When does he blame Picard (or are you reading too much into the scene)?
Sisko's tone of voice definitely suggests he is.
When does he blame Picard (or are you reading too much into the scene)?
I think maybe we are talking past each other. For me I understand Sisko having all the emotions he has. Anger, grief etc. What don't I understand is why is he blaming Picard and not the Borg? I don't understand why he needs to 'forgive' Picard when Picard was a victim of the Borg himself. If anything they are 'fellow' victims.
Let's say a loved one of mine is walking down the sidewalk. A drunk driver rams into the back of a random car, causing THAT car to veer off course and hit and kill my loved one. I would be sad, angry and feel all the feels but I wouldn't blame the person who just happened to get caught up in it...I'd blame the drunk driver.
I'll give you a real life scenario. Several years back a man suffering from severe schizophrenia was traveling on a greyhound bus and beheaded a fellow passenger. He was found to be not criminally responsible for the murder because of mental illness and has since been treated and released to a group home. He may not have been responsible for his actions, but do you think the mother of the man who was beheaded would be able to rationalize it that way when her son was so brutally murdered?
I think it's grand of Picard to have let Sisko's resentment pass through him without reaction the way he did for that old Vulcan weapon if you remember in Gambit. Sisko's waves of anger passed through Picard without eliciting reactions the same way the waves from that weapon did. Sisko is only lucky that Picard wasn't another Sisko, and that is ironic.
Well considering he murdered Siskos wife I'd say they're even.
I think it's grand of Picard to have let Sisko's resentment pass through him without reaction the way he did for that old Vulcan weapon if you remember in Gambit. Sisko's waves of anger passed through Picard without eliciting reactions the same way the waves from that weapon did. Sisko is only lucky that Picard wasn't another Sisko, and that is ironic.
Nah, just manslaughter.Well considering he murdered Siskos wife I'd say they're even.
Nah, just manslaughter.![]()
Maybe there should have been a scene where one of the Maquis spoke sternly to Sisko about that incident and hurt his feelings. Then we could debate as to whether he was a little out of line or if that Maquis member should shut their frakkin' filthy mouth.
Nobody ever speaks sternly to Sisko. Not if they know what's good for them.
Of course its human for sisko to blame Picard. Imagine if your child runs out from behind a parked car and is hit a killed by a driver who was doing nothing wrong human nature will make you think that driver could have done something different, you will hardly go up and shake his or her hand despite the fact they have to live with the fact someone was killed by them regardless of the fact they couldn't avoid it.
What if it's Sisko's clone?
Actually I take that back. Joseph (Sisko's father) spoke sternly to him.
But that was because when you've got Brock Peters AND Avery Brooks, it's a classic irresistable force/immovable object scenario. So something's gotta give.![]()
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