You would rather they potter along at subspeed, miss meeting Degra and have Earth blown to bits by the Xindi weapon. When one is at war, one does not 'act nice.'See my post on page 11. Or ask Illyrians.
You would rather they potter along at subspeed, miss meeting Degra and have Earth blown to bits by the Xindi weapon. When one is at war, one does not 'act nice.'See my post on page 11. Or ask Illyrians.
You would rather they potter along at subspeed, miss meeting Degra and have Earth blown to bits by the Xindi weapon. When one is at war, one does not 'act nice.'
The writers can do anything they like.
They're free, and responsible.
The "Archer or whoever had no choice, therefore the story logic should not be criticized" rationale is confused bullshit.
I would rather not seen a story about justifying war crimes in Star Trek. Especially during the time it was aired. If a message was needed then, it was not that, it was 'even in desperate times we must uphold our values.' This sort of 'hard men making hard choices' shit is something I utterly despise, especially in Star Trek.You would rather they potter along at subspeed, miss meeting Degra and have Earth blown to bits by the Xindi weapon. When one is at war, one does not 'act nice.'
That's not what that phrase means... and I'm sensing a pattern here.Hey you're the one who introduced being funny in the definitionQuote you " characteristics one expects from a hero, but carried to a hilariously excessive degree"
Sorry but you're not going to talk me down out of my interpretation. Michael is a Mary Sue.
The writers can do anything they like.
They're free, and responsible.
The "Archer or whoever had no choice, therefore the story logic should not be criticized" rationale is confused bullshit.
What they really need is one of those "I made a hard choice for the greater good" story to play it straight, and then drop the bomb halfway through that the choice turned out to be completely unnecessary and the "hard man in a difficult situation" committed an atrocity because he didn't know what the hell was going on and hadn't taken enough time to find out.I would rather not seen a story about justifying war crimes in Star Trek. Especially during the time it was aired. If a message was needed then, it was not that, it was 'even in desperate times we must uphold our values.' This sort of 'hard men making hard choices' shit is something I utterly despise, especially in Star Trek.
As Sisko said its easy to be a saint in Paradise or from one's armchairI would rather not seen a story about justifying war crimes in Star Trek. Especially during the time it was aired. If a message was needed then, it was not that, it was 'even in desperate times we must uphold our values.' This sort of 'hard men making hard choices' shit is something I utterly despise, especially in Star Trek.
Starfleets ideals such as blowing a planet to bits as Kirk would have done in TOSAnd here's the funny thing: when Archer threatened to suffocate the alien captain inside the airlock in order to get his cooperation there were lots of posters on this board who shit a blue streak about it and kept criticizing Archer as a monster for forgetting his Starfleet ideals and almost turning into a murderer. I don't remember too many of us letting Archer OR the writers off the hook for that act so I don't know where this newfangled storywriting purity is coming from within the Trek universe.
Both sides got lambasted for that episode's choices and whether or not you agreed with Archer's decision that doesn't let anyone off the hook for a series lead threatening to murder somebody in cold blood just to get the information he needed. Every Trek character has a choice, as do the writers.
Sure, quote an another war criminal...As Sisko said its easy to be a saint in Paradise or from one's armchair
Does not make his statement erroneousSure, quote an another war criminal...
It's the sort of justification war criminals tell themselves.Does not make his statement erroneous
What's the problem with the story logic? You didn't actually criticize the logic; you criticized the values.
I agree that the writers can do anything they like. They liked putting Archer in that position. What's the problem with them doing that?
It's the sort of justification war criminals tell themselves.
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