I'd almost hazard a guess that the showrunners went so far as to rip off "The ones who walk away from omelas" and risk angering Le Guin fans precisely so they could troll the audience and see how many people condemning Alora for her Warhammer 40k golden throne torture setup for the "greater good" would then be cheering on the exact same concept with Pike just a few episodes later.(Especially as Alora's people have had centuries to search for an alternative while Future Pike can't have had nearly that long)
First Servant's not human. We don't know their maturity rate equivalency. Furthermore, First Servant's intelligence level exceeded that of many adults.You mean like some people see the difference between an adult man choosing to sacrificing himself versus a brainwashed kid?
Sounds real-world-y enough.The simple answer would be bureaucracy. It takes time for the Enterprise logs to make it back to Starfleet Command, and then be reviewed, and then someone has to have that 'wait- what? Holy shit!' moment regarding Una, then think on it for a day or two, then report it to someone else, and then the whole 'well what do we do about it' discussion happens at the flag level. In the meantime, Enterprise is warping around the Federation, doing its thing.
Then, events finally catch up to them at Outpost 4.
You know, at this point, I don't think it counts as Pike "choosing" anything anymore. Whatever valor his character was intended to demonstrate by not shoving a bunch of kids out of the way to be first out the door when the alarms went off has been eaten away by all this Final Destination time-travel nonsense.You mean like some people see the difference between an adult man choosing to sacrificing himself versus a brainwashed kid?
First Servant's not human. We don't know their maturity rate equivalency. Furthermore, First Servant's intelligence level exceeded that of many adults.
Hmmm...Spock's sacrifice suddenly means a whole lot less now.First Servant's not human. We don't know their maturity rate equivalency. Furthermore, First Servant's intelligence level exceeded that of many adults.
Furthermore, the brainwashing in both cases is the same. In both cases the brainwashing is "true". They suffer for the greater good.
Oh, I see. I'm not a "real" fan because I'm not obsessed with reconciling things that just don't fit together.Then you have completely lost a large part of what being a fan of Trek has been about since its inception.
And you are much the poorer for it.
I wonder who spilled the beans. I can't see any of the officers who wouldn't want her kicked out putting that info in the reviewed logs.
Hi my name is Dr. Mark Piper and I'm here to tell you Joseph M'Benga to turn yourself into the slammer with Una while I replace you. Maybe if I'm feeling nice I'll let you spend probation as a junior doctor on my team.Una and La'an were ultimately responsible for curing the crew, so the big clue would be in the medical logs. Those can't be really be explained away without outright falsification, which we now know didn't happen. M'Benga, technically speaking, should be on thin ice himself unless the 'kid in the transporter buffer' things was totally kept under wraps.
On that note, the Jedi have no problem doing the same to kids in their care, brainwashing thenm to forsake attachments and go into combat. It is off topic but I do remember you being fine with that (which I suppose is ok since it's a different franchise but I like to point out double standardsYes, if you change the premise of the episode then the premise is changed.
On that note, the Jedi have no problem doing the same to kids in their care, brainwashing thenm to forsake attachments and go into combat. It is off topic but I do remember you being fine with that (which I suppose is ok since it's a different franchise but I like to point out double standards)
Maybe M'Benga's falsification of medical logs & hiding his child in the transporter buffer catches up with him and StarFleet eventually pulls him from his spot in the future.Una and La'an were ultimately responsible for curing the crew, so the big clue would be in the medical logs. Those can't be really be explained away without outright falsification, which we now know didn't happen. M'Benga, technically speaking, should be on thin ice himself unless the 'kid in the transporter buffer' things was totally kept under wraps.
We have a whole thread for this.On that note, the Jedi have no problem doing the same to kids in their care, brainwashing thenm to forsake attachments and go into combat. It is off topic but I do remember you being fine with that (which I suppose is ok since it's a different franchise but I like to point out double standards)
I don't know about savage so much as controlled warrior. Kirk embraced being a soldier, knowing that his decision could alter whole planets in terms of the course of their history. If force was necessary he would use it in a controlled way to move towards a positive outcome. He was no less the diplomat but more willing to employ the big stick. Pike is too, but in a different way.Kirk is a savage by his own words in TOS and sadly was the savage they needed.
Both of them are wrong! Where's Edward Jellico when you need him? He should be the captain of every starship in every time period.Kirk: "Tell me I'm wrong."
Pike should have. Kirk's maneuver was a terrible tactical choice. Starship aren't subject to gravity or atmosphere. An Immelmann style roll makes the ship a bigger target to an enemy to its rear. The better choice would have been a rotation around the z axis.
Thank goodness this is an alternative reality.
Strictly speaking it's Piper first, then McCoy.Maybe M'Benga's falsification of medical logs & hiding his child in the transporter buffer catches up with him and StarFleet eventually pulls him from his spot in the future.
That's why we get to see Bones take over.
Fuck that.Both of them are wrong! Where's Edward Jellico when you need him? He should be the captain of every starship in every time period.![]()
I concur, Kirk was doing fine when when he doved down, but when he rose back up for the Immelman, I was like WTF?Kirk: "Tell me I'm wrong."
Pike should have. Kirk's maneuver was a terrible tactical choice. Starship aren't subject to gravity or atmosphere. An Immelmann style roll makes the ship a bigger target to an enemy to its rear. The better choice would have been a rotation around the z axis.
Thank goodness this is an alternative reality.
I don't think Edward Jellico was born by this period in time.Both of them are wrong! Where's Edward Jellico when you need him? He should be the captain of every starship in every time period.
We have a whole thread for this.
And fans are nothing if not double standards.
I don't know about savage so much as controlled warrior. Kirk embraced being a soldier, knowing that his decision could alter whole planets in terms of the course of their history. If force was necessary he would use it in a controlled way to move towards a positive outcome. He was no less the diplomat but more willing to employ the big stick. Pike is too, but in a different way.
For what it's worth I do consider my religious upbringing to be brainwashing, being forced to church by my mother even when I was crying not to go. The negative repercussions into my adult life well into the present day are too numerous and severe for me to go into here...In fact, I have a problem with taking children into combat and think that is a pretty awful thing for Jedi to do. I don't consider Buddhism to be brainwashing, though.
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