It's welcome as fuck.Edit: I replaced two words with "F***" (now using stars). I am not sure, whether writing the actual words is welcome here, so sorry, if it is not welcome.
It's welcome as fuck.Edit: I replaced two words with "F***" (now using stars). I am not sure, whether writing the actual words is welcome here, so sorry, if it is not welcome.
If you mean he woke up and saw that the Federation he represented wasn't what he thought it was and wasn't afraid to let people know it, and wouldn't be a lapdog for Starfleet Command's terrible decisions, then I agree.Good point. The Picard in PIC, season 1, did not nearly have the integrity of the Picard in TNG.
Yes, the Federation would normally have offered no aid but they did so the post-Dominion War Federation was willing to overlook the "internal matter" of the Romulans and do a lot of humanitarian aid regardless of the Prime Directive.
(I think people overly romanticize the TNG Federation)
I used the term "victim blaming" because Picard seems wholly unconcerned about the Martian victims versus the Romulan ones. It feels like his attitude is monofocused and shows a marked lack of sympathy for the trauma endured by the Federation or how it might shift priorities.
No, I didn't mean it that way. In the one scene in the past where he threatened with this resignation, he showed integrity and that's good. And that he then actually resigned also is understandable - one does not threaten with something, if one is not prepared to do it.If you mean he woke up and saw that the Federation he represented wasn't what he thought it was and wasn't afraid to let people know it, and wouldn't be a lapdog for Starfleet Command's terrible decisions, then I agree.
No, I didn't mean it that way. In the one scene in the past where he threatened with this resignation, he showed integrity and that's good. And that he then actually resigned also is understandable - one does not threaten with something, if one is not prepared to do it.
But then he just gave up - even as a civilian he still had other relations that he could at least have tried to use. But he was so shocked and offended by Starfleet letting him go, that he just went to his chateau and buried himself for 14 years. Here, I see a big loss of integrity.
Also, the whole mission of season 1, Picard is very clearly considering as a suicide mission, but he does not tell the others that he considers it a suicide mission. I think if you hire people for a suicide mission, you should tell them that it is a suicide mission. But here we have something like "I will die, but I need company when I die. Well, I won't ask Beverly and Will or Laris and Zhaban, because I like them and don't want them to die, too. So, who is totally broke? Let's get Raffi on board to die and this one Romulan child I once abandoned!" ... It came off really creepy.
Well, the designated goal was to save Soji from a secret Romulan assassin squad. Picard saw how Dahj was murdered by this squad. Laris and he found that the Romulan squad had the ability to change Federation surveillance recordings to cover up their attack. Laris even told him about the Zhat Vash.He does think it will be dangerous and doesn't want to endanger any of his other friends (apparently Data dying in Nemesis had a more profound effect on him than we realized) but the goal was mostly just to get Bruce Maddox and see if they could help Soji avoid assassins.
I don't think Picard realized it would turn into a massive conflict with an ancient cult.
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