The Tardigrade is macro-bacteria that eats spores.
Huh? Tartigrades aren't bacteria. They're metazoan animals which are closely related to the stem group which gave rise to arthropods.
The Tardigrade is macro-bacteria that eats spores.
All that made it look like she tried to attack the Klingon's out of revenge and then purposely started a war. I think she asks herself if that was her motivation.As a kid her parents were killed by Klingons, prompting her to be raised by Vulcans into a Starfleet scientist who is assigned to Georgiou to connect her Vulcan upbringing and discipline with a human heritage and sensibility she was in clear danger of forgetting. The result is a constant battle between a strict application of logic and her more emotional human instincts, leading to her trying her own 'Vulcan Hello' out of absolute conviction that it would save lives because it did after H'atoria and because it was, Vulcans are almost certain to argue, the logical course of action. She reacted emotionally when T'Kuvma killed Georgiou, accepts the consequences of her actions.
Huh? Tartigrades aren't bacteria. They're metazoan animals which are closely related to the stem group which gave rise to arthropods.
I'm not interested in going tit for tat through Trek history. From my perspective, there are three significant differences here:
1. We're not just talking about a foolish decision with potential consequences that could lead to conflict. Burnham had one and only one chance to prevent all-out war. Her mentor died for that plan. But this supposedly stoic ward of Sarek throws all out the window for revenge. She makes a conscious decision to murder, regardless of cost, not an impulsive move that leads to trouble.
2. This is after she mutinies against her beloved captain. So we have not just one terrible impulsive choice, but two in a row. How many terrible impulsive mistakes does she get to make before she shouldn't be trusted on a starship? We're not talking about some green kid -- she's a first officer, and she's unsuitable for command.
3. This isn't a standalone episode from the days when what happened last week is forgotten. This is the narrative throughline for the entire series. It's the very essence of the show, and, to me, it runs against the fundamental message of Trek. She'd have been a villain on TOS, and now we're supposed to root for her?
YMMV, of course.
I'm not interested in going tit for tat through Trek history. From my perspective, there are three significant differences here:
1. We're not just talking about a foolish decision with potential consequences that could lead to conflict. Burnham had one and only one chance to prevent all-out war. Her mentor died for that plan. But this supposedly stoic ward of Sarek throws all out the window for revenge. She makes a conscious decision to murder, regardless of cost, not an impulsive move that leads to trouble.
2. This is after she mutinies against her beloved captain. So we have not just one terrible impulsive choice, but two in a row. How many terrible impulsive mistakes does she get to make before she shouldn't be trusted on a starship? We're not talking about some green kid -- she's a first officer, and she's unsuitable for command.
3. This isn't a standalone episode from the days when what happened last week is forgotten. This is the narrative throughline for the entire series. It's the very essence of the show, and, to me, it runs against the fundamental message of Trek. She'd have been a villain on TOS, and now we're supposed to root for her?
YMMV, of course.
Klingons have spoken about eating their enemies, particularly their hearts before. Also it was stated pretty clearly that they had run out of food and had to resort to cannibalism.
Darmok is overrated and the premise doesn't make much sense.I have watched the first three episodes as they aired and was watching this one up until the point where we have a Starfleet captain warmongering and "Klingons" that now apparently eat human flesh, and I have turned it off. I am so sick of this garbage. I'm sorry, this is not Star Trek. Not MY Star Trek anyway. I don't like a single thing they have done to this franchise. Star Trek is dead, and it died with Enterprise. To those that are liking this, I'm happy for you. But I've been watching TNG a lot the last week, just watched "Darmok" today. And to follow up something that masterful with the wreck that is Discovery just makes Discovery an even more bitter pill to swallow. I'm not trying to troll, or bait anyone. I am just simply heartbroken that something that has been so dear to me for my entire 34 years of life is being handled this way, first with the Kelvin movies and now this new "Prime" universe show. I'm sorry, this is not my Trek universe.
Her exact description is, it "appears to share some natural traits with the Tardigrade species, a docile creature that lives in the waters of the Earth. A micro-animal capable of surviving extreme heat and subfreezing temperatures." It only shares traits with bacteria. This line, perhaps, induced the confusion: "No unregistered microbiota in the transporter's pattern buffer."I could've sworn Burnham described the creature as bacteria.
I am about to start watching the 4th episode, even so I am a little bit suspicious of Tilly, I don't think she is quite as harmless as she seems.Yes, Tilly was really friendly:
Tilly: "Sorry, these stations...we had assigned seats..."
,
,
,
Tilly: "You don't care that everybody hates you..."
(And after all that Burnham still said: "you're a nice kid.")
So yeah please, Tilly is very self centered and is most concerned about how other people think about her, and only gets 'close' to someone that helps her image,
Tilly changed her attitude towards Burnham only because now she sees her as someone who can help further her own career.
Her exact description is, it "appears to share some natural traits with the Tardigrade species, a docile creature that lives in the waters of the Earth. A micro-animal capable of surviving extreme heat and subfreezing temperatures." It only shares traits with bacteria. This line, perhaps, induced the confusion: "No unregistered microbiota in the transporter's pattern buffer."
It was nice of the mining colonists to all take perfectly timed turns dramatically crying and screaming into the subspace radio before dying so Captain Loco could make a manipulative point to his crew about where their duty lies.
We're not just talking about a foolish decision with potential consequences that could lead to conflict. Burnham had one and only one chance to prevent all-out war. Her mentor died for that plan. But this supposedly stoic ward of Sarek throws all out the window for revenge. She makes a conscious decision to murder, regardless of cost, not an impulsive move that leads to trouble.
He was in the process of stabbing her Captain; to mangle an old saying, you don't take a taser to a bat'leth stabbing. She used deadly force to counter deadly force in an effort to save her Captain. That's not 'murder from revenge'. It's the sensible choice in the circumstances.
"Stun" doesn't work now? She had to change that setting, which makes it malicious.
It was a bad call, due to the mission goals, but she was being attacked on all sides and probably by whatever rules of engagement they have, she was justified in killing him. Doesn't make her a murderer.
Some intel on four of the bridge crew. Someone on NeoGAF either made this or copied it from elsewhere.
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I always felt that, esp after I saw the reimagined BSG, where I could feel the danger, strangeness, and aloneness.The writers never really made the delta quadrant feel strange or dangerous.
As far as the Klingon High Council is concerned Voq is unworthy.
"Stun" doesn't work now? She had to change that setting, which makes it malicious.
I always felt that, esp after I saw the reimagined BSG, where I could feel the danger, strangeness, and aloneness.
On Voyager Janeway talked about emphatically about being alone and short on supplies, but her saying it just underscored how I didn't feel it.
And VOY had a recreational Holodeck that somehow had a power source unusable/incompatible with all other systems of the ship; so hey, no reason to turn it off/use it sparingly to save power. Plus every species and station they met seemed to have fully compatible technology and food stores, so hey, it's really just a long roadtrip.I always felt that, esp after I saw the reimagined BSG, where I could feel the danger, strangeness, and aloneness.
On Voyager Janeway talked about emphatically about being alone and short on supplies, but her saying it just underscored how I didn't feel it.
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