I've been working my way through TNG in order to prepare for the Picard Series. My goal is to get up to "All Good Things" before the new series premieres. I'm up to the third season right now and I just finished watching "The Survivors".
Kevin Uxbridge will not kill under any circumstances. Then something occurred to me when Picard asked if he would kill even if his wife was in danger. This episode premiered on October 9th, 1989. Less than a year after the 1988 US Presidential Election. During the Second Debate, the first question that one of the moderators, Bernard Shaw of CNN, asked Micheal Dukakis (the Democratic candidate) was: if his wife were raped and murdered would he still be against the Death Penalty. Then Dukakis replied that he would still be against it no matter what.
I have to wonder if this debate question sparked the influence for putting together "The Survivors" and took it to an extreme? Kevin wouldn't kill even if his whole colony was under attack. Then he went from one extreme to the other by killing every Husnock, the race that attacked, in existence.
Kevin Uxbridge will not kill under any circumstances. Then something occurred to me when Picard asked if he would kill even if his wife was in danger. This episode premiered on October 9th, 1989. Less than a year after the 1988 US Presidential Election. During the Second Debate, the first question that one of the moderators, Bernard Shaw of CNN, asked Micheal Dukakis (the Democratic candidate) was: if his wife were raped and murdered would he still be against the Death Penalty. Then Dukakis replied that he would still be against it no matter what.
I have to wonder if this debate question sparked the influence for putting together "The Survivors" and took it to an extreme? Kevin wouldn't kill even if his whole colony was under attack. Then he went from one extreme to the other by killing every Husnock, the race that attacked, in existence.
Last edited: