• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Why do so many people hate 'Insurrection' so much?

If you lived on an island with the cure for cancer you would have every right to refuse to have it harvested and you forcibly moved to the Shetland islands as compensation.

And if I did that I wouldn't blame people for considering me morally repugnant.

It's just like the (let's assume factions of) Maquis who'd rather start a full-fledged war with the Cardassians than leave their precious little colonies when they live in a world where there's the technology to recreate their homes in nigh-exacting detail.

Hell, even "Family Guy" did an episode where Carter had come up with the Cure for Cancer but wasn't going to sell it to anyone except for a steep cost. Does he have the legal right to do that? Sure. That doesn't mean he should do it, or that it's ethical for him to do so.
 
Then its get the lawyers.
In the movie the Feds were not the owners turning up in year 299. The Feds were the new guys.

Not necessarily. We don't know what the legal status of the planet was at the time the Baku started shacking up on it, nor what Interstellar Law may say about such a matter, assuming it says anything.

The Baku could have squatted on a Klingon-owned planet for the proverbial nine years, eleven months before the Klingons traded the area to the Federation.
 
It doesn't matter who they are. They're essentially sitting on the proverbial cure for cancer and all indications from the film are that they refuse to share it.



The Baku weren't native to the planet. Humans are native to Earth (as far as we know).
And they have the right to refuse. If your child or any other loved one, needed a bone marrow transplant and the only match refused to give it what would you do? Force them at gunpoint to the nearest hospital?
 
Last edited:
And if I did that I wouldn't blame people for considering me morally repugnant.

It's just like the (let's assume factions of) Maquis who'd rather start a full-fledged war with the Cardassians than leave their precious little colonies when they live in a world where there's the technology to recreate their homes in nigh-exacting detail.

Hell, even "Family Guy" did an episode where Carter had come up with the Cure for Cancer but wasn't going to sell it to anyone except for a steep cost. Does he have the legal right to do that? Sure. That doesn't mean he should do it, or that it's ethical for him to do so.
But he was allowed to exercise his choice right?
 
Where Insurrection's entire moral argument falls apart is that it's based on circular logic - Insurrection claims that it's wrong to forcibly relocate people regardless of the underlying motive, therefore it's wrong to move the Ba'ku, but never actually bothers justifying the former part of the argument.

Heck, the very fact that the film's premise can produce such a huge debate, whereas the film itself simplifies things down to "moving people is wrong, and any government that would do so is so evil that one should take up arms against it" kinda illustrates how badly wrong it went.
 
Not necessarily. We don't know what the legal status of the planet was at the time the Baku started shacking up on it, nor what Interstellar Law may say about such a matter, assuming it says anything.

The Baku could have squatted on a Klingon-owned planet for the proverbial nine years, eleven months before the Klingons traded the area to the Federation.
Well unless instellar law or Federation law recognises forced colonisation 18th/19th century Earth style, the legal status of the planet should be whatever sentient species lives on it first and is still occupying it, owns it.
When the Baku shacked up on the planet (mid 21st century) there was no Federation and humans were just getting over blowing each other to bits (2075).
 
I don't recall how the episode ends, but he's clearly no hero for choosing legality over morality. Nor are the Baku, if the best defense they have is "We don't wanna move, and we're not going to let anyone else live on the entire surface of this planet we're not even using ten percent of."

If the only person who could possibly save my loved one refused to do so, I don't think I'd resort to threatening their life, but I might try to find a way to take them to court. And I'd find them morally reprehensible for refusing to help.

Let's say when the British started to colonize North America that there wasn't anybody living on the portion of the continent where they made landfall, or within a five hundred mile radius. Should the Native Americans be able to come along and say "Hey, we were here first, you need to leave"? What if the British are there for over a century before contact occurs?
 
Where Insurrection's entire moral argument falls apart is that it's based on circular logic - Insurrection claims that it's wrong to forcibly relocate people regardless of the underlying motive, therefore it's wrong to move the Ba'ku, but never actually bothers justifying the former part of the argument.

Heck, the very fact that the film's premise can produce such a huge debate, whereas the film itself simplifies things down to "moving people is wrong, and any government that would do so is so evil that one should take up arms against it" kinda illustrates how badly wrong it went.
For me forced relocation is wrong under certain circumstances, the Baku situation fits one of those circumstances.
 
Let's say when the British started to colonize North America that there wasn't anybody living on the portion of the continent where they made landfall, or within a five hundred mile radius. Should the Native Americans be able to come along and say "Hey, we were here first, you need to leave"? What if the British are there for over a century before contact occurs?
Sounds similar to the Boer/Afrikaans argument for how they claimed parts of present day South Africa- 'There was no one there, we were here first, the space was empty. God gave us this land...etc etc' And we all know how well that turned out right?
Does not matter, the British wanted the whole land mass as it turned out they were not prepared to just stay in Jamestown were they? Human nature being what it is, greed, arrogance plus racism led to Manifest Destiny and the almost decimation of the indigneous peoples who were there before the British, Spanish and French.
So yes the Native Americans would have a right to say we were there first and as history turned out they would have a right to be suspicious of the English motives.
Now imagine if the Native Americans had turned up to some isolated part of England and claimed the land, you think the 17th century English would let those 'savages' have it?
 
I don't recall how the episode ends, but he's clearly no hero for choosing legality over morality. Nor are the Baku, if the best defense they have is "We don't wanna move, and we're not going to let anyone else live on the entire surface of this planet we're not even using ten percent of."

I'm not sure the Ba'ku go that far. They banned the So'na a century ago after their rebellion, yes, but I don't think the script states the Ba'ku would be against the foundation, of, say, a Federation resort for "people of good will" on the other side of the planet. Rather, I have the idea that Dougherty doesn't expect anybody wants to live in the Briar patch for much longer than a holiday.

PICARD: Then the Son'a can establish a separate colony on this planet until we do.
DOUGHERTY: It would take ten years of normal exposure to begin to reverse their condition. Some of them won't survive that long. Besides, they don't want to live in the middle of the Briar Patch. ...Who would?

If the other extreme were true --trillions flocking to the planet -- that would of course be unworkable, too.
 
Here is a question for those that are ok with forcibly relocating the Ba'ku against their will.

Is there a number at which it becomes wrong and if so what is that number? secondly subtract one from that number and explain why that is acceptable but not the number one higher?
 
Sounds similar to the Boer/Afrikaans argument for how they claimed parts of present day South Africa- 'There was no one there, we were here first, the space was empty. God gave us this land...etc etc' And we all know how well that turned out right?
Does not matter, the British wanted the whole land mass as it turned out they were not prepared to just stay in Jamestown were they? Human nature being what it is, greed, arrogance plus racism led to Manifest Destiny and the almost decimation of the indigneous peoples who were there before the British, Spanish and French.
So yes the Native Americans would have a right to say we were there first and as history turned out they would have a right to be suspicious of the English motives.
Now imagine if the Native Americans had turned up to some isolated part of England and claimed the land, you think the 17th century English would let those 'savages' have it?

So I'm allowed to squat in an abandoned house but the English aren't allowed to squat on unused land?
 
So I'm allowed to squat in an abandoned house but the English aren't allowed to squat on unused land?
Not when its foreign soil. That is colonisation which ended badly for the indigenous. Can the UK People claim unused parts of the USA today?
 
Last edited:
They are not Federation citizens, the Feds had no legal jurisdiction over them at all
On the other hand they (the federation) did have jurisdiction over the planet and the rings.

Don't forget, the federation wanted to move the Ba'ku to prevent them from being harmed as the federation and the S'ona collected the federation's natural resource.
That is colonisation which ended badly for the indigenous.
But the Ba'ku weren't indigious.
Can the UK People claim unused parts of the USA today?
No, but the USA can. If a group of people moved into a area of what one day would become the USA, that doesn't mean that the area isn't part of the USA later.

"We got here first" doesn't make for the best of claims, especially if that all you got. Otherwise the UK would still belong to the Celts.
 
Last edited:
I'm admittedly asking this part somewhat tongue-in-cheek, but what if I'm an illegal alien who's squatting, then?

No Star Trek puns on "alien" intended...
 
On the other hand they (the federation) did have jurisdiction over the planet and the rings.

Don't forget, the federation wanted to move the Ba'ku to prevent them from being harmed as the federation and the S'ona collected the federation's natural resource.But the Ba'ku weren't indigious.No, but the USA can. If a group of people moved into a area of what one day would become the USA, that doesn't mean that the area isn't part of the USA later.

"We got here first" doesn't make for the best of claims, especially if that all you got. Otherwise the UK would still belong to the Celts.

You mean the Federation wanted to forcible relocate the Ba'ku and steal the Ba'ku's natural resource. Just because the planet fell within Federation Space doesn't make it the Federations planet to do with as it pleases.

Let's say the Halkan homeworld from TOS is within Federation space does that mean the Federation can come and take the Dilithium reserves on the planet against the wishes of they Halkan's?

If the Federation truely held their beliefs if the Ba'ku told them to go away and never come back, then they should go away and never come back.
 
You mean the Federation wanted to forcible relocate the Ba'ku
As opposed to leaving the Ba'ku to burn when the rings are collected?
and steal the Ba'ku's natural resource.
Federation's natural resource.

Otherwise why did the S'ona want to partner with the federation in the first place? If the fedration didn't own the resource, then the S'ona could have simply move the Ba'ku themselves and avoided federation participation.
Just because the planet fell within Federation Space doesn't make it the Federations planet to do with as it pleases.
Answer this, does the federation council consider the planet to be the federation's or the Ba'ku's? The movie indicates that the federation council think it to be theirs, as does Picard.
Let's say the Halkan homeworld from TOS is within Federation space does that mean the Federation can come and take the Dilithium reserves on the planet against the wishes of they Halkan's?
Halkan are (apparently) indigious to their planet, the So'na aren't.
If the Federation truely held their beliefs if the Ba'ku told them to go away and never come back, then they should go away and never come back.
That presumes the federation council thinks the planet to be the Ba'ku's. Which the movies doesn't support.

Who does the council think the planet belongs too?
 
You mean the Federation wanted to forcible relocate the Ba'ku and steal the Ba'ku's natural resource. Just because the planet fell within Federation Space doesn't make it the Federations planet to do with as it pleases.

Let's say the Halkan homeworld from TOS is within Federation space does that mean the Federation can come and take the Dilithium reserves on the planet against the wishes of they Halkan's?

If the Federation truely held their beliefs if the Ba'ku told them to go away and never come back, then they should go away and never come back.
I think that's the problem with the movie, it's too 1 dimensional where the plot can only go 1 way.
MacLeod, what if there were millions of people who were dying and this disease or plague was spreading, and you and your loved ones and shipmates were infected. The Ba'ku's homeworld was only place where it can cure everyone, but they refused to share there resource, what would you do?
Should the Federation still hold on to their beliefs if its a matter of life and death???
 
Last edited:
I think that's the problem with the movie, it's too 1 dimensional where the plot can only go 1 way.
MacLeod, what if there were millions of people who were dying and this disease or plague was spreading, and you and your loved ones and shipmates were infected. The Ba'ku's homeworld was only place where it can cure everyone, but they refused to share there resource, what would do?
Should the Federation still hold on to their beliefs if its a matter of life and death???

Isn't that the true test of a belief that you will hold true to it regardless of the outcome?
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top