"Dammit, I'm a general practitioner, not a plastic surgeon!"
Romulan Kirk begs to differ>

"Dammit, I'm a general practitioner, not a plastic surgeon!"
For Amok Time? He dies in that one, right?Shhhsh... spoilers.![]()
I would have flipped over to another network. Just saying...
instead you would have seen this:
Other 50th anniversary viewing scheduled for me this week:
The Avengers
"The Correct Way to Kill"
Originally aired March 11, 1967 (UK)
I've started doing reviews of the other shows in The Classic/Retro TV Thread. (No "new" episodes of The Saint or Mission: Impossible this week.)
.
We're sticking with 50th anniversaries of airdates, and thus going on hiatus and coming back in September, correct?
March 19 – A referendum in French Somaliland favors the connection to France.
March 21
- A military coup takes place in Sierra Leone.
- Vietnam War: In ongoing campus unrest, Howard University students protesting the Vietnam War, the ROTC program on campus and the draft, confront Gen. Lewis Hershey, then head of the U.S. Selective Service System, and as he attempts to deliver an address, shout him down with cries of "America is the Black man's battleground!"
- Charles Manson is released from Terminal Island. Telling the authorities that prison had become his home, he requested permission to stay. Upon his release, he relocates to San Francisco where he spends the Summer of Love.
_______MeTV said:The Federation and the Klingon Empire teeter on the brink of war as Kirk investigates a humble planet caught in the middle—Organia, inhabited by pacifists.
Somebody's watching TOS-R.But there are other worlds where the hostages killed by the Klingons and put into camps are not hyper intelligent shades of the color blue.
The thing is this...But hey, we're all just two sides of the same coin and the sooner we realize that then the sooner we'll all get along.
From the Organians' perspective, humans, Vulcans, Klingons, Klingon subject races...all amoebae. How worked up would you or I get if those amoebae were doing something bad to those other amoebae? It's all a matter of perspective. Much like the effect that pictures of the Earth from the moon are said to have had, making people realize that we're all sharing one small planet in a much larger cosmos.Spock said:I should say the Organians are as far above us on the evolutionary scale as we are above...the amoeba.
Who's saying they aren't? This is framed as the Federation vs. the Klingon Empire. Vulcan is stated to be a member of the Federation more than once in the episode. And Kor describes Spock as an enemy alien.Again, why is Vulcan not a part of this?
Spock said:Pure energy
I'm a production order man at heart, but I'll say this for airdate order: It manages to put off that steaming turd for another seven episodes.
What Kirk describes as Klingon subjugation is quickly demonstrated to not be mere propaganda or hyperbole or even a misunderstanding. It is exactly as Kirk described it.
but I'll say this for airdate order: It manages to put off that steaming turd for another seven episodes.
Yeah, that too. There's a lot of attempted manipulation/using of the Organians on Kirk's part, and his attitude toward them borders on "If you're not with us, you're against us."To play the Klingon devils' advocate here, they didn't actually do anything against the Organians until they were attacked. Sure they occupied the planet and posted their rules punishable by death, but the Federation was planning to do the same thing, the only difference is Federation used the carrot, and the Klingons used the stick.
Kirk isn't exactly an innocent party here, he repeatedly tries to draw the Organians in a conflict with the Klingons against their express wishes all for the benefit of the Federation because they need Organia for their war against the Klingons.
When it comes down to it both were willing to let the Organians die just for being in the way of their conflict...
Perhaps giving Kirk...or whoever was there before the Enterprise to assess the culture...what they expected to see. Which brings up the question of why they chose to look exactly like humans. Was that their old corporeal form, or did they make themselves look like that because the earlier expedition was from Earth?Organians have evolved beyond physical bodies, but not beyond the patriarchy, considering all the ruling council members are old men.
A doubleplus?
Yeah, you try hitting the right gumdrop button on the helm console with oven mitts on...!They stop the war by heating everything up, if only the secret of making oven mitts survived World War III...
I admire TPTB for being downright artful about its placement in the season: Let's bury it as far back as possible, but not so far that it's the last thing that people remember about the show. And they directly follow it up with what many consider to be the strongest episode in the series, to wash away the foul taste.I wouldn't jump to conclusions, I'm sure they used the extra time in post production to really make the episode shine and be the bestest possible!![]()
Oh, and Kirk says "I'm a soldier, not a diplomat", does that mean Starfleet is military?![]()
Yeah, you try hitting the right gumdrop button on the helm console with oven mitts on...!
Here's the thing: The moral of the story is that the war is bad, just as a thing. If the Klingons and the Humans (Federation) would just put down their guns then everything would be fine.
The problem is (and this is where Star Trek and I apparently part ways) is that the Klingons will apparently continue to take over planets. What Kirk describes as Klingon subjugation is quickly demonstrated to not be mere propaganda or hyperbole or even a misunderstanding. It is exactly as Kirk described it.
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