They got vampires and teenagers, so they're the same thing, right?
Probably not.I'd have to rewatch, but is there a reason Georgiou let Burnham go with her to the Klingon ship instead of just confining her to a locked room?
I think only a few people would claim Burnham is responsible for Geogiou's death in a planned-a-deadly-and-poorly-thought-out mission. I think most people's charge (including Burnham and Saru's) is that she got Georgiou killed "as her first officer". A first officer's duties include protecting the captain from: bad decisions, mistakes, disharmony with the crew, and - certainly -death on away missions. Starfleet wouldn't and didn't charge Burnham with that, but everyone in the fleet knows she didn't protect her captain, and thus "got her killed".... It's not her fault Georgiou lost a close-quarters combat with a Klingon. That's on Philippa.
But in both the UN and EU/NATO all countries are allowed to keep their military/defensive sovereignty - if they should so choose - and act under a supervisory, collective operational control.There was a significant alliance of thirteen nations which were rebelling and forming their own independence that formed an alliance which worked out for them.
Oh and this thing where all of Europe united themselves into a Union.
Oh and NATO.
Asserting one's national identity over a large national alliance isn't a thing which is inherently good or rationale or important.
Huh?It bothers me that Burnham really hasn't been wrong yet.
...Klingons taking prisoners contradicts later Trek but I think that bird left the coop anyway and is best ignored
...
This was always inconsistent.
The Klingons held Kirk and Spock as captives in "Errand of Mercy."
Fifteen years later, in TWOK, Kirk claims that "the Klingons don't take prisoners."
Then in the very next movie, Kruge vaporizes his gunner for accidentally destroying the Grissom because "I wanted prisoners!"
I think Kirk's line in TWOK may have been a bit of humor, not a totally factual statement.
Kor
Well, that's part of the judicial system; condemned criminals get sentenced to go to Rura Penthe. That's different from taking prisoners in battle and sending them there. Unless we count the deleted stuff from ST09.Not to mention that Rura Penthe is a Klingon prison. LOL
And one of our absolute favourite small universe references.Not to mention that Rura Penthe is a Klingon prison. LOL
But seriously folks, how did Erica Hernandez not make the cut? Far more competent than Jonathan 'Mah Pop's Engine' Archer and more, erm, 'stable' than Matt Decker.
Well, her career was cut short when she and the Columbia went missing during the war with the Romulans... at least, that's what happened in the novels, which I realize aren't canon, but it's the best explanation I've got.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.