A perfect, and highly appropriate, summation. Couldn't have said it better myself.This episode makes my ass bleed.![]()
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This is the kind of episode that makes a DVD copy of "Catspaw" stop, put down the gun and take a breath.
A perfect, and highly appropriate, summation. Couldn't have said it better myself.This episode makes my ass bleed.![]()
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What problem do they have with the original chronometer?![]()
They only had to built one set for this one, the council chamber and that was pretty mininal. The comsummate "bottle" show.
Yeah, they were afraid of overpopulation at the time. The hysteria of some scientists and groups was realized in this episode.
It makes no sense that they could feed, shelter and clothe the number of people apparently on Gideon. (Though admittedly the Gideonites don't seem to spend a lot on clothes.)
It would also seem that the Enterprise could look down from orbit and see the teeming masses.
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"I hear you knockin' but you can't come in..."
Common sense and scientific logic aside, I suspect the main reason it doesn't turn up on more people's "worst of" lists is because it's also rather dull.This ranks even lower than ENT's "Rogue Planet" on the common sense and scientific logic scale. It's a wonder this one isn't ranked as the worst episode of the Original Series ever considering the logical loopholes big enough to sail a Trident sub through.
Colonization could never be an efficient remedy to overpopulation, not at the rate humans and Trek near-humans tend to procreate. One would need hundreds of millions of ships to make a reasonable dent in the population - quite impractical in comparison with mass killings.
Why did the Gideonites have a population progam? Hodin makes it rather clear:
-Long lifetimes which the people don't want to give up
-Failure to find efficient contraceptives, because most chemicals and surgeries are negated by the regenerating physique of the Gideonites
-A religious conviction that contraception is wrong to begin with
The last point was obviously the most important here. And of course, the idea of massive "postnatal abortions" would not have been accepted by the religious folks of Gideon, either. Voluntary steps like contraception or suicide were forbidden and would not have been performed by the populance, so they clearly wouldn't have willingly participated in wholesale slaughter. Yet succumbing to a government-provided disease was supposed to work - probably because the government would spread the disease without telling anybody.
As Hodin later says, though, the true effect of the disase program would not be limited to mass murder. In addition, the radically blasphemous attitudes of Hodin and his suicidal daughter would hopefully set an example for the masses. Of course, that part is spoiled by Kirk who saves Odona's life, leaving only the mass murder program as such.
Timo Saloniemi
"We don't need no infestation...".
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