Before the hearing, Data was treated exactly like a human being (including his right to leave Starfleet). Then the Jag ruled he was property of StarFleet, and then he had the freedom to choose.At the conclusion of the episode, the judge steadfastly refuses to declare Data sentient. This does not spell the end of Data's Starfleet career, though - quite apparently because sentience does not matter, and never did.
She says that "Lieutenant Commander Data has the freedom to choose" too. We don't usually say that a toaster has a freedom to toast, even if it's not our property. So in this contest, it's a quite important decision.Because the judge says so?
She's loath to create precedent, but here she is forced to. Quite possibly Data is the first piece of Starfleet property to verbalize a desire not to be that, allowing Louvois to declare the Acts not relevant to this case after all. Yet she precedes this decision by emphasizing that she's not addressing Data's metaphysical connotations, and then follows it by more of the same. So essentially, she's shunting the burden of further precedent-making to her successors, expressly limiting her own judgement to the "Is she SF property? No." bit.
And this is one of the numerous reasons why she is, in my opinion, a bad Jag (and probably in bad faith too, like I said in the other thread).It's her professional opinion that the Acts apply. She changes that opinion. She doesn't explain herself in either case, and thus probably will get away with it in both cases. And getting away is a good strategy here, considering how Data got away with it for more than a decade easily enough.
Amen! Like I said, she is the bad guy of the episode.Ruling, summarily, against someone due to lack of staff is a pretty shotty thing to do.
"I have no staff and am forcing someone into an uncomfortable position because I have no staff, if things don't go perfect I declare the subject of this is ordered to potentially die because this other guy's career is really important to him.
In that case, Picard would just tell that he's going to rip Data a new one; have him softened up in the basement till he talks; generally use the expressions that normally go with flesh-and-blood underlings who are too confident about the protection they feel they enjoy. This is a case of Picard expressing appropriate emotion, after all, not of him outlining a concrete battle plan; there's a message he wants to convey, even if it requires bending grammar, regulations or (just possibly) a few limbs.
Whether Picard would actually torture or otherwise violate his own crew if need be is an interesting issue as such. He has access to telepaths for probing Riker if the XO goes weird like Data here; he can tell Crusher to use fancy potions, too. There are times where he holds back from using force of this sort, but those are cases of delicate political intrigue, such as with Worf and the dying Romulan. In contrast, Starfleet employees enjoy few rights as regards privacy anyway. It's not as if there would have been concerns or consequences about Spock's probing Valeris, either: the interrogation was only cut short due to the interrogator not having the pain tolerance for the mutually damaging act.
But that's just the concrete side of it. As said, Picard is passing on a sentiment, expecting Data to get the hint.
Timo Saloniemi
She says that "Lieutenant Commander Data has the freedom to choose" too. We don't usually say that a toaster has a freedom to toast, even if it's not our property. So in this contest, it's a quite important decision.
And this is one of the numerous reasons why she is, in my opinion, a bad Jag (and probably in bad faith too, like I said in the other thread).
She doesn't explain her decisions, she doesn't consult any expert on the matter, she decided that Data was a property of SF without even talking with him, she doesn't pospone the hearing (why the hurry??). Who the heck put her in that delicate position?
With Picard I wouldn't worry about that as we know he's too moral to threaten Data in that way. He respects Data as a sentient being.
What's somewhat disturbing is the idea that Starfleet would strip Data to his wires a couple of years after the court experience.
Or that there was no follow up as to whether Data was a sentient being that had rights as a Fed citizen.
There was no "Fed" version of the supreme court that took the issue up to solve it once and for all? There should have been like a dozen jag lawyers and civilian lawyers on each side filing objections and motions.
Exactly. But in the episode Picard never tried to make this (obvious) argument. Instead he engaged in some nebulous discussion about "sentience", "humanity" or whatever.Lt. Cmdr. Data ... the ship's computer does not have a rank, there is not Sgt. Phaser, the Enterprise itself has no rank; Star Fleet does not give ranks to machines. Star Fleet gave Data a rank, thus already considers Data more than a mere machine.
Trying to argue that Data has rights and privileges on basis of being a Starfleet officer would be pretty futile, when the opposite side (including the presiding judge) already starts out with "Yes, he's obviously a Starfleet officer, but since he's a machine, too, he has squat". ...
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