Both intriguing solutions, though I feel like the grey hat solution is a better fit, both for the situation and for the characters involved.
This does have me wondering more about Gibbs though. He's arguably THE main character in the show, and definitely has a complex history. In my opinion, he still counts as a "good guy", though definitely more grey than white. However, I'm trying to figure out if he does in fact fall on the right side of the moral scale, or if he would be more of a "should be a good guy but lost his way is actually not a good guy".
Although I suppose characters don't have to be distinctly one thing or another; I just keep flashing back to a comment ysabetwordsmith made about not liking stories where she can't tell the good side from the bad side. In this case, I think he does still fall on the side of good, just not with a hat of pure white.
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This does have me wondering more about Gibbs though. He's arguably THE main character in the show, and definitely has a complex history. In my opinion, he still counts as a "good guy", though definitely more grey than white. However, I'm trying to figure out if he does in fact fall on the right side of the moral scale, or if he would be more of a "should be a good guy but lost his way is actually not a good guy".
Although I suppose characters don't have to be distinctly one thing or another; I just keep flashing back to a comment ysabetwordsmith made about not liking stories where she can't tell the good side from the bad side. In this case, I think he does still fall on the side of good, just not with a hat of pure white.