@Futur Dracula Yes, excellent analogy.
So the UFP should take it upon themselves to prevent planets from suffering natural disasters even if it means interfering with the cultures of the planet, is what I'm assuming you're saying.
What about non-natural disasters, though? If the UFP knows that a repressive regime is in control of a planet only because they assassinated the rightful rulers, should the UFP take it upon themselves to "save" the planet at that point?
First of all, I don't think it's legitimate to use seemingly undecidable cases as a pretext not to solve the obvious ones. IOW, it would be like a doctor refusing to treat a fairly common illness under the excuse that someday you could get an incurable disease!
Second, In case of non-natural disasters as you say, if the case is not clear, as when a fully armed and belligerent regime attacks unarmed and peaceful people (which happens very often), then you can have a committee of elected people (always better to have people represented on a large scale rather than people put there because "they got the diplomas" and most likely because they know influential people) and that committee can then make an informed decision that will then be executed by the captain(s) of the ship(s).
How can you interact with a alien culture from orbit?
First of all, I don't think it's legitimate to use seemingly undecidable cases as a pretext not to solve the obvious ones. IOW, it would be like a doctor refusing to treat a fairly common illness under the excuse that someday you could get an incurable disease!
Second, In case of non-natural disasters as you say, if the case is not clear, as when a fully armed and belligerent regime attacks unarmed and peaceful people (which happens very often), then you can have a committee of elected people (always better to have people represented on a large scale rather than people put there because "they got the diplomas" and most likely because they know influential people) and that committee can then make an informed decision that will then be executed by the captain(s) of the ship(s).
Not the Prime Directive, but rather a good example of the Butterfly Effect.If a Federation officer stops a local from a more primitive culture, has a chat with him and little later because of that the local walks into busy traffic and dies, wouldn't that be interfering with Prime Directive in a way? Who knows, he might have been local Cochrane and would have invented warp drive. Little things can have massive repercussions.
I'm not clear as to whether you're saying that I'm doing what you say in the first paragraph, as I only raised an actual case with regards to a non-natural disaster...
With regards to the second paragraph, is it not entirely possible that this is exactly what's led to the manners in which Picard has applied the PD to begin with? It's easy to trash Picard's decisions, but he's (presumably) following broader policy.
Not the Prime Directive, but rather a good example of the Butterfly Effect.
In any case, wouldn't the Prime Directive have been broken? No matter how small or big the interference is.
My suggestion, wait for other cultures to find their way into space, then make the first contact. Before that, stay in orbit.
To what avail?
Does there need to be something to gain from a first contact?
Let people live their lives, get to know them when you meet them in space.
And in the meantime you let them go extinct without lifting a finger?
Someone earlier mentioned 'who watches the watchers'. In this episode, Picard gives full disclosure after considering the alternative to be worse and not being capable of memory-wiping everyone. So apparently, he can decide something like this (or provisions for cases like these must have been built into the PD).
This is after involuntary partial exposure already had happened, which hasn't happened in the Boraalan's case (at least, if you don't count Nikolai being undercover there). Still.. it's a weird contrast: in one episode 'sending them back into the dark ages of superstition' is a sufficiently bad consequence for Picard to reveal themselves, in the other not even extinction is sufficient reason to try to rescue them.
Someone earlier mentioned 'who watches the watchers'. In this episode, Picard gives full disclosure after considering the alternative to be worse and not being capable of memory-wiping everyone. So apparently, he can decide something like this (or provisions for cases like these must have been built into the PD).
This is after involuntary partial exposure already had happened, which hasn't happened in the Boraalan's case (at least, if you don't count Nikolai being undercover there). Still.. it's a weird contrast: in one episode 'sending them back into the dark ages of superstition' is a sufficiently bad consequence for Picard to reveal themselves, in the other not even extinction is sufficient reason to try to rescue them.
Someone earlier mentioned 'who watches the watchers'. In this episode, Picard gives full disclosure after considering the alternative to be worse and not being capable of memory-wiping everyone. So apparently, he can decide something like this (or provisions for cases like these must have been built into the PD).
This is after involuntary partial exposure already had happened, which hasn't happened in the Boraalan's case (at least, if you don't count Nikolai being undercover there). Still.. it's a weird contrast: in one episode 'sending them back into the dark ages of superstition' is a sufficiently bad consequence for Picard to reveal themselves, in the other not even extinction is sufficient reason to try to rescue them.
The PD only makes sense as a way to protect people from being exploited by unscrupulous members of the Federation, otherwise, it makes no sense at all.
The unscrupulous probably wouldn't be stopped by a simple directive. What with them being unscrupulous and all...
I rather think it's also aimed at protecting Starfleet from falling into a mindset of "we should help everyone we can, and if we don't help everyone we can it indicates some sort of failure on our part".
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