I wonder what the health tests from one of the early TOS episodes would like like in a more DSC-esque sickbay.
Considering they repair DNA damage from radiation by...firing antimatter into your cells, I don't think I want to know what they do.
I wonder what the health tests from one of the early TOS episodes would like like in a more DSC-esque sickbay.
No, they absolutely had to do with each other. It was Deep Space Nine that introduced the idea that there was an in-canon explanation as to why they looked different when the audience knew full well that it was simply a design change due to larger budgets allowing for it. Had it not been for this brief exchange in the episode, Enterprise (and perhaps the franchise at large) would not have made any attempt to explain this.
Odo: Who ordered raktajino?
Waitress: The Kingons.
Odo: Klingons?
Waitress: Yes. Right over there.
Bashir: Those are Klingons?
Waitress: All right, you boys have had enough.
Odo: Mister Worf?
Worf: They are Klingons. It is a...long story.
O'Brien: What happened? Some kind of genetic engineering?
Bashir: A viral mutation?
Worf: We do not discuss it with outsiders!
I'll concede that it gave said canon explanation that there was a change. Except by attempting to explain it, they made things worse.
So, not only does Bashir, who is one of Starfleet's most up-and-coming doctors (who also knows a thing or two about genetic engineering himself), not know the origin of the Augment virus, but Worf doesn't want to talk about it even though both Bashir and O'Brien correctly guess the reason for it. Never mind that the Augment virus was known to Phlox and presumably Starfleet medical, and obviously Starfleet command, since it would be pretty damn important that their officers know that an alien enemy of Earth now looks like humans.
Disco is not about the battle of Donatu V, it simply made another reference to it. It having apparently happened during the hundred years there was no contact between the Federation and the Klingons along with the attack on the colony Michael lived with her parents.The event mentioned might have been the Battle of Donatu V.
Disco is not about the battle of Donatu V, it simply made another reference to it. It having apparently happened during the hundred years there was no contact between the Federation and the Klingons along with the attack on the colony Michael lived with her parents.
Again, like so many continuity sticklers around here do, you are assuming that the characters should have the exact same level of knowledge of past events as we, the viewers, do. You're talking about an event that took close to two centuries before Bashir was even born. Bashir, himself, knowing, as you put it, a thing or two about genetic engineering, doesn't necessarily mean that he is a subject matter expert on the topic or the Klingons. We've seen throughout Star Trek that Starfleet doctors can lack the medical knowledge of other species.
A good amount of a doctor's time is spent researching. If he had a reason to research the augment virus before their mission to the Enterprise, then he could have easily done so assuming the events we saw in Enterprise are in Starfleet's historical database; but that wasn't why they went to the past. They went there strictly to stop Kirk from being assassinated and you saw how surprised both Sisko and Dax were when Koloth's ship arrived, so they clearly didn't expect there to be Klingons about.
It's utterly ridiculous that you would expect a character to basically recite the event from nearly two centuries earlier completely off the top of his head beat by beat.
Which should have piqued his interest because it is both a medical matter, and it involves genetic engineering.I don't have to be a 'continuity stickler' to point out obvious flaws in logic. There's no way Bashir would not have known about the Augment virus, much less anyone else. Just because it happened 200 years ago means nothing. The relevant info would have been in the Federation/Starfleet historical database.
And no contact doesn't me no conflict. They may have just meant no official communication between the governments, or no transmissions were sent during those incidents.
I don't have to be a 'continuity stickler' to point out obvious flaws in logic. There's no way Bashir would not have known about the Augment virus, much less anyone else. Just because it happened 200 years ago means nothing. The relevant info would have been in the Federation/Starfleet historical/medical database.
There'd be no relevant reason to know that information right off the top of his head just because he happened to be faced with some human-looking Klingons in addition to him being genetically-modified.
You think that Klingon physiology and Augment history was something that Bashir had no knowledge of whatsoever before that point?
As an episode it shows Bashir's and O'Brien's lack of familiarity with Starfleet history, i.e. not recognizing the uniform design, rank braids, or Klingon history. O'Brien even mistakes someone else for Kirk.
The novel made it more understandableWell, it was a homage and a big joke, but trek fans could not enjoy it for what it was
Well that isn’t what the show implies.My definition of "no contact" is "I haven't heard a peep out of them." By that logic, engaging in space battles even without communication, is contact.
Well, it was a homage and a big joke, but trek fans could not enjoy it for what it was
Well that isn’t what the show implies.
I’ll take the on screen evidence over your definition
I enjoyed T&T immensely. It was the ENT Augment episodes that I thought were dumb.
T&T was not my thing, but it was a funny homage episode many fans could not take as it was intended. I really am hoping DSC retcons out the stupid ENT argument retcon
Didn't they already do that?
Voq had to be surgically altered into Tyler. If they had the Augment virus, they could have just turned him into a human that way.
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