I wasn't trying to make a moral point, just using it as an example to answer Tenacity's specific question.Nuking a town filled with, shall we say, 600 people, or nuking a deserted town after evacuating those 600 people?
On a totally unrelated note, this gives me an idea for another area for genealogical research, based on some vague old lore about my family having to leave England for the new world because of being on the wrong side in a war there.In an odd way, the Son'Na are more like American colonists, as they are an expelled faction after a failed civil war (like Puritans).
All this makes me want to *gag* pull out the Insurrection bluray and watch the movie again. Whether it was right or wrong to want to move the Baku away, I think it was beneath the ideals of the Federation to try to do in such an underhanded way.
On a totally unrelated note, this gives me an idea for another area for genealogical research, based on some vague old lore about my family having to leave England for the new world because of being on the wrong side in a war there.
Kor
Regarding the Ba'ku allowing the Federation to set up "hospitals" elsewhere on the planet for people to recover in: I don't think they'd object to that, otherwise the Ba'ku would never have allowed the crew to stay on the planet in the first place (remember that the Enterprise crew were very well treated even after Data's attack).
My vote would have been (if offered) it would be wrong if it hurt more people than it helped.I voted for 1,000,000
The prisoners were well treated, but they were rounded up and taken prisoner, and then not allowed to quietly depart after being taken prisoner. The Baku could have merely insisted that they leave.^ Still, it seemed clear that the Ba'ku were friendly to visitors.
^ Still, it seemed clear that the Ba'ku were friendly to visitors, and would probably have no objections to the Federation setting up hospitals. Why would they? It wouldn't get in their way.
The thing is its not exactly the Trolley problem, The things the planet's rings would provide are "nice to haves" not necessities. I know some theoretical Federation subjects may suffer without help from the rings but the Federation in TNG's time has allowed entire "inferior" species to die out because that was "nature's way" so as not to break the Prime Directive. The 10s of thousands or whatever how many who could be saved by the planet ring's are chicken-feed numbers compared to the billions Starfleet even Picard himself could have saved during his captaincy.
This is probably a simplified version of the same problem
But it's okay for the elders to force the young adults to live a cerain way?Banishing their upstart kids for trying to force the entire colony to live in a way they had abandoned was their prerogative
How'd they do that?. Making the upstarts get on a ship and leave
On a totally unrelated note, this gives me an idea for another area for genealogical research, based on some vague old lore about my family having to leave England for the new world because of being on the wrong side in a war there.
Kor
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