So at the end of TTWT, Kirk wonders where all the Tribble have gone and Scotty says he "Gave them a good home" by beaming the to the Klingon ship before they went into warp.
Everyone seems happy with this solution and is laughing, except Spock of course, as the Entrprise flies away to another adventure.
Now Uhura was head over heels with the Tribbles. Chekov and McCoy both expressed how they liked them, Spock even had a brief moment where he seemed to show affection towards them. Kirk and Scotty didn't like the havoc they caused on the Enterprise, but didn't seem to not like the Tribbles as a species. As a matter of fact Kirk seemed mildly shocked when he thought Scotty had just beamed them out into space and Scotty replied with how inhuman that would be before telling where he sent them too.
Give the fact that the Klingons are not what you would call "kind" or "understanding" and have shown little hesitation to kill things they don't like, they were willing to kill who knows how many people by poisoning the wheat that very episode. Doesn't it stand to reason tha,t as soon as they realized the Tribbles were aboard the ship, that the captain would order every crew member to get a phaser, a bath'leth or those three pronged daggers and kill every last one of them? Hell the Klingons would probably have a contest to see who could kill the most and since the Tribbles make that high pitched squeal when they are near, it's not like the Klingons would have a hard time finding them.
Yet not one member of the Enterprise crew goes "Holy shit!!!! the Klingons are going to slaughter those things worse than Germany slaughtered Brazil in the 2014 World Cup!!!!!!"
You think Spock, who never hesitates to point out the logical as unpleasant as it may be, would respond to Scotty's statement of a good home by pointing out, given the Klingons easily resorting to violence and total hatred of Tribbles, that it was highly unlikely they would be in a good home and would all be dead within a matter of days at most.
Yet noone seem to think this way at all and that the Tribbles are going to be happy and content with their new owners.
Everyone seems happy with this solution and is laughing, except Spock of course, as the Entrprise flies away to another adventure.
Now Uhura was head over heels with the Tribbles. Chekov and McCoy both expressed how they liked them, Spock even had a brief moment where he seemed to show affection towards them. Kirk and Scotty didn't like the havoc they caused on the Enterprise, but didn't seem to not like the Tribbles as a species. As a matter of fact Kirk seemed mildly shocked when he thought Scotty had just beamed them out into space and Scotty replied with how inhuman that would be before telling where he sent them too.
Give the fact that the Klingons are not what you would call "kind" or "understanding" and have shown little hesitation to kill things they don't like, they were willing to kill who knows how many people by poisoning the wheat that very episode. Doesn't it stand to reason tha,t as soon as they realized the Tribbles were aboard the ship, that the captain would order every crew member to get a phaser, a bath'leth or those three pronged daggers and kill every last one of them? Hell the Klingons would probably have a contest to see who could kill the most and since the Tribbles make that high pitched squeal when they are near, it's not like the Klingons would have a hard time finding them.
Yet not one member of the Enterprise crew goes "Holy shit!!!! the Klingons are going to slaughter those things worse than Germany slaughtered Brazil in the 2014 World Cup!!!!!!"
You think Spock, who never hesitates to point out the logical as unpleasant as it may be, would respond to Scotty's statement of a good home by pointing out, given the Klingons easily resorting to violence and total hatred of Tribbles, that it was highly unlikely they would be in a good home and would all be dead within a matter of days at most.
Yet noone seem to think this way at all and that the Tribbles are going to be happy and content with their new owners.