I think we're talking past one another. I don't see what the difference is.That, with all due respect, is not the point I was discussing.

Kor
I think we're talking past one another. I don't see what the difference is.That, with all due respect, is not the point I was discussing.
Fair enough about the Defiant. Pike can still resign over what he saw and Starfleet couldn't do anything to him about it.You seem to forget:
There is the Temporal Prime Directive - and it probably came into being BECAUSE of the whole 'Red Angel' situation. Hell, DS9 showed there was a 'Temporal Investigation' section of Star Fleet and it had definitely existed since the 23rd century as they new all about Kirk, and considered him a temporal menace.
There always was poverty in Trek, they just redefined poverty by saying "Is Raffi starving? She has a replicator right? She has a home even if its trailer sized? There, she's not poor."Remember when Picard was lecturing the rich guy from the twentieth century? It would seem that there are still people with enormous estates and others who live in quasi poverty. Maybe the rich guy was still rich after all and Picard was just pulling his leg.![]()
You seem to forget:
There is the Temporal Prime Directive - and it probably came into being BECAUSE of the whole 'Red Angel' situation. Hell, DS9 showed there was a 'Temporal Investigation' section of Star Fleet and it had definitely existed since the 23rd century as they new all about Kirk, and considered him a temporal menace.
I know. After I sent the entry, I remembered him.Um...Space Legolas still hasn't shown up.![]()
Maybe the rich guy was still rich after all and Picard was just pulling his leg.
Would using contemporary slang in a show set on 18th century make it fell more 'real' to you as well? Personally I want portrayal of future to be a bit more than rayguns and rubberhead aliens; you should at least try to hint that it is a different time via speech, customs and values. Making the future to be like today makes it less real to me, not more.I love it. Makes the world feel more real, less sterile. Everyday people instead of stuck up starfleet types.
I guess we can toss out the rumors that the Romulan samurai is Laris and Zhaban's son? I know that was a rumor going around, but there's no indication so far that this is true.I know. After I sent the entry, I remembered him.![]()
Fair enough about the Defiant. Pike can still resign over what he saw and Starfleet couldn't do anything to him about it.
Making the future to be like today makes it less real to me, not more.
they don't need to exist then - they can come from 3214 to whack whatever captain they want toBecause they knew about Kirk doesn't mean they existed as a department that far back. I'm sure whenever the department came into be, they studied Starfleet records for incidents of time travel.
And the Defiant absolutely had to die to allow our heroes to save all the multiverse from Mirror Stamets' meddling.
Would using contemporary slang in a show set on 18th century make it fell more 'real' to you as well? Personally I want portrayal of future to be a bit more than rayguns and rubberhead aliens; you should at least try to hint that it is a different time via speech, customs and values. Making the future to be like today makes it less real to me, not more.
Good episode! A bit slow at times, but it featured several fun scenes.
1. The EMH listing off Picard's credentials: "Chief contact with the Q continuum, arbiter of succession for the Klingon Empire, savior of Earth from Borg invasion, Captain of the Enterprises D and E. The man even worked alongside the great Spock!".
2. The TNG fanfare as Picard considers sitting in the captain's chair, then later when he says "Engage" and La Sirena warps off -- pure nostalgia!
Laris also alludes to the fact that the captured Romulan is a "northerner", like Zhaban. Perhaps bumpy foreheads are from the north?
yes, he was - at the very end. He was watching Soji speak to a reclaimed Borg in its own language and commented on it to himself.Hugh wasn’t in episode 2
Yes, the same Spock who's so great that he's never mentioned at all in regards to the Romulan supernova, which itself is always discussed, or how it suddenly disappeared into a black hole Spock created.The man even worked alongside the great Spock!".
Assuming they were referring to the northern hemisphere of Romulus, how would such radical speciation occur to demonstrate such physical characteristic changes on the same world, when they are relative newcomers? Cross-breeding with Remans, perhaps?Good episode! A bit slow at times, but it featured several fun scenes.
1. The EMH listing off Picard's credentials: "Chief contact with the Q continuum, arbiter of succession for the Klingon Empire, savior of Earth from Borg invasion, Captain of the Enterprises D and E. The man even worked alongside the great Spock!".
2. The TNG fanfare as Picard considers sitting in the captain's chair, then later when he says "Engage" and La Sirena warps off -- pure nostalgia!
Laris also alludes to the fact that the captured Romulan is a "northerner", like Zhaban. Perhaps bumpy foreheads are from the north?
we more or less know how people talked in the 19th centurie - 24th not so much
... do we scrap cecille b demille's work entirely (not a bad idea for any reason)?
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