I was one of those nerdy smart alec kids. But I was an Eddington fan I rooted for him all the way in For the Uniform.He was an interesting character, but something about him...he reminds me of one of those nerdy smart alec kids in school that thinks they are superior. The kind that give you a savage urge inside to just pound their face in, bit you have to resist.
The kind that give you a savage urge inside to just pound their face in, but you have to resist.
^Yes, he was certainly destabilizing the region.
And secure freedom for his people.
That one guy in the two parter was like Mr. Rogers trying to fight a guerilla war.
That would've been a crazy twist. I think Sisko's role as Emissary was to be a captain. The prophets wanted to put one of their own in SF. Maybe it was their plan for the Dominion to be stopped before they take over Bajor or Earth or something.What Sisko did was almost certainly illegal. Whether it qualifies as a war crime or not would depend on whether this would classify as an international conflict. It doesn't seem to, and I would classify it as an insurrection. I'm assuming the planet Sisko poisoned was not one already ceded to the Cardassians in the treaty.
The government usually has wide leeway to put down insurrections, though normally they would have to declare an emergency or invoke a martial law act. So since Sisko acted on his own, what he did was very likely criminal.
I would have loved for the show to follow this up with very serious consequences. Seeing Sisko charged and put in prison for most of the rest of the series would have been fascinating. Bringing on a new captain and seeing how they would change things, and maybe Sisko coming back toward the end, not in Starfleet anymore but moving to Bajor and fully embracing his role as Emissary.
The Maquis were mostly civilians while Eddington was a Starfleet officer formerly of one of the most important posts in the galaxy. Yeah, I can see that.Yeah the Maquis in "The Maquis" were pathetically naive and rather weak.
Eddington obviously got them into fighting shape.
Else they wouldn't have "turned the tide" as Dax said.
No, the Maquis were actively in revolt against the Cardassian presence and, to some extent, the Federation. Otherwise, their were referred to in the series as colonists.The Maquis were mostly civilians while Eddington was a Starfleet officer formerly of one of the most important posts in the galaxy.
Not if Sisko had the leeway to do what he did under his standing orders and rules of engagement.So since Sisko acted on his own, what he did was very likely criminal.
I thought it was really dumb that in this episode they started saying "Maquis Planets." They're no longer Federation colonies in the DMZ. Now they are Maquis planets...
If the Maquis had succeeded they would have formed their own breakaway state in the DMZ.
All the Federation planets became part of the Maquis? When was this established?They're no longer Federation colonies in the DMZ.
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