Kind of a precursor to the late DS9/FC uniforms.I really like Picard's "captain's jacket" that he wore in the later seasons of TNG. In fact I wish this is what all the TNG uniforms had looked like.
![]()
Admiral Dougherty kind of had a point, and the Ba'ku were selfish privileged people. Sure, the Ba'ku were benefitting from continued good health and longevity and some pretty real estate; but, if 6,000 of them had been willing to simply age like normal people and move to a similarly pretty world, they could have helped "millions" of sick people and revolutionized medical science for billions. Nobody was asking them to suffer. They would even have benefitted from the medical advances themselves. But did we see even a single Ba'ku say, "I'll give up my place here to save my millions of horribly ill Federation neighbors"?
You're assuming that the Baku would've fundamentally objected to this if anyone had simply asked them instead of attacking them unprovoked and trying to kidnap them.
Seems like Picard would have mentioned this in his argument with Dougherty. Picard seemed to stipulate that the radiation would be effective. He objected to a forced relocation.You're also assuming the Son'a's technology would actually produce a miracle cure-all which would last forever and produce enough medicine for everyone in the Federation instead of simply running out after a while and no longer being replaceable because the process of stripping the energy from the rings destroyed the only source of the particles.
Again, Dougherty claimed "it could help millions" and Picard didn't snap back something like "oh, nonsense...you exaggerate. It is perhaps a few thousand, Admiral."And you're assuming there were millions of horribly ill Federation neighbours in desperate need of being saved from diseases and birth defects that somehow weren't in any way treatable by the already miraculous Federation medical science.
The movie doesn't actually give any facts at all to support any of these assumptions. It's a big part of why the movie is as boring as it is. Because it makes no effort whatsoever to actually make the Federation's 'dilemma' even remotely logical or believable.
Now what if the movie started with a somber log where Picard lamented the seemingly incurable engineered disease that the Dominion had recently released on several Federation worlds? People sickened and dying by the millions. Now you have a moral dilemma. Save millions by wronging thousands, or respect the rights of thousands while millions die? Or raise the stakes farther by making it so that the Ba'ku have become physiologically obligated to remain on the planet within the radiation field or else they themselves will die. Millions can be saved only by murdering thousands of innocents.
Well, they definitely weren't offering, I'll say that much.
Seems like Picard would have mentioned this in his argument with Dougherty. Picard seemed to stipulate that the radiation would be effective. He objected to a forced relocation.
Again, Dougherty claimed "it could help millions" and Picard didn't snap back something like "oh, nonsense...you exaggerate. It is perhaps a few thousand, Admiral."
That much I agree on. Now what if the movie started with a somber log where Picard lamented the seemingly incurable engineered disease that the Dominion had recently released on several Federation worlds? People sickened and dying by the millions. Now you have a moral dilemma. Save millions by wronging thousands, or respect the rights of thousands while millions die? Or raise the stakes farther by making it so that the Ba'ku have become physiologically obligated to remain on the planet within the radiation field or else they themselves will die. Millions can be saved only by murdering thousands of innocents.
I have to agree. I don't find much in there that makes me want to revisit them.controversial opinion: Star Trek would be a better place if there had been NO (yes, I said no… as in zero) TNG movies. They range from mediocre to complete waste of film. The creative team was so tapped out by this point that they were incapable of making anything good, not that I think they even understood the differences of movie vs 1 hour tv.
wait just a minute there, that would be a good movie with a solid foundation for drama. How dare you write a good TNG movie. Don’t you know they are supposed to be shite?
(by the way, that seriously would be a good starting point)
controversial opinion: Star Trek would be a better place if there had been NO (yes, I said no… as in zero) TNG movies. They range from mediocre to complete waste of film. The creative team was so tapped out by this point that they were incapable of making anything good, not that I think they even understood the differences of movie vs 1 hour tv.
The Baku was one village, there was an entire planet.
Why did the Baku need to move?
Surely the Healing Radiation wasn't just concentrated on that one village?
Couldn't StarFleet work around the Baku?
The Baku are Warp Capable, and not even native to that planet.
Some how, given enough time, I think StarFleet & the Baku would've figured out a solution the healing radiation w/o having to strip mine the rings.The movie's answer to this was that Starfleet couldn't harvest the particles without the Sona's help and the Sona refused to consider anything less than stripping the rings and rendering the entire planet uninhabitable. This was ostensibly because anything less than that wouldn't be concentrated enough to save the Sona from dying of old age, but it was pretty transparently also because they wanted revenge on the Baku.
Some how, given enough time, I think StarFleet & the Baku would've figured out a solution the healing radiation w/o having to strip mine the rings.
controversial opinion: Star Trek would be a better place if there had been NO (yes, I said no… as in zero) TNG movies. They range from mediocre to complete waste of film. The creative team was so tapped out by this point that they were incapable of making anything good, not that I think they even understood the differences of movie vs 1 hour tv.
That obviously never happened =DIt was like they needed just one (1) person with common sense, to read the script and point out the HUGE holes in it.
They got the grabby womanizer part down =D.the part where they retconned Zephram Cochrane into a thinly-veiled expy of Gene Roddenberry.
Watching Relics on BBCA right now. For as much as Scotty is a man out of time with kind of a sad story…he is kind of a dick too.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.