Needs of the many being explored in an uncomfortable way.
You must have seen a different version of TNT than did because if this were a TNG episode, you can be sure they would have gotten a 10 minute and usually somewhat hypocritical sermon speech by Picard before he beamed off.I loved this episode. It really reminds me of the old TNG era where people would have differences of opinion and give their ideas on them in order to let the viewer decide. The dichotomy between sacrificing the child for the well being of everyone and having many people in small amounts of suffering is an interesting philosophic idea to explore.
Nope.You guys never noticed how TNG would give multiple viewpoints on different topics and issues in contrast to DS9(Picard and Disco) where they give one viewpoint and the other viewpoint is just cartoonish villainy.
Hahaha...nope, not really. Picard usually just gets up and leaves in a huff if they don't listen.You guys never noticed how TNG would give multiple viewpoints on different topics and issues in contrast to DS9(Picard and Disco) where they give one viewpoint and the other viewpoint is just cartoonish villainy.
This was not a "let the viewer decide" story. I think you fundamentally misunderstand both this and a lot of TNG. It's very rare for them not to telegraph the point of view with which they sympathize, and that has always been true.I loved this episode. It really reminds me of the old TNG era where people would have differences of opinion and give their ideas on them in order to let the viewer decide. The dichotomy between sacrificing the child for the well being of everyone and having many people in small amounts of suffering is an interesting philosophic idea to explore.
TNG usually presented two sides of a situation:You guys never noticed how TNG would give multiple viewpoints on different topics and issues in contrast to DS9(Picard and Disco) where they give one viewpoint and the other viewpoint is just cartoonish villainy.
This was not a "let the viewer decide" story. I think you fundamentally misunderstand both this and a lot of TNG. It's very rare for them not to telegraph the point of view with which they sympathize, and that has always been true.
According to the U.S. Dept. of Housing & Urban Development, only about 25% of homeless people have a serious mental illness. The National Homelessness Law Center points out that the leading causes of homelessness are lack of affordable housing, unemployment, poverty, and low wages, in that order.
Most homeless people are not in their situation because of mental illness.
You are overstating the extent to which the "help options" actually exist. The "help options" are often deeply authoritarian, unsafe, and/or inadequate to the level of need.
While this is true, most people mean the "visible homeless" who live on the streets when talking about homelessness. They always forget about the much larger homeless population that crashes on friend's couches, sleeps in their cars, or always stays in shelters.
You're making the opposite of the point you think you are, here. One out of four in any population is huge, suggesting that people are reasonable in seeing a correlation.
NIH statistics on serious mental health problems population-wide.
I'll call 25% "many" with a clear conscience.
In America, federal funding and consequently services and support for people with serious emotional and cognitive problems was cut down substantially by the Carter and Reagan administrations, leading to a surge in the homeless population. It's actually a range of problems that continue to this day.
Due to underresourcing and other issues, many available shelters in many large communities are not regarded as safe places by many people, who are hesitant to make use of them except under the most extreme of conditions.
After reading some discussion from Picard, apparently the Federation should force help.But those people need to ask for help or at least be noticed to get it.
I am not sure what you mean.After reading some discussion from Picard, apparently the Federation should force help.
In the Picard subforum there was a topic of conversation around this idea that in the utopian Federation if one us presenting as mentally ill then treatment should be given, by force if necessary.I am not sure what you mean.
Needs of the many being explored in an uncomfortable way.
Which is why Spock says, "It was logical."? To quote someone else it is better for one to due than a whole nation to perish.Of course the implication in TWOK is that individuals who ascribe to that philosophy voluntary sacrifice for the good of others, it's not forced on them. And that's how it works on paper in this episode, with the first servant explicitly giving their consent. There's a level of coercion at the end, of course, so they don't back out.
... the first servant explicitly giving their consent. There's a level of coercion at the end, of course, so they don't back out.
I'm sorry, how old are the victims when they give this "consent?"
I'm sorry, how old are the victims when they give this "consent?"
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