Pretty much built in.Dude,do you even Star Trek? "Whack over the head" is a feature, not a bug.![]()
Pretty much built in.Dude,do you even Star Trek? "Whack over the head" is a feature, not a bug.![]()
I don't know. The Prime Directive is a UFP thing, I think, not a Starfleet directive?I might have to rewatch but didn't Robert April say that the Federation High Court (I assume another name for the Federation Supreme Court) had to be convinced not to punish Pike for the non-interference directive violations? Why would they be involved? Wouldn't jurisdiction fall under a Starfleet/military court tribunal or court martial?
That's ok. It became that in 1988.For me this is what TNG should have been in 1987.
True, though Trek has usually made those points through alegories rather than direct references.Dude,do you even Star Trek? "Whack over the head" is a feature, not a bug.
Sometimes, instead of a parable, you just need a big stick.True, though Trek has usually made those points through alegories rather than direct references.
Yeah...no.Adding a female version of Dr. McCoy <> TNG becoming TOS - not by a LONG SHOT.That's ok. It became that in 1988.
Actually TOS's use of more subtle allegories was deliberately designed to evade network censors. Thus Trek's history of talking about issues sideways by using aliens and not spelling it out.Dude,do you even Star Trek? "Whack over the head" is a feature, not a bug.
Who says it's the same Kyle?
Trek has been "cringe political" since at bare minimum 1966. If you're complaining now then you must be like Mr. Short Term Memory from SNL.
Sometimes, instead of a parable, you just need a big stick.
And MASH was all about about the Korean conflict while directly commenting on Vietnam.True, though Trek has usually made those points through alegories rather than direct references.
True, though Trek has usually made those points through alegories rather than direct references.
Hey, at least Pulaski had a personality.Yeah...no.Adding a female version of Dr. McCoy <> TNG becoming TOS - not by a LONG SHOT.
I didn't say Trek was subtle. I said it usually did its thing through alegories, not direct references. I'm just highlighting a difference with SNW's Jan6 shots.And MASH was all about about the Korean conflict while directly commenting on Vietnam.
It's not as subtle as Trek like to think that it is sometimes.
It was still an allegory.I'm going to play my "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" card again.
You can also toss in the wild card ... "A Private Little War".I'm going to play my "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" card again.
The scene where Spock goes to visit Pike in his quarters made me laugh a bit because PIke was just staring directly out into that light show as Spock comes in. I was half expecting him to turn around bleary-eyed and say "welcome in.. uh.. Una?"Some of the special effects are a bit OTT - the warp effect felt like every room had a "discotheque" set of windows
Nope. Pike even said it himself. The lesson was pulled directly from "The Day The Earth Stood Still," lampshaded earlier in the episode.Wasn't that the opposite of what was being argued in the episode?
Ah, thought you were still referring to t’pring.Trellium-D
Ah, I had something similar happening at my first programming exam!Reminds me of a test that a college Professor once gave in my 'English Comprehension' course on the first day.
His instructions before hand were to read the first page and then proceed.
There were 15 pages to the exam. (about 120 questions)
At the top of the first page it said...
Read all the questions.
Then answer to the best of your ability.
Then sign at the bottom of the last page, turn in the exam papers and leave.
Myself and two other students were done within the first five minutes...
Everyone else stared at us as we turned in the test and left.
The kicker was Question #120, it read ...
"After reading all the questions, don't answer any, sign your name below and you can leave."
good point: how can a tradition involve an illegal practice?Might even be a new thing they have started to embrace once they decided mind melds were also okay to do
No, it teaches paying attention to instructions.That makes for a good story. But as a teaching lesson it's kind of a bad one, the big lesson in there is "blind obedience", not critical thinking.
In fairness, those instructions are vague.No, it teaches paying attention to instructions.
It was still an allegory.
Well, sure, if you like wiping your ass with 220-grit sandpaper.Hey, at least Pulaski had a personality.
I'd kind of hope that SNW Kyle had moved on by the time TOS Kyle shows up. But it is the Enterprise, where the motto is "Crew for life".Two guys on the Enterprise serving as transporter chiefs seems a stretch...!
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