. I don't approve of Lorca's action and generally find him a questionable moral character, but he's still interesting. This is a story, not a morality tale.
Then I'm at a loss as to what you want here. It seems to be that the expectation is that Lorca and Burnham must somehow be raised to grand moral bastions but have been driven so low by their actions to be forever tarnished as protagonists in a Star Trek show.It depends on the starting point. Lorca being Captain is already a consequence of previous actions. Michael in a prime position is also a consequence of story telling that wanted her to be free to not be imprisoned. Move the goal posts by all means for what has yet to be told but I do not see any thing that could be told in the future that would change Michael disabling her Captain. Done duck. Same with Lorca. He did what he did.
Exactly. I tend to resist the idea that characters have to be admirable to be interesting. We're supposed to be uncertain as to whether Lorca is essentially a good guy or a bad guy; that's where a lot of the narrative tension is coming from. He's not supposed to be an unambiguous role model like, say, Picard.
In general, I'll often take interesting over virtuous--at least when it comes to fiction.![]()
Think about Khan. One of the great villains of late 20th century Earth and a man both directly and indirectly responsible along with his fellow genetic supermen for the deaths of about 37 million people. As an Augment bred for conquest and subjugating those he sees as lesser human beings he's a threat to both world peace and the lives of those around him, yet he's also one of the most fascinating characters in the history of the Trek franchise. He is a criminal and a tyrant who oppressed untold millions but he's still an interesting person and legions of fans flock to his character.
Well, who can resist “fine Corinthian leather”?Honestly, of all the Trek books I've written, it's the Khan trilogy people seem to remember.
Then I'm at a loss as to what you want here. It seems to be that the expectation is that Lorca and Burnham must somehow be raised to grand moral bastions but have been driven so low by their actions to be forever tarnished as protagonists in a Star Trek show.
I truly am at a lost as to what you want from either of these characters or this show.There seems to be no allowance for moral grayness in DISSCO even when Star Trek has done it before. No regard for lawbreaking even though Kirk, Sisko, Bashier, Spock, Janeway, Paris, among others, all did.
But, these characters. They're just damned and cannot be leads. There is no room for them.
Someone serving the sentence for their crime is not wanting them to be raised to 'grand moral bastion' standards. It's a simple balance of justice based on the law, in Michael's case she was judged by. Morale greyness is when you get the wrong change when you buy dinner and pocket it, not when you disable your Captain and friend or kill your entire crew. What do you think they are just little lapses, lol.Then I'm at a loss as to what you want here. It seems to be that the expectation is that Lorca and Burnham must somehow be raised to grand moral bastions but have been driven so low by their actions to be forever tarnished as protagonists in a Star Trek show.
I truly am at a lost as to what you want from either of these characters or this show.There seems to be no allowance for moral grayness in DISSCO even when Star Trek has done it before. No regard for lawbreaking even though Kirk, Sisko, Bashier, Spock, Janeway, Paris, among others, all did.
But, these characters. They're just damned and cannot be leads. There is no room for them.
Lorca as a role is well acted but not complex. He's an unambiguous nutjob and the narrative tension comes from him twirling his moustache. There is nothing you cannot predict about him. I knew he was going to dodge getting into trouble with Cornwell, didn't you? Same with Michael. We all know she's not going to spend the rest of the show in prison.Exactly. I tend to resist the idea that characters have to be admirable to be interesting. We're supposed to be uncertain as to whether Lorca is essentially a good guy or a bad guy; that's where a lot of the narrative tension is coming from. He's not supposed to be an unambiguous role model like, say, Picard.
In general, I'll often take interesting over virtuous--at least when it comes to fiction.![]()
Wow. That's quite a straw man, there!Not sure I really accept the "it's happened before so it's okay" argument. I mean, Spock mind-raped Valeris in ST VI. Does that mean it would be fine if the writers of Discovery decided that Spock would be a habitual mind-rapist who just loved to go around mind raping the ladies? Of course not.
But it wouldn't even be a lie! Whatever she did or didn't do, it didn't legally constitute a mutiny until the moment the court found her guilty of that charge. If the court reverses the conviction, then it's made a binding legal decision that, in fact, no mutiny ever actually took place. And even if they don't, but instead merely expunge the record of the conviction, then there's still no record of any mutiny taking place. Other people can continue to call it a mutiny all they like, just as Kirk and Garth claimed that their own crews had mutinied in "This Side Of Paradise" (TOS) and "Whom Gods Destroy" (TOS). But the court is the only authority that can ultimately make such a determination. Any number of other people besides Burnham could be accused and brought up on such charges, but as long as they didn't stand convicted, they would not technically be mutineers. Spock himself was apparently charged with mutiny in "The Menagerie" (TOS), but the proceeding that was begun in response turned out to be a sham, and real charges were subsequently forgone.And in any case, it would be an absurd lie to tell. Spock generally lies for strong reasons - either to avoid talking about intensely personal matters that others are ignorant of (pon farr), or for a greater purpose (ST II, VI, Taste of Armageddon, etc).
But why lie about something that would be common knowledge to anybody who had a little knowledge of Starfleet history? It would be like a Royal Navy officer responding to the same question the same way because his ancestor was Fletcher Christian. It's a dumb lie and the likely response is gonna be "But what about the Bounty?"
...and? She asks him a question, he doesn't answer... and so...?
I'm really not sure what it is you're listing here. Spock doesn't want to answer him, so he says he needs rest - which he clearly does
It was already clear in canon that multiple encounters with both the Borg and Ferengi had taken place prior to official "first contact" with either, before a single episode of ENT had ever aired!The idea of "we can violate the spirit of canon whilst doing the bare minimum to stick within the strictest possible interpretation of the words" is a bit of a bugbear of mine. It's why we got Borg and Ferengi in Enterprise on the grounds that "well they didn't say who they are so it doesn't technically count as a violation."
So? The consequences haven't played out yet-that's my only point. I don't approve of Lorca's action and generally find him a questionable moral character, but he's still interesting. This is a story, not a morality tale.
No. Trek occasionally presented “morality tales”. It has NEVER merely done only that.You realise ‘this is a story, not a morality tale’ suggests they are mutually exclusive (they are not) and plays right into the ‘not Trek’ argument, because historically, Trek very much is a morality tale.
No. Trek occasionally presented “morality tales”. It has NEVER merely done only that.
Someone serving the sentence for their crime is not wanting them to be raised to 'grand moral bastion' standards. It's a simple balance of justice based on the law, in Michael's case she was judged by. Morale greyness is when you get the wrong change when you buy dinner and pocket it, not when you disable your Captain and friend or kill your entire crew. What do you think they are just little lapses, lol.
Got it. So, you would rather Michael be in prison for the rest of the show.Lorca as a role is well acted but not complex. He's an unambiguous nutjob and the narrative tension comes from him twirling his moustache. There is nothing you cannot predict about him. I knew he was going to dodge getting into trouble with Cornwell, didn't you? Same with Michael. We all know she's not going to spend the rest of the show in prison.
Star Trek has used morality tales, and no, I'm not arguing that they are mutually exclusive. I'm arguing that DISCO isn't necessarilly a morality tale.You realise ‘this is a story, not a morality tale’ suggests they are mutually exclusive (they are not) and plays right into the ‘not Trek’ argument, because historically, Trek very much is a morality tale.
April was 75 circa 2270 per "The Counter-Clock Incident" (TAS), meaning he was born circa 2195, and could readily have been captain of the Enterprise from the late 2220s and still leave Kirk (born 2233, assumed command circa 2263 around age 30—but probably after having had a previous command—see here) as the youngest-ever captain of such a ship as per The Making Of Star Trek (which is the same source where the age of the design is said to be "about forty years" old). Not set in stone, of course. The Chronology and an unused and unseen portion of Archer's bio from "In A Mirror, Darkly" (ENT) place the Enterprise's launch in 2245. That would still be a decade before DSC.
Scotty performed site-to-site transport of an individual from one surface location to another, with no novelty value attributed, in "A Piece Of The Action" (TOS).
What concerns Spock about intra-ship beaming, pad-to-site, in "Day Of The Dove" (TOS) is the necessity of "pinpoint accuracy" due to the possibility of ending up materializing inside a deck or wall. But that would generally be a concern beaming just about anywhere, so I think you are quite sensible in presuming the complication must have something to do with some other function of the ship within the area of the destination potentially interfering with the process. Spock quite explicitly says it has been done, though, even if rarely because of this danger. Scotty accepts that it could work, even if it may be a trap. Spock makes computations and sets the computer to automatically perform the transport. And it ultimately all goes off without a hitch, despite it all being done hurriedly in the heat of the moment.
So Lorca actually does nothing they couldn't do in TOS, and is quite justified in feeling no apprehension, especially because in his case he's had the luxury of all the time in the world to have the computer programmed for such pre-set transports and work out any bugs! It can't possibly be a more complicated matter than getting the spore drive to work, methinks. Plus, again, quite possibly better transporters.
Sorry, I'm not just arguing for argument's sake here. I just think much more has been made of this than really ought be.
-MMoM![]()
Got it. So, you would rather Michael be in prison for the rest of the show.
Star Trek has used morality tales, and no, I'm not arguing that they are mutually exclusive. I'm arguing that DISCO isn't necessarilly a morality tale.
It really isn't, since morality tales can take on different forms and storytelling for different generations. Star Trek is first and foremost entertainment, and the rest of it builds from there.But Trek is a morality tale. If DSC isn’t, then as I said, it’s straight in the ‘not Trek’ evidence box.
And Lorca is just the man to do it!... if you need a reason why nobody ever mentioned discovery you simply need to blow her up with all hands lost in the grand finale - i admit that would be something totally new to the franchise
edit to add: oops, i forgot![]()
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