Is this for real?? Oh dear..
Well, it did work out for Blackadder back in the 80's ... that is to say... kind of ...
Is this for real?? Oh dear..
Like Sisko, he got dirty for a perceived greater good. Funny how the Romulans brought out the worst in people...
Haha Excellent! I love Brian Blessed!Well, it did work out for Blackadder back in the 80's ... that is to say... kind of ...
It was the right thing to do! If he hadn't, Spock would have died permanently and Earth would have been destroyed (or at least rendered uninhabitable).Admiral Ross was good
Kirk wasn't okay, he went charging off against orders just because he thought it was the right thing to do do!
Troi was super-annoying. The writing for her was all over the map, and her accent became increasingly sloppy and drawly as the seasons progressed. It really grated on the ears.Personally I didn't find Troi that annoying. There ar chararcters, especially in the later series made after VOY which I've found more annoying. However, Troi could have been written better.
I put a link in the fanfiction recommendation thread in the fanfiction subforum. I try not to discuss specifics of fanfic in the other Trek threads because it A. annoys the moderators; and B. one never knows when any of the tie-in authors might be reading.Who is that "underused character you're mentioning?
Just a recommendation here: You've posted four comments in a row, which will annoy the moderators when they see it. If you want to reply to multiple people at once, use the multiquote function (the +Quote you see next to Reply).Haha Excellent! I love Brian Blessed!
(I understand the subject of my post has probably been discussed ad nauseam for years but I'm a new member who has never used social media before.)
My Trek has always been TOS and TNG. I've adored these shows for over 30 (my God!) years. Around a dozen years ago I watched DS9. I was floored. What a show! I couldn't believe it had taken me so long to get to it. So much so that I considered it my favorite. That station was a second home!
Then I went through a very intense period in which TNG and TOS basically began to inform my life to an insane degree. It became nothing short of a religion or a philosophy to live by. Without really realizing it, I was becoming a Star Trek purist.
When I've returned to DS9, I see a show that deviated from what Trek is. I see a show that deals with themes like terrorism, war, and religion. I get it: Trek can take many different forms. It's underlying message can still come through in episodes like "Duet" or "In The Pale Moonlight". But I can't help thinking that Roddenberry would have disapproved. Sisko lies and deceives. He was unhonest. Then the war with the Dominion. I love TNG for its optimism and peaceful nature. It's a comfort. And DS9 remains a comfort as well but differently. It's hard to explain and I must sound a bit crazy. I'm really not.
What do people think? How does DS9 fit into Roddenberrys vision?
Are my feelings relatable?
Thank you! Great post too! I think yours is the 47th reply. All threads should congratulate the 47th post! I wonder how many people will get my joke. I'm assuming most will!Welcome aboard!
DS9, I feel, is the closest in spirit to TOS than any other spinoff. The people that inhabit that show are just people doing the best they can in a less than ideal region. It was full of excellent characters that felt real.
DS9 certainly challenged a lot of the ideals of the Federation and STAR TREK at its core. And that's a good thing. High ideals and morals should be able to be challenged.
Another point about DS9 that I always loved... it's the truest to the spirit of the franchise itself. You have a station manned by a wide variety of races and cultures, not the least of which run by two different groups that have different ways of thinking on many subjects (Starfleet and Bajorans), but they are able work well together. And for the civilians, you have radically different cultures and values and beliefs, but they all work and live together.
Many of the lead characters are even outcasts of their own societies (Odo, Worf, Garak, Quark for a while), but they are welcomed and can thrive on DS9. What better message can there be for anyone than, "It doesn't matter that you don't belong in your society or don't fit in there... you are welcome here"? That, to me, is one of the core philosophies of the franchise, and DS9 exemplifies that better than any other series.
As an example, take the ending of "BODY PARTS" (next to last episode of season 4). Quark just got outcasted by the FCA, and he has now lost everything. Even the shirt he is wearing, because he has to 'send it to Brunt in the morning'. But then Bashir comes in with a case of alcohol, then Dax with glasses... and suddenly you have Sisko walking in with pretty much the entire station with tables and chairs and stuff to help Quark get back on his feet. It was a supremely touching scene... even Quark was speechless. It is one of THE scenes that best shows what the franchise, and DS9, is all about.
And while DS9 did have their dark episodes, TOS was full of the dark side, too. It's very first aired episode had their doctor be forced to kill the last member of a species. And a number of other endings were not puppies and kittens, either... a wife and unborn child stoned to death ("THE PARADISE SYNDROME"), possibly locking a planet into an endless civil war ("A PRIVATE LITTLE WAR"), condemning a person for eternity to a fight with a madman ("THE ALTERNATIVE FACTOR"), marooning a teenager to a life of no contact with another person ("CHARLIE X"), and more.
But DS9 had just as much light-hearted and fun episodes as they did dark, heavy ones. "LITTLE GREEN MEN", "TRIALS AND TRIBBLE-ATIONS", "OUR MAN BASHIR", "FASCINATION", "HIS WAY", "TAKE ME OUT TO THE HOLOSUITE", and many more. They were a very, very well balanced show.
Thank you! Great post too! I think yours is the 47th reply. All threads should congratulate the 47th post! I wonder how many people will get my joke. I'm assuming most will!
It was the right thing to do! If he hadn't, Spock would have died permanently and Earth would have been destroyed (or at least rendered uninhabitable).
If you're in a service under military discipline and you see it as very important that X action be taken, what's the best thing to do?
A. do you best to convince your superiors in the chain of command that X is very important
or
B. just grab whatever you need and whoever you need and go off on your own to do X?
Admiral Ross collaborated with Section 31 on at least one occasion...
TBF, Kirk did talk with Admiral Morrow first, but got shot down.
Admiral Ross figured correctly that some things Section 31 does are really vital, and Section 31 is too well-entrenched for one Admiral (and a doctor and a CPO) to get rid of, even if he made it his top priority.
You appeared to be claiming that Kirk just went off on his own; I was merely pointing out that Kirk did ask for permission first.So if your superior says no, you go ahead and do it anyway?
Whether some things S31 does are really vital is a debatable claim, but what's not debatable is that their activities in the episode were extrajudicial and likely illegal. To say that Ross is unequivocally "good" given his role in the matter strikes me as a dubious claim.
Granted it's out of scope, but the novelverse would expand upon just how deeply in bed with S31 Ross was.
You appeared to be claiming that Kirk just went off on his own; I was merely pointing out that Kirk did ask for permission first.
As has been mentioned, he did do his best to convince his superiors that X was very important.If you're in a service under military discipline and you see it as very important that X action be taken, what's the best thing to do?
A. do you best to convince your superiors in the chain of command that X is very important
or
B. just grab whatever you need and whoever you need and go off on your own to do X?
As Kirk said, "The word is 'no'. I am therefore going anyway." It's not the first time he "therefore went anyway" in order to save Spock (does Amok Time ring any bells?).So if your superior says no, you go ahead and do it anyway?
Kirk was laboring under the misapprehension that his superiors had functioning brain cells and consciences. He discovered they didn't, so went ahead and did the right thing.Are you saying that it's better to ask for permission and then go off on your own when permission is denied than it is just not to ask permission at all?
Even admirals have to pick their battles. Fighting Section 31 wasn't one he could win, so he concentrated on fighting the Dominion.
Are you saying that it's better to ask for permission and then go off on your own when permission is denied than it is just not to ask permission at all?
Star Trek ethics obviously since there are those who criticize the actions of Sisko in In The Pale Moonlight.Who's ethics?
I agree.Definitely one of the best.
Which is why Kirk's struggles as an admiral were so damn frustrating. He was a man of action and capable of so much more than the pettiness he lowered himself too as an admiral.
Roddenberry created Star Trek which was good and iIreally like him for that. But I don't see him as a god or something similar. He really had som weird ideas and it was good that some of them never becamre real.Unfortunately, yes.
That's true.It was the right thing to do! If he hadn't, Spock would have died permanently and Earth would have been destroyed (or at least rendered uninhabitable).
I think that we have the same story here.As for the post-Voyager series, I tried most of them and didn't like them. I haven't even seen all of Enterprise, and don't care. DiscoTrek was a nightmare of a bad premise and awful acting, and Picard lost me the moment Icheb was killed off (not that I liked it that much to begin with; I might have stayed with it because I like Seven, but they crossed a line).
So for me, Star Trek mostly ended with Voyager. I will grant, however, that I enjoyed the Mirror universe episode. That was well done.
I will take a look at that. I need something good to read after all the disappointments I'd had with Trek Literature in the recent months. [/QUOTE]I put a link in the fanfiction recommendation thread in the fanfiction subforum. I try not to discuss specifics of fanfic in the other Trek threads because it A. annoys the moderators; and B. one never knows when any of the tie-in authors might be reading.
If you're really curious, feel free to drop me a PM. I certainly don't mind recommending good stories.
Welcome aboard!
DS9, I feel, is the closest in spirit to TOS than any other spinoff. The people that inhabit that show are just people doing the best they can in a less than ideal region. It was full of excellent characters that felt real.
DS9 certainly challenged a lot of the ideals of the Federation and STAR TREK at its core. And that's a good thing. High ideals and morals should be able to be challenged.
Another point about DS9 that I always loved... it's the truest to the spirit of the franchise itself. You have a station manned by a wide variety of races and cultures, not the least of which run by two different groups that have different ways of thinking on many subjects (Starfleet and Bajorans), but they are able work well together. And for the civilians, you have radically different cultures and values and beliefs, but they all work and live together.
Many of the lead characters are even outcasts of their own societies (Odo, Worf, Garak, Quark for a while), but they are welcomed and can thrive on DS9. What better message can there be for anyone than, "It doesn't matter that you don't belong in your society or don't fit in there... you are welcome here"? That, to me, is one of the core philosophies of the franchise, and DS9 exemplifies that better than any other series.
As an example, take the ending of "BODY PARTS" (next to last episode of season 4). Quark just got outcasted by the FCA, and he has now lost everything. Even the shirt he is wearing, because he has to 'send it to Brunt in the morning'. But then Bashir comes in with a case of alcohol, then Dax with glasses... and suddenly you have Sisko walking in with pretty much the entire station with tables and chairs and stuff to help Quark get back on his feet. It was a supremely touching scene... even Quark was speechless. It is one of THE scenes that best shows what the franchise, and DS9, is all about.
And while DS9 did have their dark episodes, TOS was full of the dark side, too. It's very first aired episode had their doctor be forced to kill the last member of a species. And a number of other endings were not puppies and kittens, either... a wife and unborn child stoned to death ("THE PARADISE SYNDROME"), possibly locking a planet into an endless civil war ("A PRIVATE LITTLE WAR"), condemning a person for eternity to a fight with a madman ("THE ALTERNATIVE FACTOR"), marooning a teenager to a life of no contact with another person ("CHARLIE X"), and more.
But DS9 had just as much light-hearted and fun episodes as they did dark, heavy ones. "LITTLE GREEN MEN", "TRIALS AND TRIBBLE-ATIONS", "OUR MAN BASHIR", "FASCINATION", "HIS WAY", "TAKE ME OUT TO THE HOLOSUITE", and many more. They were a very, very well balanced show.
So what? The question isn't whether Ross chose wisely by not engaging with S31; the question is whether he's a good person.
So...needs of the many? IDIC?Star Trek ethics obviously since there are those who criticize the actions of Sisko in In The Pale Moonlight.
I don't!
Context is for kings.So if your superior says no, you go ahead and do it anyway?
Good person or not, he's a good admiral for winning the winnable Dominion War rather than letting himself get distracted by an unwinnable war against Section 31.
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