magic rich. Poor Muggles got left out of the fun, though.
Squire James said:
Hermione clearly has more intelligence and skill than Harry, but Harry has more raw power. She'd probably analyze-and-lose in a couple of situations where Harry acted-and-won.
I don't understand. What do you mean when you say: Harry has more raw power. What do you mean back that? What do you mean by raw power? (confused look)
Squire James said:
(snip)
I don't think they quite got all the kinks worked out with Wizard School yet... I mean they let the House of Slytherin exist, right? It's hard to tell how much of the danger's real, and how much was set up to instill some fear in the students and curb overconfidence.
I merely wish to comment that I would prefer to make my own choice concerning which House I was put into. I don't believe that Sorting Hat should be determining - for the rest of their lives - which way children will go. It hasn't got that right.
If I was put at Hogwart's (theoretically) back when I was 11, and the Sorting Hat put me in Slytherin, I'd leave the school. If forced to remain, I'd refuse to work, causing my forced expulsion. That Hat wouldn't force me to stay around the likes of the Slytherins when I didn't want to be around them. (That goes for any of the other Houses, too, where appropriate.)
Yes, perhaps, children arriving and being Sorted had tendencies towards one House or another - AT THAT TIME. But children change, and people change. Dumbledore is completely out of line here (anyone got a handy Sphere of Annihilation that Sorting Hat could be stuffed in?

)
Squire James said:
Not quite. They wouldn't be keeping themselves so secret if they weren't at least somewhat aware in the backs of their minds that Muggles and their technology could destroy them. Even Valdemort seems pretty circumspect in how he kills them.
Well, the muggles have nuclear weapons and whatnot. But in a Muggle versus Wizard war, I think it'd be quick and decisive for the Wizards. Just my take.
The really big What If, which I can only speculate on, is the historical role of magic. For example, what role did magic (and Hogwart's) play in World War I?
I do think the wizards are being elitist about muggles. All of the wizards all being elitist. And this just messes up an already Voldemort-messed-up situation further.