Pike is hopelessly optimistic. And he's never been to war.This episode was not a good look for the federation or Pike.
Pike is hopelessly optimistic. And he's never been to war.This episode was not a good look for the federation or Pike.
I think this is basically a DS9 "Anti-Trek" story. Which is the fact that we have a scenario about a man who committed war crimes and we assume it'll end with his story being that he's sincere in his redemption and M'Benga reluctantly forgiving him.
But no, Rah ****ed up and he knew he didn't have a place back home in the Klingon Empire so he decided to join the Federation and throw his men under the buss.
And it's probably better M'Benga killed him.
How do we know Klingon ships show up next week? Next week is the musical episode. Now I hope we get some Klingon honor songs!
I think they are not as cynical but they are as ambitious. Like the Vulcans there is an attitude of we know our past, and we know we can become better. So, if someone says "I want to become better" then they are willing to make efforts to work with that, even if some officers don't agree. Look at Nimbus III, Gorkon, the allowance of Koloth to make use of facilities. All overtures against a power that Kirk describes as expansionist, cruel, and barbaric.Now, is the Federation as cynical and ambitious as 20th century United States? I don't know, but since Star Trek is often an allegory for better understanding humanity in our modern era, the comparison could be made, I think, for the purposes of this narrative.
Indeed, yes. That's kind of the appeal of SNW is that the world merely exists.Fair enough and true but my point to the other poster still stands. M'Benga didn't need to "earn" the right to appear in the older series. He just did. Appearing and just exisitng "earned" him whatever he has in those episodes. He's a fictional character. His accomplishments, relationships and value are whatever he's written to have.
Pike is hopelessly optimistic. And he's never been to war.
Yeah, that and when they wouldn't say how long Pike and M'Benga knew each other."A few years ago" is an oddly non-specific date for the flashback.
I guess someone got tired of being nitpicked?
Oh of course, but in the "world" of Star Trek, it's hard not to see the parallels.... Deep Space Nine is not the only space show to deal with war. Calling it a "Deep Space Nine" episode gives DS9 more credit than it deserves.
Toronto-based production after all. lol"Commander Buck Martinez"? Whoever wrote this episode must be a Toronto Blue Jays fan.![]()
I guess one thing I don't get is where the battle was being fought. They're slaughtering Federation citizens, fine, but apparently there are Klingon civilians who are also being slaughtered because they're not soldiers?Like I said before, "Man & Machine". Not "Man or Machine".
You need to pair both to get the best effective use out of both.
Also, Ukraine has a personnel problem, they're outnumbered significantly in terms of man power compared to Russia. So they can't afford to risk lives and throw people into the grinder like Russia has done.
Ukraine is fighting Smart, Russia is using it's one natural advantage, man-power.
It's going to end up destroying Russia's future because Putin is dumb.
As with remote control tech, it maximizes damage, minimizes casualties on your side.
It's the smart way to fight when you have a home field advantage and want to minimize loss on your side.
That's before we even get to guerilla warfare.
The size of the Federation fleet is so random. In Picard S3,IMO, in the future 1x Organic Soldier should be out in the field remote commanding 12x "Data / EMH level" Combat droids.
He'll have 2x Droids with him at all times to watch his back, but he'll be out in the field command and controlling a full 12x unit Fire Squad that works in pairs.
So imagine for every 10,000 Organic Soldiers, you have 120,000 Combat Droids on the offensive with 20,000 on Defense for a total of 150,000 Soldiers in total.
Now imagine that's for only 1x Galaxy Class sized ship.
Imagine what a 1000+ Fleet of ships, each one filled with soldiers would do.
1,000+ Ships with 150,000 Soldiers each. 150,000,000 Soldiers spread over a entire planet covering at least 1,000+ battle fields or cities or important areas, taking over key infrastructure / supplies / HVT's (Highly Valued Targets).
That's just 1x Fleet, imagine when you have millions of Fleets in all of StarFleet.
I agree, but also don't want to veer too off topic with the history talk.The main issue with Afghanistan was that the local culture didn't have a sense of National Identity. They're very much a rural / tribal people in nature.
Unlike Japan after WW2 or Korea, those people have "National Identity" and wanted to remain a unified country.
Vietnam was handed over to the locals, they couldn't hold the line 2 years after and needed to be evacuated.
If you watched any of the interviews with the Vietnamnese General Minh, they were "Very Close to Surrendering" after some of the massive bombing campaigns, but the US let up and they were able to survive becuse the US internal political issues back home forced the White House to give up applying pressure in Vietnam due to the political back-lash. That's what allowed them to survive and re-build their forces so that 2x years after the US left, they had enough forces to take over the rest of the country.
If it was a Federation planet, I would get why the Federation soldiers would just run at the enemy like a meat grinder instead of using transporter bombs or kamikaze shuttlecraft or whatever tech they had. I'm not sure why the Klingons would bother, other than the long standing tradition of making Klingons extremely stupid when it comes to battle because of their honor code.It's not so much that, it's more the unity of the people and the willingness to fight the invaders to the bitter end.
Someone on another forum mentioned that this felt like an episode of MASH, which makes sense. I don't have a problem with field hospitals - iirc, the Jake Sisko episode where everyone thinks he's a hero takes place in a field hospital. I just think the premise of having traditional wars when there is the equivalent of magic feels strange.Local improvised Medical Hospitals will always be a thing in a war zone.
To me, the local improvised Medical Hospital made perfect sense in a "War Zone".
Definitely agree that SNW hasn't shied away from that. But I do think it was odd how nonplussed Pike was. "Ah, there might be an inquiry . . ." but basically no big deal. We'll see. Thought it was a great episode though! But the ending was a little soft in my opinion.A fair question. SNW has not shied away from consequences even in its episodic format.
I don't know. I've worked with enough different people that receiving horrible news doesn't always warrant an immediate reaction. It sometimes is a moment of just taking in information.Definitely agree that SNW hasn't shied away from that. But I do think it was odd how nonplussed Pike was. "Ah, there might be an inquiry . . ." but basically no big deal. We'll see. Thought it was a great episode though! But the ending was a little soft in my opinion.
He was definitely weasel enough for that. He doesn’t seem like he’d get as far in the Klingon command structure as he did.
I'd agree. Using this Ambassador was the Federations official policy. M'Benga single handedly shut that policy down. And that's on top of the fact that he killed the guy.I don’t see how anyone walks away with their career intact. It’s a massive embarrassment for the Federation and a stain on the Enterprise for an ambassador to be stabbed to death on their ship..by a Starfleet officer, under any circumstances.![]()
I didn't know you could time travel.So of course after all this praise next week's episode is possibly the worst episode in the entire Star Trek franchise
So TNG? One of the Co-Writers next week wrote 1x03, 1x06 and 2x07just really want to be making a cringey sitcom,
D7s in the trailers.How do we know Klingon ships show up next week?
The Klingon High Council exists now. We saw it in Discovery.This is before the Klingon High Council so all he'd have to be is born to the right House.
He honestly reminded me of some of the popular Christian converts I knew that would go from church to church giving their testimony. They talked all about peace, and love, and forgiveness, but never really made amends for what they did to people before they became "saved."
They had no intentions of ever making actual amends, just finding the most comfortable way to stay away from that past and simply not deal with it.
So here we have a man who did horrible, brutal, vile things, and then slipped away and defected. His past sins were forgiven in the name of fostering good will with the Federation and being used as a propaganda tool. It kind of goes back to my Wernher von Braun example earlier.
The US essentially said "sure, von Braun, you used concentration camp slave labor to build your rockets, you designed increasingly deadlier weapons for the Nazi regime, and millions of people died as a result, but since you surrendered to us and offered us a terrific leveraging tool, we'll talk about how the past is the past and we need to move forward."
Now, is the Federation as cynical and ambitious as 20th century United States? I don't know, but since Star Trek is often an allegory for better understanding humanity in our modern era, the comparison could be made, I think, for the purposes of this narrative.
Just my two bits, though.
It might be one of those contested planets where both UFP & Klingon Civilians occupied it in the past and started growing their colonies.I guess one thing I don't get is where the battle was being fought. They're slaughtering Federation citizens, fine, but apparently there are Klingon civilians who are also being slaughtered because they're not soldiers?
There might not have been "Space Superiority", ergo control of the Space around it might have been contested.But assuming this is a Federation planet... why would you even invade? Just starve the planet to death with a siege. I haven't seen Discovery S1 since it aired, but I seem to remember the Federation being on the brink of loss which is why they were willing to commit mass genocide by destroying the Klingon homeworld in order to end the war.
The size of the Federation fleet is so random. In Picard S3,Maybe a couple hundred of ships available, but I doubt that's all of UFP's fleet.we get the impression it's pretty tiny with maybe a couple hundred ships?
Remember, during the pandemic, we had global logistics shortages because containers were in the wrong place and staffing was short-hand
It doesn't take much to screw up a logistics supply chain.
Well, making the Wallenberg class vessels in mass was something they were attempting, but that got screwed up by the Synth Rebellion.In Picard S1, they had problems evacuating the Romulan homeworld with the ships they had, if I'm remembering correctly. It's not really clear what logistical capability the Federation actually has... but presumably it'd be worse in the TOS era.
OKI agree, but also don't want to veer too off topic with the history talk.![]()
Klingons just seem to love fighting. They live for the fight, the battle, the combat.If it was a Federation planet, I would get why the Federation soldiers would just run at the enemy like a meat grinder instead of using transporter bombs or kamikaze shuttlecraft or whatever tech they had. I'm not sure why the Klingons would bother, other than the long standing tradition of making Klingons extremely stupid when it comes to battle because of their honor code.
The more things change, the more things stay the same.Someone on another forum mentioned that this felt like an episode of MASH, which makes sense. I don't have a problem with field hospitals - iirc, the Jake Sisko episode where everyone thinks he's a hero takes place in a field hospital. I just think the premise of having traditional wars when there is the equivalent of magic feels strange.
=DIt's really not a big deal to me, despite writing paragraphs about it. lol
Remember, kamikaze attacks are a "Last Ditch" weapon. They aren't the first option in combat.It's like how in Star Wars they had to write a line about why they don't just warp starships into the Empire in order to stop them, despite the fact that it proved to be an effective tactic in The Last Jedi. They can't do it because there'd be no story for Rise of the Skywalker. lol
It's incredibly wasteful of resources to warp your vessel into something.
It's a moot point now because the character died, but the young Starfleet engisn that M'Benga and Chapel saved and then talked to starkly reminded me of a young Admiral Cartwright from TUC. It would have been an interesting swerve to introduce him here and have him live- it would have made his decisions decades later much more understandable in light of his experiences here. A man who hated Klingons so much that he was willing to collude with them in order to prevent peace with them.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.