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What are your controversial Star Trek opinions?

He is demoted.

That he sees the demotion as a reward doesn’t change the fact it as intended as a punishment.

Starfleet didn’t see it as a reward.
The president doesn't even treat it as a punishment.

The luck of the circumstances does not change the nature of the crime.

I don't understand why this is hard to see. People are acting like Kirk's heroics were all preordained and that he deserves all the accolades with little to no repercussions. The President even says that the demotion basically puts him back in to a position that he serves in the best capacity.

So, where's the punishment for any of these crimes? I'm sorry, but a question of ethics bugs me when Kirk assaulted officers. He violated the rights of others, usurped due process and created a conspiracy to upend lawful chain of command.

Again, the circumstances that ended up happening demonstrated Kirk's value but doesn't change his actions and his actions should have some measure of consequence and punishment. Not excessive punishment but a punishment nonetheless.

You're accusing me of being black and white and yet there's zero recognition that the punishment was a slap on the wrist. It was the same a kid taking a joyride and his billionaire dad bailing him out to me. It feels wrong.

Brooklyn 99 handled this way better.
 
You're accusing me of being black and white and yet there's zero recognition that the punishment was a slap on the wrist.

Yes it was a slap on the wrist, to the amusement of 99.99999999999999999% of the audience.

It’s a mid-eighties action adventure romp. You’re over thinking and applying ethical values and arguments to something that lacks the substance and depth required to do so.

It takes all kinds of weird mental gymnastics to watch Kirk knock out a nameless redshirt and then cry ‘assault’.

It’s just a fun movie.
 
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 could swear Picard says something similar in "Redemption II".

It was the same a kid taking a joyride and his billionaire dad bailing him out to me. It feels wrong.

It that is all you got out of it, then it probably says more about you than what was presented on screen. Kirk wasn't some kid who went on a joyride. He was someone who had given his entire life to the Federation and Starfleet. He didn't take the Enterprise for shit-and-giggles, he took it to recover the body of a friend who had also given his entire life to the Federation and Starfleet, and made the ultimate sacrifice to save a Starfleet ship and crew.

At the end of the day, they owed him far more than he owed them. Starfleet got him anyway, by giving him a broken ship.
 
It’s a mid-eighties action adventure romp. You’re over thinking and applying ethical values and arguments to something that lacks the substance and depth required to do so.
That is what I do.

A lot.

It takes all kinds of weird mental gymnastics to watch Kirk knock out a nameless redshirt and then cry ‘assault’.
It really doesn't. It applies real world expectations of conduct to fictional characters, which you have already stated I take too far.

And I have already acknowledge the irrationality of this position. Doesn't change the "gut feeling" I have over it. As @Tallguy notes, the "punishment" was a wink and a reward. It grinds my gears, cuts against the grain, irks me, etc.

Does it ruin my enjoyment of the movie? No. Still a fun movie. Does that one little moment stand out to me? Yeah, it does. That's how I analyze works. I find those little moments and go through them again and again.

Mileage will vary.

Alright, I give up.

TVH should have ended with Kirk on his way to prison along with his crew.

Maybe it could have ended with him them all having the shit beaten out of them by hardened cons?
While I appreciate hyperbole, that's not the argument I'm making.

Only for Kirk's choices to have a consequence beyond the wink and the slap on the wrist.
 
It that is all you got out of it, then it probably says more about you than what was presented on screen.
As I've stated, again and again and again, yes it does say more about me.

I've stated my reasons and apparently that's not good enough.

He was someone who had given his entire life to the Federation and Starfleet. He didn't take the Enterprise for shit-and-giggles, he took it to recover the body of a friend who had also given his entire life to the Federation and Starfleet, and made the ultimate sacrifice to save a Starfleet ship and crew.
Yes, but that's not the arguments being made. The arguments being made here are "Kirk saved the Earth therefore he should not be punished."

Which wasn't the motivation for his original choices. It's disingenuous at best, and seems set frame this as badly as possible. You all got what you wanted to I guess jokes on me. :shrug:
 
No, his original motivation was to recover the body of a friend, to respect the wishes of his family and return his body to Vulcan.

Not a kid joyriding.
Poor analogy on my part.

He did the wrong thing for the right reasons. He is to both be commended and punished.

That's all I see it.

And it is damn frustrating to hear people say Star Trek is about rules, and laws and ethics and conduct, and set a hire standard and then throw them out with no repercussions because of personal biases. That's not justice to me.
 
Ending the movie by giving the crew six months of hard labor, mining borite would've given the movie the emotional kick it needed!
I'm out too.

If people will not actually read my opinion without adding in the supposed punishment they imagine I mean then this conversation is going nowhere.

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Ok, well, at least I got a good Brooklyn 99 clip for my trouble. Thanks, Richard!
 
I think something that is missing, is the Sarek angle. "I've been to your government, I've seen your reports." They gave the Vulcan ambassador the brush off, or else he never comes to Kirk.

And, who would Kirk be if he brushed off a professional or private request of the Vulcan ambassador? He was willing to give his life and career to help his friend, in front of T'Pau.

Kirk is a creature of honor and duty.
 
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