Well, there is nothing new under the sunNot bad but we already have that one it's: "La beauté est dans les yeux de celui qui regarde"

Well, there is nothing new under the sunNot bad but we already have that one it's: "La beauté est dans les yeux de celui qui regarde"
“If you can't take a little bloody nose, maybe you ought to go back home, and crawl under your bed. It's not safe out here! It's wondrous...with treasures to satiate desires both subtle and gross; but it's not for the timid.”
Exactly.The Enterprise crew were fully prepared to destroy it if it posed an imminent threat to the ship or to a nearby colony, but where they were, the shields were holding up and they had some time before a colony was threatened, so they wanted to take a chance to communicate with it to show that they were intelligent beings like it was and that intelligent life was being harmed by its feeding. Like Picard said, feeding animals aren't evil, they're just feeding.
She unilaterally took away any option to find a peaceful solution first and destroyed as far as they knew a unique lifeform. It's the antithesis of the entire point of Starfleet and the franchise Star Trek itself. Seek out new life, not destroy it when you have time to try and change its feeding patterns through communication.
The same thing could be said about AIDS, it doesn't want us any harm, it's just reproducing. I mean with that kind of excuse you never get rid of any danger.
That thing had killed millions of people and it would have gone on killing people until it was stopped. Picard et al. were willing selfishly to risk it escaping and destroying another settlement because they were protected against it. That's cowardly. You don't put the lives of PEOPLE in anger just because you keep telling yourself how great you are for "seeking new life". Even if it's a life that kills and kills again. That life has also conspired with an android to kill people and it spared the android proving that it was capable of plotting and allying itself with beings. At this point, the only decent thing to do was to kill that thing. Like Ripley said in Alien II, "it's the only way to be sure."
If you wish to maintain the pretense that you are highly evolved civilized people the first thing you don't do is put innocent human/humanoid lives at risk just keep a thing that's killed millions of them alive.
Exactly.
Speaking of silicon, it would be kind of like if, in "The Devil in the Dark," Vanderberg had swiped a phaser-2 from one of the Enterprise people and killed the Mother Horta while Spock was still trying to make peace with her.
Notice that I said "kind of like" and not "exactly like." It's as if I acknowledged that there are differences between the situations up front.Not exactly the crystal thing wasn't seeking revenge on people attacking its progeny. Plus unlike the Horta, it didn't have anything to offer except stop killing people... Yeah, like that was gonna happen... Plus as I said there was the danger of it escaping and killing ye another settlement before the Enterprise could catch up with it. But why would they care they are protected, so what if ten thousand more colonists pay for their experiment... I doubt they'll lose any sleep over it. They never have before.
...
Hardly the foundation of an evolved civilization.
How did she know that killing it wouldn’t bring the entire Crystalline Army down on them?
It was an act of revenge based on her personal feelings. Again, there is no nobility in it at all.
That’s no way to interact with new species.
Yeah, it's another bogus reason. Riker could very well have given Geordi his eyesight back and then decided not to be a Q anymore. In which case Geordi's sight would have been completely free of charge but hey, far be it from to deprive a would-be martyr of an occasion to become one.![]()
Indeed yes. Made all the worse by the fact that they were trying to communicate and receiving a response. The possibility of dialog was cut short. It was vengeance, pure and simple.How did she know that killing it wouldn’t bring the entire Crystalline Army down on them?
It was an act of revenge based on her personal feelings. Again, there is no nobility in it at all.
That’s no way to interact with new species.
With Q there are always strings attached. Picard was aware of that and so was the crew. So, it wasn't as simple as being painted here. Geordi may have wanted Riker's gift but he knew what was being asked of Riker.
Maybe that episode was their first contact with aliens?
No, It's "The Doctor, when Vesuvius blew".If you met an alien for the first time, would you assume he knows the story of Pompei?
“Shaka, when Vesuvius blew”.
It’s absurd.
but how do we know that Q wouldn’t have just taken Geordi’s sight away again.
If it’s perceived that Riker pulled a fast one just get his buddy eyesight I don’t think Q would have just sat there wagging his finger saying “you may have won this round Riker…but I’ll get you next time”.
In “Hide and Q,” they are basically in a fight to “save Riker’s soul from the devil.”
Geordi refuses the gift of natural eyesight completely on this basis. To accept is to enable Riker’s path toward being a Q. Geordi had absolutely no choice in the matter, if they were to successfully save his friend and fellow officer.
Exactly. Geordi isn't willing to give up Riker's humanity in the name of "gifts. "In “Hide and Q,” they are basically in a fight to “save Riker’s soul from the devil.”
Geordi refuses the gift of natural eyesight completely on this basis. To accept is to enable Riker’s path toward being a Q. Geordi had absolutely no choice in the matter, if they were to successfully save his friend and fellow officer.
Geordi is a cipher, a plot point, not a person.
"I will forgo having real eyes so that Riker is not incited to remain a Q"
Yeah, that's plausible... in a pig's eye (as Bones would say).
But since none of this is real, whatever... You can believe what you want.
Riker (to Picard): "How did you know?"
Picard:" I read the script."
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.