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Spoilers Star Trek: Picard 1x04 - "Absolute Candor"

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Ive described the show that we are ALL watching. Maybe you just thought that the BrainGenius was right to say that Picard should not turn to the many he knows, cares about and would do whatever he ask. He needs to turn to the people who HATE him.

That's what you always do when in trouble right? Dont we all hand wave the people who love us, care about us and would love to help? I know I do. Whenever I am trouble, the only people I ask, are the ones I know hate me.

Because that is a 100% rational thing to do. Doesn't everyone refuse to ask friends and allies? It is always to enemies that we ALL turn when we need it most. TOTALLY rational!
And more yawn.
 
People in this thread explained it to you. Not once, not twice, but multiple times over the last few pages. Yet you chose to ignore this explanations posting the same tired rant over and over. Now tell me, do you think that this is rational?
This is the flip side to the endless Mary Sue argument. Both arguments are fallacious and both are unsupported by the show.
 
Doesnt that sound crazy to you though? I cant ask them! They would actually do it!! I need ask people who hate me! Whhhaaaatttt?

Picard can find capable people who would actually do it (i.e., risk their lives on a dangerous -- but important -- mission) strictly because they choose to and not because they feel bound by loyalty and duty. And Picard does find those capable people in Raffi, Rios, and Elnor. They are shown potentially to be as just as capable as Worf, Geordi, and the others.

I mean, it would be quite a dick move by Picard to ask people on a dangerous mission whom he KNOWS would agree to go just because they are loyal to him. Picard knows the right thing to do is to ask capable people who feel no such loyalty and could easily say no to him.

Granted, Worf, Geordi, and the others might have gone along even if they weren't so duty-bound to Picard. However, the point is that Picard can never be sure that it wasn't out of loyalty. And he wants to be sure.
 
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Ive been soooo wrong! You guys are right. When you are in trouble we ALL always turn to our enemies for help! Whoever cares the least about us is who we should turn to in our hour of need. Never, EVER ask the people who love and care about us for help. Always turn to those who do not give a F about you!

That just makes perfect sense! To hell with the people who care about us, are competent, brilliant and can help us solve the problem. Always ask the people who do not give a F!! They are the best!
 
which reminds me, if Picard is a "moral MS" how can he be dickish?
Indeed.

Ive been soooo wrong! You guys are right. When you are in trouble we ALL always turn to our enemies for help! Whoever cares the least about us is who we should turn to in our hour of need. Never, EVER ask the people who love and care about us for help. Always turn to those who do not give a F about you!

That just makes perfect sense! To hell with the people who care about us, are competent, brilliant and can help us solve the problem. Always ask the people who do not give a F!! They are the best!
All explained in the show. All explained in post after post by many board members.

Your bafflement is due to you, not the show.
 
Ive been soooo wrong! You guys are right. When you are in trouble we ALL always turn to our enemies for help! Whoever cares the least about us is who we should turn to in our hour of need. Never, EVER ask the people who love and care about us for help. Always turn to those who do not give a F about you!

That just makes perfect sense! To hell with the people who care about us, are competent, brilliant and can help us solve the problem. Always ask the people who do not give a F!! They are the best!

All right, you don't buy the explanations or rationalizations people are giving you. But why are you characterizing JL's crew as his enemies?
 
Granted, Worf, Geordi, and the others might have gone along even if they weren't so duty-bound to Picard. However, the point is that Picard can never be sure that it wasn't out of loyalty. And he wants to be sure.

Why would it be bad if it was out of loyalty though? No one does this. No one ever says "I cant't ask the amazing, brilliant people who know me!..I need to ask the people who hate me!"

No one does that. There is no logical or moral rationale for it. "I do not want people who are loyal to me! I only want people who are here bec I stuffed enough latinum in their pockets!"
 
Sooo...lets not risk old friends! But Raffi and Romulan kid....yeah he can risk them. If Romulan kid gets killed....thats not like Worf dying! Picard actually gives a F about Worf. It won't be like someone he CARES about dying. That would actually bother him.

Totally NOT a dick move.

He's not sending these people on suicide missions. He isn't expecting them to die.

What he is doing is telling each of these people how dangerous the mission might be and letting them decide for themselves whether or not they choose to go (again, withOUT a sense of loyaty to Picard being a factor.

Picard was ready to walk away from Raffi and Elnor after they initially said no. He was disappointed, but accepted their decisions. Picard feels that if he asked his old Enterprise crew, their loyalty to him would cloud their ability to freely say no.
 
Why would it be bad if it was out of loyalty though? No one does this. No one ever says "I cant't ask the amazing, brilliant people who know me!..I need to ask the people who hate me!"

No one does that. There is no logical or moral rationale for it. "I do not want people who are loyal to me! I only want people who are here bec I stuffed enough latinum in their pockets!"
Explained already. Picard doesn't want more guilt. Your failure to get that is all on you.
 
I think the episode made it pretty clear that Picard didn't want Elnor to go along on the trip initially due to his fondness for him as a boy, his youth, and the risk the mission had for his life. It was the pressing of Zani that got him to relent. She recognized Elnor for what he was - a young man trained to be a warrior with no real cause to live for, trapped in a position/place in life that didn't really suit him.
 
Explained already. Picard doesn't want more guilt. Your failure to get that is all on you.

Picard's motivation was understandable. At the same time, it should be noted that Data was probably more distant from Picard than anyone else on the TNG main cast. I mean, a mission to go save "Data's daughter" isn't really a mission for Picard, it's a mission for Data! I'm not sold on the fact that it's up to Jean-Luc, for example, to decide that Geordi wouldn't be able to help do one good deed for his departed best friend.
 
Why would it be bad if it was out of loyalty though? No one does this. No one ever says "I cant't ask the amazing, brilliant people who know me!..I need to ask the people who hate me!"

No one does that. There is no logical or moral rationale for it. "I do not want people who are loyal to me! I only want people who are here bec I stuffed enough latinum in their pockets!"
Because Data sacrificed himself for Picard and JL feels guilty
 
Ive described the show that we are ALL watching. Maybe you just thought that the BrainGenius was right to say that Picard should not turn to the many he knows, cares about and would do whatever he ask. He needs to turn to the people who HATE him.

That's what you always do when in trouble right? Dont we all hand wave the people who love us, care about us and would love to help? I know I do. Whenever I am trouble, the only people I ask, are the ones I know hate me.

Because that is a 100% rational thing to do. Doesn't everyone refuse to ask friends and allies? It is always to enemies that we ALL turn when we need it most. TOTALLY rational!

Ive been soooo wrong! You guys are right. When you are in trouble we ALL always turn to our enemies for help! Whoever cares the least about us is who we should turn to in our hour of need. Never, EVER ask the people who love and care about us for help. Always turn to those who do not give a F about you!

That just makes perfect sense! To hell with the people who care about us, are competent, brilliant and can help us solve the problem. Always ask the people who do not give a F!! They are the best!

Just stop. All you're doing is repeating yourself.
 
Why would it be bad if it was out of loyalty though? No one does this. No one ever says "I cant't ask the amazing, brilliant people who know me!..I need to ask the people who hate me!"

No one does that. There is no logical or moral rationale for it. "I do not want people who are loyal to me! I only want people who are here bec I stuffed enough latinum in their pockets!"
For a potentially dangerous and life-threatening mission? Maybe they should say "I can't ask the people who would never turn me down."

And he isn't asking people who hate him or getting people to come just for the payday; Raffi and Elnor don't hate Picard. They might have hated a thing that he has done, but they don't hate him.

However, Picard knows they are good and capable people, and that's why he asked them (along with the knowledge that they could say no if they wanted). As for Rios, it is true that he's getting paid, but he was chosen by Raffi, and I suspect that Picard knows Raffi well enough to trust her judgement on Rios.
 
Picard's motivation was understandable. At the same time, it should be noted that Data was probably more distant from Picard than anyone else on the TNG main cast. I mean, a mission to go save "Data's daughter" isn't really a mission for Picard, it's a mission for Data! I'm not sold on the fact that it's up to Jean-Luc, for example, to decide that Geordi wouldn't be able to help do one good deed for his departed best friend.
Yeah, Picard's whole go find the missing daughter (assuming there even is one and hasn't already been destroyed) somewhere in the galaxy was a bit wonky. Better she hadn't died at all and they just went looking for the Romulans after her and left that cube as a reveal later in the series.
 
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