Riker was commanding it then, also.
- Archer and Phlox not giving the cure to a genetical desease to the Valakians and thereby letting a whole sentient species die (ENT "Dear Doctor")
- Leaving a civilian prisoner (Mudd) behind in an Isis-inspired torture chamber (the Klingon prison), only because he ratted out some fellow prisoners to escape torture and execution (something MOST people in real life would have done) (DIS "Choose your pain")
I'm personally quite fond of that episode. It's a moral quandry episode. Moral quandries are one of my favorite types of Star Trek episodes. The science may be iffy, but it fosters a nice conversation about when humans are morally obligated to intervene and when they're morally obligated not to intervene.
Except, after the Enterprise was gone the Edo culture was intact and unchanged. If the experience with Picard and Wesley lead the Edosions to change their justice system, that would be their choice, and not something Picard forced upon them.he was violating the Prime Directive by interfering in the Edo's culture
A lumbering whale (admittedly armed) explorer ship destroyed by a highly malnuverable dedicated warship, yeah how did that happen?how the Enterprise was easily destroyed by some old klingon ship
- Archer and Phlox not giving the cure to a genetical desease to the Valakians and thereby letting a whole sentient species die (ENT "Dear Doctor")
In TNG's "Justice", I couldn't help but wonder if the writers had a death wish for Wesley.
When the Edos made their case against Wesley, the points that they made against Wesley were devastating. The Edos made extremely strong arguments about upholding the rule of law and of their right to protect their sovereignty and culture.
In contrast, the defense that Picard gave was relatively weak and self serving. I thought that the arguments that the Edos made were overwhelmingly more convincing than what Picard had to say.
Even Picard admitted that he was violating the Prime Directive by interfering in the Edo's culture. But he did so anyway. Picard and Crusher were the ones undermining the rule of law, and doing so blatantly, not to mention undercutting the Edo's culture.
If you hated Wesley then, there was no reason to feel any differently afterward, imo. This would have been the perfect opportunity for the writers to write off the boy, as harsh as it might have been.(Then again, it was lethal injection, a painless way to go, I suppose.)
After watching the episode, I felt that justice wasn't served. Wesley and Picard got off without paying any consequence. If the writers wanted the viewer to feel sympathy for Wesley or Picard at the end, they failed miserably, at least as far as I'm concerned. How Picard "resolved" the matter tainted him in a negative way forever, in my mind. This episode shaped my opinion of Picard going forward.
For an episode with half naked women in it, it ironically left a bitter taste.
Except, after the Enterprise was gone the Edo culture was intact and unchanged. If the experience with Picard and Wesley lead the Edosions to change their justice system, that would be their choice, and not something Picard forced upon them.
since we never see the Edo again
Now we have things like Game of Thrones on mainstream TV, I feel like Picard should revisit it, repeatably, to ensure we see the planet and its culture from all angles
A modern state of the art flagship of a thousand of its service's elite versus a twenty-year retired ship crewed by a couple dozen rebels cut off from their government and its military. Even the Duras sisters believed in a fair fight they'd be no match for the Enterprise, which they even said when Soran first commanded them to destroy it.A lumbering whale (admittedly armed) explorer ship destroyed by a highly malnuverable dedicated warship, yeah how did that happen?
Actually, the mistake there was in the casting. While it still wouldn't be that good an episode, had the guest characters been predominantly white, or lizard-men as they were intended to be in the original script that episode would not have been as racist as it ended up being. Even Tracy Torme, when asked about it said "all I'm saying is that episode did not turn out exactly as I intended."That entire episode was a mistake by its writers.
Wesley and the landing party were physically within the jurisdiction of the Edo, so the Edos had jurisdiction over them while they were physically on the planet.THe simple fact is, the Edoans had no right to execute Wesley, since he was an alien. They have no jurisdiction over him.
The Edos pleaded with Picard to not jail break Wesley. They acknowledged that Picard and Starfleet had the power to snatch away Wesley from their justice. They acknowledged that they were the weaker party, not in the moral sense, but in the power sense.Except, after the Enterprise was gone the Edo culture was intact and unchanged. If the experience with Picard and Wesley lead the Edosions to change their justice system, that would be their choice, and not something Picard forced upon them.A lumbering whale (admittedly armed) explorer ship destroyed by a highly malnuverable dedicated warship, yeah how did that happen?
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