Only guy I found:Yeah, they handled that pretty well. T'Kuvma's death came as a surprise. In the credits he is listed as “Javid Iqbal”. Although I'm not able to really find that actor on the web. Interesting.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm8856297/
Only guy I found:Yeah, they handled that pretty well. T'Kuvma's death came as a surprise. In the credits he is listed as “Javid Iqbal”. Although I'm not able to really find that actor on the web. Interesting.
We're talking about Voq not T'Kuvma
Yeah, but nobody is going to hold her responsible for shooting a guy during a firefight, especially since this guy just killed one of her team. What I wanted to say: Pretty much everything Burnham did was understandable, and should never be used against her. EXCEPT her suddenly nerv-pinching her Captain and wanting to give the order to fire. Which she didn't even pull off.
Which is why I think this was specifically only added to make her a pariah later on, not because it made sense during that moment.
The issue with the end wasn't just that she was given life, but that, in an a supposed enlightened society, her rights of due process where thinly adhered to--even for a military. [Serious this time.]
She had no JAG representative when she offered her plea. And she gave it to a judicial bored of flag officers and not in front of a proper court and panel of members.
And let's not forget, saying her actions started a war is BS. The only thing she did was defend herself. Georgiou and Admiral Numbnuts where actually far more responsible than she was. The only thing Burnham was guilty of was attacking a senior officer. (Even mutiny is a hard sell.)
I loved the sentencing at the end. The way that room was lit, with everyone's faces concealed, was the darkest that Starfeet has ever seemed. I loved it.
I assumed that scene was thematically, rather than literally, lit like that. I can't see any reason for a courtroom to actually be lit like that, I just thought we were meant to be inside the traumatised head of Michael as she was 'sent down'. I loved it, as long as I read it that way![]()
If true, then that's our Voq, everybody:
Doe he even have half a personality?Did Vorik leave half his personality inside B'Elanna?
*whispers* They are Section 31.
In TMP, Ilia was attempting to use "navigational deflectors" to deflect the asteroid in the wormhole. That failed because the wormhole overloaded the main power systems.Actually, navigational deflectors haven't been precisely defined in canon. But, based on Trek tech manuals they focus on hydrogen and other microparticles and can also "move aside larger" objects that present a collision danger. But it isn't clear how big of an object is "larger". Can they move a multi-million ton asteroid? From how far away?
How specific were they about the whole lovers only part?
Sarek left part of his Katra in Picard, and Tuvok left part of his soul in Suder.
Did Vorik leave half his personality inside B'Elanna?
Was Voriks attraction to Tom Paris, why B'Elanna tracked that blond boy down and mated him into submission?
Lets not forget Spock sensing V'Ger entering the Galaxy.
Hmm? Maybe it was Spock's connection to the barrier, since Where no man has been before, which is why he noticed a thing 82 AU in diameter, crossing that membrane he was psionically tethered to?
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