I await your better example... that does not involve Riker in an alien insane asylum.I find that hard to believe.
BTW-- Enjoy my take on the Gorn, from the era when they weren't Xenomorphs!
I await your better example... that does not involve Riker in an alien insane asylum.I find that hard to believe.
I think that they WILL reveal that La'an has Khan's abilities. But if they do, that is all the more reason not to have given similar abilities to Una.
BTW, trying to support an argument with hypotheticals based on no evidence - "I bet more than 50% of viewers" - doesn't work. Resorting to it actually weakens whatever point you thought you were making.
To those of us who have watched all of season 1, it makes sense that it was Una rather than La'an.It's a bet in the abstract. There are no stakes. Go ahead and poll people here about whether they would like to have seen the trial be about La'an and not Una, if you'd like. The payout will be a No-Prize.
Sybok.I await your better example... that does not involve Riker in an alien insane asylum.
Shaw: no.BTW-- Enjoy my take on the Gorn, from the era when they weren't Xenomorphs!
I'm catching up on the show, (I'm at S01E03). I suppose I cannot deny that Una's DNA history was set up early.To those of us who have watched all of season 1, it makes sense that it was Una rather than La'an.
La'An's struggle with her heritage is a very important plot point in future episodes.
The former, yes. But not recalling the latter.What exactly does she have to struggle with, though? That's the part I'm not getting. Yes, La'an raises the issue multiple times: "My great, great, great garndpappy was a tyrant... and also super sexy and awesome." Why exactly is this her cross to bear, except for manufactured drama?
Yup..it's pretty much thus.The former, yes. But not recalling the latter.
Because people use it to hurt her.
Presumably some recruiter would have recognized the name at some point, so even if La'an still has some genetic modifications from Khan, Starfleet thought it was fine.I mean, it's pretty simple.
Una was directly and intentionally genetically modified by her parents/guardians, much like Bashir was, directly against existing laws.
La'an was not. Yes, she has distant ancestry to someone who was, but she herself was not modified in any way whatsoever even if she shares some DNA strands with someone who was. What's more, any modified DNA she does have (if any of it still exists in her after all these generations) was modified before the Federation even existed, let alone its laws against genetic modification.
It's clear to me that the writers didn't really understand the material.
You're paying attention to the show and applying logic instead of judging it based on preconceptions. I'm pretty sure that must violate some "rule of drama."I mean, it's pretty simple.
Una was directly and intentionally genetically modified by her parents/guardians, much like Bashir was, directly against existing laws.
La'an was not. Yes, she has distant ancestry to someone who was, but she herself was not modified in any way whatsoever even if she shares some DNA strands with someone who was. What's more, any modified DNA she does have (if any of it still exists in her after all these generations) was modified before the Federation even existed, let alone its laws against genetic modification.
You're paying attention to the show and applying logic instead of judging it based on preconceptions. I'm pretty sure that must violate some "rule of drama."
And my axe.If we have Chekhov's gun, perhaps we also have Spock's stone knives and bearskins?
Una was enhanced and has even demonstrated some of her enhancements. La'an never was, nor has demonstrated any such enhancements. That's the end of it.
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