Pike, unless there was another one in there we don't know about. Spock is there with him ("The Cage"; "The Menagerie" [TOS]). Lieutenant Kirk is likely serving aboard the Farragut under Garrovick on his first deep space assignment ("Obesession" [TOS]), somewhere in between commanding his first planetary survey on Neural ("A Private Little War" [TOS]) and getting attacked by the dikironium cloud creature ("Obsession" again).I'm curious who is the Captain of the Enterprise (that Burnham mentions to Tilly a few eps back) during this time period...April? Also are Kirk and Spock in Starfleet Academy during this time?
Pike, unless there was another one in there we don't know about. Spock is there with him ("The Cage"; "The Menagerie" [TOS]). Lieutenant Kirk is likely serving aboard the Farragut under Garrovick on his first deep space assignment ("Obesession" [TOS]), somewhere in between commanding his first planetary survey on Neural ("A Private Little War" [TOS]) and getting attacked by the dikironium cloud creature ("Obsession" again).
Kirk is already a Lieutenant, no longer a cadet. My interpretation based on reviewing the evidence is that in his deep guilt and remorse after failing to save Garrovick and nearly half the Farragut crew from the cloud creature, he goes back to Earth and becomes an instructor at the Academy, retreating into his books and bonding with Gary Mitchell, who has just then enrolled and is Kirk's student as per "Where No Man Has Gone Before" (TOS). (He had previously met the younger Mitchell when Kirk himself was a fresh 17-year-old cadet, or just about to be, hence having "known" Mitchell "for fifteen years" but them only having "been friends" since Mitchell joined SF. This relationship nicely parallels the one Kirk earlier had with his own instructor-cum-shipmate, Ben Finney, per "Court Martial" [TOS].)This also means that Kirk might be the same year as Cadet Tilly.
Seriously need a Lower Decks style episode to cover all the minor characters AND I will not rest until I get an evil Mirror Captain Tilly in leather episode.
It wasily could be. The more this series progresses, the more I think that CBS turned the screws on "Star Trek: Axanar" because they realized it was going to try and tell the exact same story they were aiming for with a completely different interpretation of events.In any case, DSC isn't heading for Axanar, barring non-linear storytelling, time travel shenanigans, or major retcons...
So could Voq.But Lorca could turn out to be Garth...![]()
This one got off on the wrong foot with me, tainting my enjoyment of what followed. In Burnham's log she explained why they could not beam down to the crystal spire but not why they could not shuttle down to it, or did I miss something?
Also, has anyone explained why there's a Vulcan admiral in Starfleet? Spock was supposedly the first Vulcan in SF, yet this Terral must have joined far earlier than Spock if he's an admiral at this point.
I believe that this is the quote in question, in regards to the Federation's founders...
Those are the trappings of a feudal state, I agree. That doesn't necessarily imply anything about the actual state underneath the trappings. The British Empire had all those trappings in the 19th century (noble houses, aristocratic ranks, royalty, primogeniture, etc.), but it hadn't been an actual feudal society for centuries... and were it one, it couldn't have been effective as an empire. (Indeed, the concept of a feudal society managing to survive and thrive as a modern technological state — never mind an interstellar one! — is fairly preposterous. We certainly have no examples on Earth.)Yes we do. Not only are there great houses, but there's nobility (literal lords) commoners (remember Martok?), royalty (Kor) descended from past emperors. There's ritualized pledges of fealty, as we saw this week in DSC. L'Rell spoke of having to choose her own familial allegence previously. T'Kuvma spoke of his ship as a birthright. All signs of a feudal state.
Theres just two core conceits to feudalism: 1) the central importance of family and blood alliances 2) that feudalism is one step above total anarchy. Modern concepts such as "the state" don't even exist. The monarch is the state. Which is why Gowron had a free hand to declare whoever a traitor, because there is no legal distinction between betraying the empire and betraying Gowron personally.
By the same token, while there are laws and customs, there is no rule of law. Law is a subset of politics. Duras is powerful and connected, so he gets away with literal murder. The Chancellor adjudicates disputes. Show trials (as shown in TUC) are the only kind of trial and exist solely for public benefit...
All of these things strongly indicate a fuedal Klingon society. In fact, it's a stretch to find anything that contradicts the notion.
This is a really interesting speculation. (Of course, a society with social classes based on functional roles is something fairly distinct from a feudal society, and it's not clear how the Klingons square that circle.) It's an alternative to what I just posited — you're saying that the military is, in fact, pointed inward to a large extent — but it's possible, perhaps even plausible.Nobody else but me seems to notice what they were implying in "Vulcan Hello." That the Beacon is ancient technology but is still, somehow, incredibly advanced. Also implying that ancient Klingons were very VERY smart...
tl;dr, the Klingon Empire is just a shell of what it used to be. The warrior class has taken over and they've turned their backs on art, science, music, literature, and ultimately even religion. If they seem backwards and barely competent, it's because they ARE. Doesn't mean that's how they've always been.
Oooh, that sounds interesting! Where and when are you planning to post it? I've got my own opinions about a lot of that, but I would never deny that there are lots of ambiguities and lacunae, leaving plenty of room for interpretation.[Axanar] should have already taken place with respect to DSC, absolutely. And most probably shouldn't be against the Klingons, no....
I have a post in the works for another thread with a more straightforward outline of Kirk's early service record as referred to in TOS, with all the complete quotes and references, as I've been re-watching and making a new attempt at it. Stay tuned...
Well, that depends on how you date "Obsession." I've never been partial to the Okudachron approach of dating TOS episodes exactly 300 years after their broadcast seasons... but even if we stick with that approach I'm not sure why "Obsession" should land in 2268, since the episode was both produced and broadcast in 1967. In fact, there were two later episodes in '67. In my personal chronology, it's definitely in '67... which would place the cloud-creature incident with the Farragut sometime in 2256, almost certainly already in the past relative to Discovery.11 years ago, from "Obsession" would be sometime within the next year from the current year of Discovery. "Obsession" is supposedly 2268, and we are nearing the end of 2256 in Discovery. So sometime during 2257 for Kirk. This also means that Kirk might be the same year as Cadet Tilly.
Looks like we've got at least the outline of it already! Most of it sounds plausible, although I'm curious how you'd define Kirk's service on the Republic as something other than a "deep space assignment." And I'd be cautious about taking material from TMOST at face value, since there are plenty of things in it that contradict later on-screen canon, and (in particular) it's hard to imagine Spock having time to serve 11+ years with Pike if Kirk took command of the 1701 a full three years before S1.Kirk is already a Lieutenant, no longer a cadet. My interpretation based on reviewing the evidence is that in his deep guilt and remorse after failing to save Garrovick and nearly half the Farragut crew from the cloud creature, he goes back to Earth and becomes an instructor at the Academy...
Later he leaves that position and assumes command of a destroyer or equivalent vessel (per the backstory in The Making of Star Trek), with Mitchell serving under him at his request (WNMHGB again). Then when Pike is promoted to fleet captain and Kirk assumes command of the Enterprise ("The Menagerie" [TOS]), Mitchell follows him, just as Kirk had followed Garrovick from the Republic to the Farragut. (Garrovick had been his "commanding officer from the day [Kirk] left the Academy" and the Farragut was his "first deep space assignment" per "Obsession," but as an ensign Kirk had served on the Republic alongside Ben Finney "some years" after he had first known Finney as his Academy instructor.)
Kirk (and Mitchell) transfer to the Enterprise at least a couple years before the start of the five-year mission, per Dehner's reference to Spock (who was there already under Pike) having worked with Mitchell "for years" in WNMHGB and Kirk's reference to "all the years" he's known Spock in "Amok Time" (TOS). (It's also specified in the backstory in TMoST that Kirk has commanded the ship for "more than four years" from the standpoint of the second season of TOS, which nicely fits.)
Full quotes and rough dates with additional points to follow after collating and plotting out all references...
Every time I see that Vulcan admiral, I'm reminded how the Vulcans see Starfleet as an inferior second fiddle to the Vulcan Expiditionary fleet.
So the guy bossing Lorca around wasn't good enough for his own people's space force. Just saying.
I'm talking about what we saw only a couple of episodes ago with Sarek and Burnham's backstory.Vulcan attitudes towards Starfleet must have changed since Archer's time, else there wouldn't be enough Vulcans in Starfleet at the time Discovery is set to later man the Intrepid.
I'm talking about what we saw only a couple of episodes ago with Sarek and Burnham's backstory.
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