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David Marcus - What did Kirk know and when did he know it?

When did Kirk find out that David was his son?


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Technically, neither was Carol - she was introduced in a movie
A TOS movie. And there is the former un-named girlfriend of Kirk's mentioned in WNMHGB, who many fans (not me) believe to be Carol.
He is still Carol's father. He was already an adult when the divergence took place, so he must have existed in the prime timeline as well.
IIRC, Simon Pegg said the the Abrams-universe has a unique past, with differences from the prime universe's past.

Carol's father might never have been in Starfleet in the prime universe. It might have been grandpa Marcus who instilled a dislike of Starfleet in his grandson.
Because Kirk is not the type who forces himself into people's lives without them wanting it.
You've seen TOS, yes? Forcing himself into people's lives is Kirk's basic description.
 
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They'd still be upset, though. Understandably. If they knew.
Then let them be upset - at Carol.

IIRC, Simon Pegg said the the Abrams-universe has a unique past, with difference compared to the prime universe's past.

I'm aware of Pegg's theory. And I don't care. :shrug:

I mean, he's not writing ST4, and until he does - until that theory actually makes it onscreen - it effectively doesn't exist.

You've seen TOS, yes? Forcing himself into people's lives is Kirk's basic description.

When his Starfleet duties demand it, I suppose it is. But not here.
 
Technically, neither was Carol - she was introduced in a movie, just like her father was.
The Wrath of Khan, The Search for Spock, and The Voyage Home were all Original Series movies. They weren't TNG or nuTrek. Admiral Marcus was a nuTrek character, so he is irrelevant to this discussion.

No kids are allowed on naval ships in RL or expected to follow their parents on active duty zones, however this does not stop the personnel involved from having families and children that they actually have a relationship.
So?

If they have a relationship, great. If not, it's that family's business and nothing to do with Kirk and David and Carol. Some marriages and parental relationships can withstand the stresses of long periods apart and others can't.

If a RL Dr. Marcus and Captain Kirk (in the RL army, navy or airforce) in 2018 made those same choices for their child today, they would not be considered, parent of the year or even the decade.
Isn't that up to the judgment of the people involved, to say what kind of life they had and if it harmed them? Sometimes being apart is better for the child, if the parents have issues. This "staying together for the sake of the kids" isn't necessarily the best choice.

According to Spock in ST09 Kirk's father lived long enough to see him Captain the Enterprise, and lets assume that Peter Kirk was raised by his grandparents after the incident at Deneva. Imagine the senior Kirks' distress when their son tells him he is walking away from fatherhood to David. That is if Kirk even told them about their grandchild.
This has nothing to do with ST09.

Yes, but given that this might mean they wouldn't be able to see or know him either, Kirk's family might say, "And you're okay with that? Why don't you fight for him anyway?"
Presumably the current move in some jurisdictions to enact laws guaranteeing visitation rights for grandparents would result in automatic rights of grandparents to have meaningful contact with their grandchildren by the 23rd century. At least I would hope so.

Because Kirk is not the type who forces himself into people's lives without them wanting it.

Putting up a custody battle (which are often nasty) would hurt David and Carol both, much worse than complying with Carol's wishes to stay away.
Exactly!
 
I always felt that David must have known all along that Kirk was his father, even if Carol tried to keep that fact from him over the years and he played along for appearances' sake.

Kids just know these things, ya know?

Kor
 
If a RL Dr. Marcus and Captain Kirk (in the RL army, navy or airforce) in 2018 made those same choices for their child today, they would not be considered, parent of the year or even the decade.
Well, one of the reasons for that is that in today's world, it's a lot harder financially to raise a child without the support of a second parent. As discussed above, that's not an issue for Carol.

Beyond that, you really seem to have a stick in your craw about single parents being a bad thing. Most people don't think there's anything wrong with it, even today. Some of the best parents I've known have done it on their own.

And you're reaching even further when you speculate about David's grandparents. The notion that grandparents have some sort of right to know (or even see) a grandchild, whether the parents are together or not, is just indefensible.

Bottom line, Kirk did the responsible thing by cooperating with what Carol wanted.
 
And you're reaching even further when you speculate about David's grandparents. The notion that grandparents have some sort of right to know (or even see) a grandchild, whether the parents are together or not, is just indefensible.
I was in agreement with you up to this point. I do think that grandparents should at least be able to know about their grandchildren and be given a chance to meet them (of course not all grandparents are interested in that).
 
Sometimes being apart is better for the child, if the parents have issues. This "staying together for the sake of the kids" isn't necessarily the best choice.

When did allow a man to be a father to his child = lets be a couple, millions of folks manage to do the former everyday without being a couple, its called co-parenting.
 
Beyond that, you really seem to have a stick in your craw about single parents being a bad thing. Most people don't think there's anything wrong with it, even today. Some of the best parents I've known have done it on their own.

My mother did it on her own, i knew who my father was, where he lived and even saw him. Being a single parent does not mean denying the child the right to know its other parent if said parent exists and there is no abuse involved. Kirk's anger on the death of his son is hypocritical, he lost the chance to know him when he agreed to Carol's selfish demand.
I can imagine the scene

David - Where's my dad mum,
Answer - I told him to stay away from you cos he was hung up on his Starfleet career. I wanted you in my world not his.
(utter selfishness)
 
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I was in agreement with you up to this point. I do think that grandparents should at least be able to know about their grandchildren and be given a chance to meet them (of course not all grandparents are interested in that).
I think it's a desirable thing, and great if family dynamics allow for them to do that. I don't think they should have any legally enforceable right to do that. I've known too many grandparents who had nothing positive to contribute to their grandchildren's family life.
 
When did allow a man to be a father to his child = lets be a couple, millions of folks manage to do the former everyday without being a couple, its called co-parenting.
Given Kirk's cheating on the Kobyashi Maru and David's cheating on the protomatter, I'd say it didn't really make a difference whether Kirk was there or not.

I don't understand why "It was CAROL'S DECISION" is such a difficult concept. Do you honestly think that if she had run into so much trouble - or if David had - that they needed Kirk's help, he would have refused to help them?

My mother did it on her own, i knew who my father was, where he lived and even saw him. Being a single parent does not mean denying the child the right to know its other parent if said parent exists and there is no abuse involved. Kirk's anger on the death of his son is hypocritical, he lost the chance to know him when he agreed to Carol's selfish demand.
Kirk's anger isn't hypocritical. He's mourning the son he didn't know before, the son he was just getting to know, and the son he was looking forward to knowing throughout the next several decades.

He has the right to grieve for his son.

I think it's a desirable thing, and great if family dynamics allow for them to do that. I don't think they should have any legally enforceable right to do that. I've known too many grandparents who had nothing positive to contribute to their grandchildren's family life.
My two sets of grandparents really didn't like each other. It was actual hatred on the part of my mom's mother toward my dad's mother - who was the grandmother who raised me, and the one who I preferred to be with. There were two years of my childhood when my dad's girlfriend actively tried to keep me and my grandparents (his parents) apart.

If there had been any kind of "grandparents' rights" back then (in the '70s), I would have wanted my grandparents to have that as a means to get me back where I belonged - with them.

As for David's situation, we can only speculate about whether or not he had a relationship with Carol's parents or whether Kirk's family even knew of his existence.
 
Kirk didn't walk away. Carol told him to stay away. There's a difference.
Exactly.
Carol made a selfish decision,
Yes, she did, but to Carol's credit she's fully aware of it and acknowledges it. ("You had your world, and I had mine. And I wanted him in mine.") She's obviously thought about this a lot over the years, and she's still convinced that she made the right decision.
perhaps Admiral Marcus played the role of father to David.
Hmmm... Perhaps that's where David got his dislike of the military from.
Kirk never claimed to be enlightened. That's Picard's and Riker's schtick, and a 75-year gap between them.
...Where's the "Wild Applause" emoji? :techman:
There is no on-screen evidence of Kirk not wanting to be a parent. In fact, I got the distinct impression that he would have willingly taken on the challenge if Carol had allowed it.
Yeah. According to Scotty in GEN, Kirk always said, "If something's important enough, you make the time." And judging from Kirk's closeness to his sister-in-law in "Operation: Annihilate!", and the fact that his father saw him take command of the Enterprise according to ST09, as well as his brother's family according to "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", Kirk comes from a pretty close-knit family.
He is still Carol's father. He was already an adult when the divergence took place, so he must have existed in the prime timeline as well.
Yeah. I see no reason not to believe that Admiral Marcus existed in the Prime timeline as well. The really interesting question, I think, is was Carol in Starfleet at some point as well? She certainly seems to be sympathetic to them. ("Starfleet has kept the peace for a hundred years. I cannot and will not subscribe to your interpretation of these events!")

Maybe I should start a poll for that question!
Although Marcus-Prime may not have been the warmongering asshole that his Kelvin counterpart was. (We can only hope!)
Let's hope!
For all we know, in the Prime timeline, Admiral Marcus died in a tragic blimp accident.
I heard he got pretty beat up by Klingons and got so many prosthetic replacement parts that he became a cybernetic security officer. "Roboguard," I think they called him. ;)
Imagine the senior Kirks' distress when their son tells him he is walking away from fatherhood to David. That is if Kirk even told them about their grandchild.
This is another reason I like to believe that Kirk didn't find out about David until after TOS. It doesn't raise these questions.
But that's the thing. Kirk didn't walk away. Carol told him to STAY away. Those are not the same thing!
Because Kirk is not the type who forces himself into people's lives without them wanting it.
Exactly.
I always felt that David must have known all along that Kirk was his father, even if Carol tried to keep that fact from him over the years and he played along for appearances' sake.

Kids just know these things, ya know?
Interesting theory! It certainly puts David bringing up Kirk in his first scene in a new light.
Bottom line, Kirk did the responsible thing by cooperating with what Carol wanted.
Agreed!
 
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Bottom line, Kirk did the responsible thing by cooperating with what Carol wanted.
Bottom line no, What Kirk was demonstrating was a complete lack of (parental) responsibility.

He is/was David's father, any willingness on Carol's part to absolve Kirk of that responsibility has no baring on Kirk's decision not to be a responsible parent and be a interactive part of David's life.

This isn't about Carol and her wishes, it's about Kirk's decision to walk away from David. Not to make David an important aspect of his life.

I not saying that Kirk resign his commission and buy a house up the street for where David lives with his mother. But Kirk could spend his leaves with David, exchange regular messages. Let David know, truly know, that his father cares for him.

Which Kirk doesn't do.
I don't think they should have any legally enforceable right to do that.
The US family court system doesn't agree with you, grandparents decades ago were found to have a legal right to see and interact with their grandchildren.
 
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Just a data point of the original intent before some bits got reshot...


They walk by a group of crates. It all happens
fast: David leaps out and tackles Kirk, throwing him to
the ground and landing atop him, a knife at his throat.

At the same time, Bones and Saavik reach for their
phasers, but Jedda, already armed, steps out. He has
them covered and helpless.
125 ANGLE FAVORING DAVID

DAVID​
You're the sonavabitch who
committed mass murder up there.​

He raises the knife --

KIRK​
I'm Admiral Kirk...

DAVID​
We were still there, you dumb
bastard! We could hear the screams
all the way to the transporter room --​

Again he raises the knife --

KIRK​
Where's Dr. Marcus --

DAVID​
I'm Doctor Marcus!​

Carol reaches the tunnel entrance to the cave --

CAROL​
David --

DAVID​
Mother, go back!​

Carol sees Kirk --
CAROL​
Jim --

DAVID​
Go back. I'm going to kill him.

CAROL​
(takes a breath)​
You do that and you'll have murdered
your father.​

All react. David and Kirk, facing each other, are
turned to stone. Bones, Jedda and Chekov turn to look
at Carol, wondering. Terrell very casually takes the
phaser from Jedda.
126 NEW ANGLE (FORMERLY SCENE 134)

TERRELL​
(cool)​
I'll hold onto this.​

But Kirk and Carol ignore them and walk towards each
other. There are tears in Carol's eyes. She reaches
up, trying to smile and touches his hair --

CAROL​
You've got a little grey --
She can't. Kirk takes her and holds her tightly, look-
ing at David, over her shoulder. He stands there,
stunned, looking back.

KIRK​
Carol. Is that true?​

She nods --

KIRK​
(continuing)​
Why didn't you tell me?

DAVID​
She's making it up! My father was
Professor --

CAROL​
David, you're just making this
harder --

TERRELL​
I'm afraid it's even harder than you
think, Doctor.​

He and Chekov have their phasers trained on them.
 
The US family court system doesn't agree with you, grandparents decades ago were found to have a legal right to see and interact with their grandchildren.
There's no such thing as a US family court system; family law varies from state to state. All states do recognize grandparent visitation rights, but not in the same way, and only ever under specific circumstances. Generally speaking, it can't be awarded against a parent's will unless the parents are unfit, divorced, or deceased, and the burden falls on the grandparents to prove that it's in the best interests of the child. This is necessary to be consistent with Troxel v Granville (2000), a Supreme Court case establishing that parental decision-making about the upbringing of one's child(ren) is a fundamental right protected by the due process clause of the 14th Amendment, deference to which can only be overcome by a compelling public interest.

(Personally I think the presumption of the fitness of (biological) parents is something of a blind spot in American law, and is too hard to rebut and too often placed ahead of the actual best interests of the child. That said, though, it still can and does take precedence over any claims from grandparents.)
 
I took a look at my Star Trek II Fotonovel last night (I honestly forgot that I even owned a copy), and they have Kirk's line to Carol as "Why didn't you tell me?"

In Vonda McIntyre's novelization, Kirk actually says, "Why didn't you tell me?" to Carol twice, once in the scene that Maurice posted above, and again in the Kirk/Carol scene afterwards. There, Carol responds with, "Jim... Why didn't you ask? [...] You've known for a long time that I have a son. You know his age, or you could have found out without any trouble. And I don't believe they take you into Starfleet Academy unless you can count." Kirk says that it never even occurred to him to ask, and Carol says she once swore to never tell either of them.

It's interesting that even the tie-in products of the time had confusion about the line.
 
So it seems likely that the original line was "Why didn't you tell me?" (as in, Kirk didn't know that he had a son) and it was changed to "Why didn't you tell him?" (as in, Kirk knew, but David didn't) during the reshoots.
 
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