What do they need the body for??
You don't want to know those details.

What do they need the body for??
McCoy didn't even know what was going on until Kirk broke him out of the cell. He told him that he was 'suffering from a Vulcan mind meld', and then McCoy said, "That green-blooded son of a bitch. It's his revenge for all those arguments he lost."We're not talking about Fal Tor Pan. When they stole the Enterprise they thought they were going to get back a body. Katra 101 as far as the Vulcans knew.
That's what Kirk (and Sarek) are asking for. And what Starfleet dismissed as mumbo jumbo.
It's Earth. It's the capital of the Federation. There should be Vulcan medicine there.
The way it plays out they are racing to get to Genesis before the Klingons do and before the planet blows up.
But from what the Enterprise crew knows the ticking clock is McCoy. They don't know any of the rest of it.
Of course the real question is: What do they need the body for?? What is even going ON in this movie?!?
The point is that Kirk went to his boss, the top of all Starfleet and said "Hey, I've got a sick guy, a dead friend, the Vulcan ambassador asking me for help, and we need to do a thing" and Morrow came back with "Nahhhhhhh. That's a bunch of pointy eared green blooded nonsense."McCoy didn't even know what was going on until Kirk broke him out of the cell. He told him that he was 'suffering from a Vulcan mind meld', and then McCoy said, "That green-blooded son of a bitch. It's his revenge for all those arguments he lost."
It takes all kinds of weird mental gymnastics to watch Kirk knock out a nameless redshirt and then cry ‘assault’.
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.
TVH should have ended with Kirk on his way to prison along with his crew.
Maybe it could have closed with them all having the shit beaten out of them by hardened cons?
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.
The feel the movie always gave me was that it formally was a punishment (So Starfleet could always say they took appropriate disciplinary action if they were approached by critics), but in actuality it was the 'reward' Kirk wanted (having a starship command again instead of a dull desk job, even if it came with a rank reduction).There was punishment, though. Just because you disagree with it, doesn't mean it didn't happen. Reduction in rank is a pretty big deal in military circles.
Would you like to address me by name?A so-called assault that did not deserve the level of punishment suggested by you-know-who. Further, his complaining centers on Kirk "assaulting" a redshirt, yet fails to aim that same level of anger toward Sulu, who also "assaulted" a guard, destroyed Federation property, etc. The law must have separate meanings for each individual.
Nope. Assumption. Demonstrate that that is what I requesting please and thank you before asserting it.That seems to be the "cure" he's prescribing.
Even most Vulcans didn't think it would work. It had been so rarely done. So yes, this still can be called mysticism.
The feel the movie always gave me was that it formally was a punishment (So Starfleet could always say they took appropriate disciplinary action if they were approached by critics), but in actuality it was the 'reward' Kirk wanted (having a starship command again instead of a dull desk job, even if it came with a rank reduction).
Demonstrate that that is what I requesting please and thank you before asserting it.
Brig time, considered time already served due to time in exile on Vulcan.What punishment would you have put up on screen?
Not when the 'rarely' is once or twice in a couple thousand years."Rarely" means it has been attempted, so there was a historical trail, which anyone--Vulcan or not--should not have dismissed as the equivalent of 60s record-buyers playing LPs backward and claiming something magical spoke to them. Morrow was being a smug atheist, making himself appear to be a fool, and imagine what the brass thought once Spock was back among the living--"Zoiks! A-a ghost, Scoob!!". No, they had to accept the reality of that "mysticism" they so comfortably wrote off in their foolish manner.
A letter of reprimand in his permanent record.
I would sure hope so.I would imagine that would be standard fare, after a criminal conviction. Even if it isn't exactly what you want, there would a notation of a violation of the chain of command.
Sorry, I am sure people were expecting me to be a lot more cruel, possibly hanging Kirk and company from a yardarm but I checked in with legal counsel on the matter:
I'd like to come back to this because I think it's an interesting question. I think Garak. Quark is mostly a petty crook, but Garak did (we assume) horrible things as a member of the Obsidian Order. One could argue he's "punished" eventually in seeing Cardassia in a broken state at the end of the war, but I'm not sure. He's a very "grey area" character.Who is worse / less accountable for his actions? Garak or Quark?
*SNORT!*Special-er
Yeah, no. I'd argue that's more in the Most People Would Call Them War Crimes ballpark. But then we get into Georgiou territory again, because It's The Klingon Way. I think in both cases, it's probably one of those things that requires something like an International/Interstellar Court, where the preponderance of peoples in a quadrant (or whatever) can decide.Going back to Kor: When he orders the execution of hundreds of Organians I don't think we can shrug and say "Well, it's their way." But many people do.
Exactly. They knew what they were getting into. Everyone of them knew they were risking court martial and possibly jail.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.
I watched it yesterday. I thought it held up quite well.I'm not sure if the first TO BE OR NOT TO BE holds up now
My friend, I think you are what we call in D&D "lawful neutral".And I have already acknowledge the irrationality of this position. Doesn't change the "gut feeling" I have over it.
I'm SO glad someone else uses this phrase!cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs
More realistic, but probably not as good Drama.(This is SO controversial!)
The point is that Kirk went to his boss, the top of all Starfleet and said "Hey, I've got a sick guy, a dead friend, the Vulcan ambassador asking me for help, and we need to do a thing" and Morrow came back with "Nahhhhhhh. That's a bunch of pointy eared green blooded nonsense."
That's when Dr. Squeek should have showed up and said "Actually, Admiral, it has been proven by doctors T'ipsy and Schlock that this is a serious medical condition and we should attend to it post haste."
My friend, I think you are what we call in D&D "lawful neutral".
"Lawful neutral defines any character or approach that follows a strict code to maintain stability and order. Lawful neutral characters believe in and support the rule of law, no matter whether it's good or evil."
Eh. Starfleet failed to charge him with some other things I think but overall the demotion didn't carry enough weight. In my humble, belabored and minority opinionNo. I just wondered what Starfleet didn't do that we went on pages and pages talking about.
Fun conversation.![]()
I can be, at times, yes.My friend, I think you are what we call in D&D "lawful neutral".
"Lawful neutral defines any character or approach that follows a strict code to maintain stability and order. Lawful neutral characters believe in and support the rule of law, no matter whether it's good or evil."
I did push for more 'proper' controversial stuff so blame me
Sometimes the laws an ass and needs to be broken, the punishment does not need to fit the crime.Eh. Starfleet failed to charge him with some other things I think but overall the demotion didn't carry enough weight. In my humble, belabored and minority opinion
I can be, at times, yes.
And that's on a judge to decide.Sometimes the laws an ass and needs to be broken, the punishment does not need to fit the crime.
I think it's safe to say no one thought this would be controversial, but here we are...I did push for more 'proper' controversial stuff so blame me![]()
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