I see. So it's Kirk>Spock>Scotty>Sulu>Uhura, who's next?
About "The Deadly Years", since Kirk, Spock, and Scotty were unfit for duty, wouldn't it have made more sense to continue down the chain of command (whoever is after Scotty) than for Commodore Stocker to act as captain? I mean, the guy didn't know what to do when the Romulans started attacking.
Sulu should have been given command, he had combat experience. They just wanted Stocker to quiver in his boots so that Kirk could save the day.
Ha ha - yeah and don't forget they'll do anything to avoid letting Uhura take command.![]()
^ Maybe Uhura would have been good at command seeing as how all the senior officers knew the goings-on of life on the bridge and how to handle intense situations.
About "The Deadly Years", since Kirk, Spock, and Scotty were unfit for duty, wouldn't it have made more sense to continue down the chain of command (whoever is after Scotty) than for Commodore Stocker to act as captain? I mean, the guy didn't know what to do when the Romulans started attacking.
Well, how much do Vulcans truly value monogamy when it comes to their arranged marriages?
Remember what T'Pring said to Spock in Amok Time: "But if you did not free me, it would be the same. For you would be gone, and I would have your name and your property, and Stonn would still be there."
That sounds pretty conniving, selfish, and unfaithful to me, but Spock assessed her reasoning as "Logical, flawlessly logical."
The Vulcan philosophy of logic apparently isn't what humans think it should be (not that it necessarily has to).
Kor
Isn't it always, when we talk about rating things?Respectfully, that is just opinion stated as fact.
There's enough parallels there to real-world religions and cultures that make it easy for anyone inclined to care. Except, of course, maybe those who can't wrap their head around anything fictional in the first place.DS9 content asks the viewer to care about the made-up religious ways, & plight of the Bajorans.
Also relatable. There's always going to be that job we need but don't want but take anyway, or somewhere we have to go that we don't care about but we go anyway.At the outset, several of the characters seemed not happy to be at DS9. Why would the viewer, by extension, want to be "there" either?.
What gives you the impression Uhura is in charge? The landing party includes the ship's CO, XO and 2O. Kirk is clearly giving orders. Uhura seems to be there as a communication specialist and to deliver the infamous "I'm frightened" line.Technically, we do see her in charge of the security search party in CotEoF. The role would originally have been Rand's but as Uhura is higher rank and an officer, she was likely the one in charge.
What gives you the impression Uhura is in charge? The landing party includes the ship's CO, XO and 2O. Kirk is clearly giving orders. Uhura seems to be there as a communication specialist and to deliver the infamous "I'm frightened" line.Technically, we do see her in charge of the security search party in CotEoF. The role would originally have been Rand's but as Uhura is higher rank and an officer, she was likely the one in charge.
^^It seems possible to interpret what is shown as Uhura leading a detachment that broke off from the main group at the Guardian to search the surrounding area. But in charge of the whole landing party, no.
Again I'd have to ask what leads you to this conclusion, other than wishful thinking? Kirk's the one giving all the orders. When they fan out, Uhura is with one Security officer and Scotty with the other.^^It seems possible to interpret what is shown as Uhura leading a detachment that broke off from the main group at the Guardian to search the surrounding area. But in charge of the whole landing party, no.
This. It was the sixties. A black woman in charge of a bunch of white men was deliciously subversive. But yeah, I meant in charge of the security detachment, not the entire landing party, obviously.
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