Makes sense to me!For all intents and purposes, Star Trek IV is when I "entered" the 23rd Century and the end of Discovery Season 2 is when I "left" it. If that makes sense.

Makes sense to me!For all intents and purposes, Star Trek IV is when I "entered" the 23rd Century and the end of Discovery Season 2 is when I "left" it. If that makes sense.
I know Dax found Victor Hugo too melodramatic, but don't you think in any application of "justice" that's fair there should be a difference between how a person who steals because they're hungry is treated versus a person who steals just for greed? That a wife that murders her husband after being repeatedly abused is a fundamentally different situation than a wife that murders her husband to get his life insurance policy?A judge can administer whatever rationale they like but that doesn't change the fact that their should be consequences for actions. Far more than what Kirk received.
I don't consider it black and white but a balance of options with the consequences being clearly presented and the rationale why they are not applied. The rationale doesn't always fit for me though. Because that's not teaching anyone a damn thing.
The reason why a Starfleet officer steals the Enterprise and defies the chain of command should be mitigating circumstance. The fact that without Kirk's theft of the Enterprise, and intervention to save Spock, THERE WOULD BE NO FEDERATION COURT IN EXISTENCE ON EARTH TO CONDEMN HIM IN THE FIRST PLACE, since Spock was instrumental in both identifying the nature of the humpback whale signal and calculating their time warp, is pretty damn good mitigating circumstances providing a rationale for Kirk's actions.Not exactly, no. Just doing time for fucking assaulting officers, conspiracy, theft of property, violating direct orders, violating a quarantine zone, killing foreign troopers under a false flag of truce.
I agree. This is my stance. It's fiction. She's not real. We didn't see any of what she did, we don't know the context, and most people in the Mirror Universe are evil. I can't get as worked up about fictional characters getting killed when most of them are "the bad guys". I just can't. The dramatic rules are different when it's "bad guys vs. bad guys" instead of "good guys vs. bad guys". Everyone who was united against the Terrans in the TOS Era turned to be just as bad in the DS9 Era. Except for the eating Kelpians part, but that didn't start with Georgiou and it didn't end with her either.
Plus, the most important part (have to repeat it), it's fiction. Actually let me put it another way: It's fucking fiction. It's not real. The writers are making it up on the fly. I don't care what she did in the Mirror Universe, only the "Prime" Universe. (Quotations deliberate). The character is entertaining, she doesn't suffer fools, and that works for me. I like Michelle Yeoh's performance.
I too would also have a VERY different stance if Mirror Georgiou was a real person. But she's not. She's made up.
Anyway, from the looks of it, the Section 31 TV Movie will go deeper into her past. Then it'll be possible to go more in-depth.
Kor did horrible things in the TOS Era, but he's "lovable old Kor" in DS9. Garak did horrible things, and he's likeable Garak in DS9. No one ever mentions that stuff.
I think the Federation alliance with the Klingon Empire is a disgrace for just this reason and I find the Organians morally abhorrent. (I also think a tiny bit less of Gene Coon for asking us to believe that Kirk and Kor are equivalent.)Kor did horrible things in the TOS Era, but he's "lovable old Kor" in DS9.
"The evil lord Darth Vader, obsessed with finding young Skywalker, has dispatched thousands of remote probes into the far reaches of space...."Should Luke Skywalker be put on trial for destroying the Death Star and killing thousands of people in the process?
With notable assist by Mr. Goldsmith.Possible controversial opinion...
I think the scene where Geordi is watching the sunrise justifies the entire existence of INSURRECTION.
Just a beatifully acted scene. Absolute home run by LeVar Burton.
"The evil lord Darth Vader, obsessed with finding young Skywalker, has dispatched thousands of remote probes into the far reaches of space...."
They did try.
100%. (Though it’s also a well-paced film. By no means one of my favorites, but Frakes did a good job as director.)Possible controversial opinion...
I think the scene where Geordi is watching the sunrise justifies the entire existence of INSURRECTION.
Just a beatifully acted scene. Absolute home run by LeVar Burton.
While I think there are very good political and stability-promoting reasons for the alliance with the Klingons, it’s true that:I think the Federation alliance with the Klingon Empire is a disgrace for just this reason and I find the Organians morally abhorrent. (I also think a tiny bit less of Gene Coon for asking us to believe that Kirk and Kor are equivalent.)
I adore John Colicos but Kor is a monster.
Who is worse / less accountable for his actions? Garak or Quark?
"The evil lord Darth Vader, obsessed with finding young Skywalker, has dispatched thousands of remote probes into the far reaches of space...."
They did try. And somehow I think they would skip that trial part. (Evil Galactic Empire, don't you know.)
With notable assist by Mr. Goldsmith.
According to the Special-er DVD Edition Vader finds out that Luke is his kid during the film. According to common sense (i.e. NOT the Special-er DVD Edition) the Empire is pursuing the Rebel that destroyed the Death Star and the Rebel Alliance Command in general.They weren't seeking him out to put him on trial though... Vader wanted his kid back. That's clear by the end of the movie and it's clear in the revelation at the end that Vader was fully aware who Luke was.
So... no, not really. *shrug*
Right?(B) I can only imagine that at some point, when the Empire finally collapses, a whole lot of newly-liberated planets now freed from under the Klingon boot are going to feel pretty angry and vengeful against the Federation for having enabled their oppression.
I never consider Worf culturally a Klingon. And the other Klingons don't either.Worf’s great (if an imperial apologist), but the Klingon Empire — not so much.
Although, I do think the science-fiction/cultural element adds an extra layer to this. Can you totally judge the principles of an alien culture by human values?I think the Federation alliance with the Klingon Empire is a disgrace for just this reason and I find the Organians morally abhorrent. (I also think a tiny bit less of Gene Coon for asking us to believe that Kirk and Kor are equivalent.)
I adore John Colicos but Kor is a monster.
According to the Special-er DVD Edition Vader finds out that Luke is his kid during the film. According to common sense (i.e. NOT the Special-er DVD Edition) the Empire is pursuing the Rebel that destroyed the Death Star and the Rebel Alliance Command in general.
killing foreign troopers under a false flag of truce.
Interesting… when? Have they edited new stuff in?
Otherwise, the only thing that comes to mind is if Vader is somehow actually present during Luke’s vision on Degobah?
One of the dumbest lines in Star Trek (excepting anything Scott said in The Lights of Zetar). It's essentially wordplay that works in English. Kinda. Kirk quoting the Constitution felt more organic than Chekov busting out Thomas Jefferson in the middle of a diplomatic dinner.AZETBUR: “Inalien? If you could only hear yourselves. Human rights? Why, the very name is racist."
"Captain Kirk who are you to say what harm was done?" "Who do I have to be?"It's murder to us, but it's not to the Klingons.
But whatever Vader's motivations the Empire is after Luke Skywalker, renegade and terrorist, for crimes against the state.
No. Not sympathetic. But that is what will happen.I suppose so… if we as the audience are supposed to side with the Empire and be sympathetic to their perspective…?
SHOULD he be? Well, no because we want the Empire to be overthrown.Should Luke Skywalker be put on trial for destroying the Death Star and killing thousands of people in the process?
Are we watching the same show?That’s where Andor goes I guess.
No. Not sympathetic. But that is what will happen.
I suppose the original quote was
SHOULD he be? Well, no because we want the Empire to be overthrown.
When Kirk and his Merry Band stole Federation property they knew they were outlaws and that their actions were illegal and would most likely have consequences to their lives and careers. They certainly weren't planning for whales. Or Klingons.
When Admiral Morrow denied Kirk his request to return to Genesis his orders were not "Do NOT rescue the science team from the Klingons and by no means are you to time travel and save Earth!"
Are we watching the same show?
Only to a certain degree..A judge may be benevolent but there still should be fucking consequences for a person's action.know Dax found Victor Hugo too melodramatic, but don't you think in any application of "justice" that's fair there should be a difference between how a person who steals because they're hungry is treated versus a person who steals just for greed? That a wife that murders her husband after being repeatedly abused is a fundamentally different situation than a wife that murders her husband to get his life insurance policy?
I'm glad you know the minds of all people.Beyond that, there's not a jury in existence that would look at a similar set of circumstances as those in Search for Spock and The Voyage Home and would then convict Kirk. I wouldn't.
It's got company.....mostly dramatic movies, to be sure, but there was a tongue-in-cheek flick with Paul Fix called HITLER, DEAD OR ALIVE, in which he got dead long before Quentin Tarantino homaged it.While we're still talking about Nazis I have to tell everyone that they have to see the original To Be Or Not to Be (1942). It's like they made Hogan's Heroes WHILE THE WAR WAS GOING ON.
.
And anyone who's complaining that Kirk got off easy after saving Earth -- and wants to see him punished (being demoted to Captain doesn't count) -- is basically being the person who's "that person". The heckler in the audience. Don't be that person.
The audience does learn something from the movie. They learn that rules can be bent or broken if necessary and that being too hidebound will result in disaster. If Kirk hadn’t acted, then millions would have died, all in the name of red tape.
I’m glad you don’t write Star Trek and I’m eternally grateful that you aren’t in any position of judicial power.
The reason why a Starfleet officer steals the Enterprise and defies the chain of command should be mitigating circumstance. The fact that without Kirk's theft of the Enterprise, and intervention to save Spock, THERE WOULD BE NO FEDERATION COURT IN EXISTENCE ON EARTH TO CONDEMN HIM IN THE FIRST PLACE, since Spock was instrumental in both identifying the nature of the humpback whale signal and calculating their time warp, is pretty damn good mitigating circumstances providing a rationale for Kirk's actions.
Beyond that, there's not a jury in existence that would look at a similar set of circumstances as those in Search for Spock and The Voyage Home and would then convict Kirk. I wouldn't.
The other way of looking at the situation from Search for Spock, one that any defense attorney worth their salt would trumpet from the mountain tops, is:
If Kirk doesn't steal the Enterprise, the Grissom is still destroyed, Saavik, David, AND Spock are still either murdered or used as hostages, and the Klingons walk off with the Genesis data and use it for God knows what kind of destruction. And the whale probe still shows up, except this time there's no Spock to figure out how to speak to it.
- The stupidity of Federation policy, the failure to properly anticipate the actions of foreign actors, and their total dereliction to handle the incident directly contributed to getting the crew of the Grissom killed, including Kirk's son.
- Admiral Kirk was being ordered to abandon his longtime first officer and friend by the leadership of Starfleet, knowingly sacrificing the Vulcan ambassador's son who had just saved hundreds of his fellow shipmates, after being told it may be possible to save his existence.
- And the recklessness of these actions and negligence of those responsible to deal with the situation appropriately, left the door wide open for the Klingons to murder Federation citizens within Federation space.
Kirk gets a reward.
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