Well, Picard most likely indeed is right, but the opposing viewpoint is not cartoonishly evil.
Shall we go down the list of the many times the opposing viewpoint of Picard has been shown to be "cartoonishly evil"? Because it's a long list.
Well, Picard most likely indeed is right, but the opposing viewpoint is not cartoonishly evil.
We don't know that yet...he doesn't visit Star Fleet Command until Episode 2...Well, Picard most likely indeed is right, but the opposing viewpoint is not cartoonishly evil.
If it makes you happy, but we're talking about this episode.Shall we go down the list of the many times the opposing viewpoint of Picard has been shown to be "cartoonishly evil"? Because it's a long list.
Yes, that’s my expected outcome, and the difference in the two shows. (I hope.)
inter arma enim silent leges.
Star Trek has played with moral gray areas a lot and I don't want to assume that one captain is "a good guy" always. They are allowed to be wrong, to make wrong choices to screw up morally.
I will agree to disagree. I think Picard is the perfect kind of character to work within a moral conflict, when the answer is not completely clear. I think that Star Trek, as a format, lends itself to that kind of storytelling and worldbuilding.That’s not the kind of conflict you can reliably work with around the Picard character,
If it makes you happy, but we're talking about this episode.
Did you watch Discovery, or just what the hacks on youtube like Midnight's Edge say about the show? Because they are about as accurately reductive of the show as you are. Picard and TNG has even faced the genocide issue, and guess what, he spent no more time considering the "issue" of genocide in I, Borg than Discovery does. But I guess if its Picard saying the requisite speech at the end of the episode, then the issue has been considered deeply by default, right?
I'm sure that somehow made sense in your head, but I'm not quite sure what you're babbling about.There's only one issue that dominates this episode, and only one antagonist that Picard has to overcome. And when the moment comes, there's no struggle, there's no lets look at all sides, there's no moral conflice. There's one decision to be made, and it isn't questioned any less perfunctorily than Disco has previously. But since its Picard making the decision, no one is bothered and its automatically assumed to be well considered.
Did you watch Discovery, or just what the hacks on youtube like Midnight's Edge say about the show? Because they are about as accurately reductive of the show as you are. Picard and TNG has even faced the genocide issue, and guess what, he spent no more time considering the "issue" of genocide in I, Borg than Discovery does. But I guess if its Picard saying the requisite speech at the end of the episode, then the issue has been considered deeply by default, right?
That's the genesis of dreadfully boring drama.Picard being right is a foregone conclusion.
Put it this way... anytime a character was shown to have suffered rape, or as near as in its SF way, under Picard, they didn’t then...to my memory...then sweep that part of the story under the carpet, and have the character shack up and conceive a child with their rapist. The writers in those days certainly never clumsily ran down that path then ran back from it twice as fast.
I sort of mostly like DISCO, I certainly do t actively dislike it, but it’s flaws were on show, flaws which so far this series doesn’t have, and historically flaws it’s narrative predecessors never suffered from either. The DSC vs PIC fight is fruitless, firstly because it’s unnecessary, but secondly because it’s objectively one sided. The hand is stacked. So better not to have it.
Yes, same way like no one likes James Bond films because it is foregone conclusion that Bond will ruin the bad guy's plans in the end.That's the genesis of dreadfully boring drama.
Whataboutism doesn’t invalidate criticism of Discovery. It’s a modern streaming show in the era of peak TV, trying terribly hard to seem “adult.” Yet it gives us simplistic, juvenile commentary like “genocide is bad” as it wraps up a war with a tidy bow in the last episode.
Do I expect more from Discovery than from TNG 30 years ago? Yes, absolutely.
I'm sure that somehow made sense in your head, but I'm not quite sure what you're babbling about.
Well, let's be fair, we've only seen one episode. There's plenty of time for them to fuck this up.Exactly so.
One episode in, at least, Picard does a lot to take away the sour taste of two years of STD. There are a lot of differences between the shows, but at base it comes back to the writing. Picard's well-written, and STD isn't.
Whataboutism doesn’t invalidate criticism of Discovery. It’s a modern streaming show in the era of peak TV, trying terribly hard to seem “adult.” Yet it gives us simplistic, juvenile commentary like “genocide is bad” as it wraps up a war with a tidy bow in the last episode.
Do I expect more from Discovery than from TNG 30 years ago? Yes, absolutely.
Exactly so.
One episode in, at least, Picard does a lot to take away the sour taste of two years of STD. There are a lot of differences between the shows, but at base it comes back to the writing. Picard's well-written, and STD isn't.
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