2x22 – “Cogenator”
Tripped up on morality
This was, for the most part, a very good episode. It explored morality, how we view it, and how it can negatively impact other cultures when we force our morality on them. Then ending of the episode, however, almost completely undid all of that, and generally left me feeling disgusted, not only with Archer, but with Trip as well, but I’ll get into that later.
As I said, there was lot to like about this episode. We started out with Trip making a not-so-sly attempt to get T’Pol to admit her age when they are observing some interesting stellar phenomena, and along the way finally met a species that was every bit as curious and friendly as our crew. They’re willing to share their advanced technology, give tours of their ship, exchange food, and give rides in what I’m dubbing the “space bathysphere”.

It’s all almost too good to be true, and as we find out, it truly is, as one of our favorite characters has to struggle with his own sense of morality.
At first it doesn’t seem promising, what with Trip and Reed hitting on the alien babes of the week, but from there we move on to the Vissian engineer, his wife, and their cogenator. Star Trek has, for the most part, stayed safely away from aliens who were anything but bi-gendered, so this was an interesting concept, one I can’t still help but wonder how it works because of the seeming complexity of it all. Actually, for once the implications of how the cogenator is treated and regarded by the Vissian engineer and his wife even managed to overcome the brief humor of Phlox’s offer to not only explain to Trip how it all works, but to show him some pictures as well. I, like Trip, have a tough time getting my head around it, so I struggled right along with him. I mean, just think about it, an entire gender relegated to nothing more than sex slavery. It’s no small issue, and I can see why Trip acted the way he did, even if I think he should have resisted the urge to let his morality cloud his focus. And with Archer out taking a ride in the space bathysphere, he had no one to turn to for counsel or even a sympathetic ear to talk it out with.
As a TnT’er I kind of find it interesting that he went to T’Pol for advice. He got some good advice, and really shouldn’t have pried, because sometime ignorance truly can be bliss. There was something of a missed opportunity there though, in that for all that T’Pol has lectured Enterprise’s human crew about non-interference and not applying your morals to other cultures, she has actually done so on numerous occasions with humanity itself. Perhaps if he’d gone there he might have gotten a more receptive pointy ear on the issue, because when you think about it, when is it wrong
not to interfere? It’s a tough call in this episode, because on the one hand they have an otherwise friendly alien race that’s willing to share technology that would help advance humanity’s technologic level by leaps and bounds, and on the other we have the very objectionable case of servitude, made all the more objectionable by the fact this person is kept simply for its reproductive organs and regarded for nothing else.
While on the one hand I really wished Trip had left well enough alone, on the other I congratulate his initiative and really expect nothing less from him. It’s a travesty to his character that he ends up being belittled by his best friend for doing what could definitely be seen as the right thing, and that in the end all of his efforts are in vain because Captain Asshole and Sidekick Polly deny the cogenator asylum.

I really hate that they made Trip so docile too through his chewing out by the biggest hypocrite of them all. Just who the hell is Archer to lecture Trip on forcing his beliefs on others when he just got done doing it himself in the last episode to Phlox! Not to mention all the other times he’s done it to other alien cultures! :rant2:
And through it all, I was actually impressed by the Vissian Captain, who actually seemed like a pretty reasonable man and a much better Captain than Archer.
*sigh* I just… I just can’t get over Archer scolding Trip and Trip becoming the most self-depreciating person I can ever think of even seeing. Really, it’s like watching an abuse victim actually start to believe all the bullshit their abuser is telling to them as the beat them to a bloody pulp.

It almost ruins the episode for me, simply because it takes a very good moral struggle and trivializes it into “Archer is always right” and “don’t interfere with other cultures no matter what.” Granted, the cogenator killing itself was a very real possibility, and a good consequence of making the decision to interfere, but it should in no way reflect on if it was the right decision or not, because really it could go either way.
At least for the most part this was a very good episode, and a breath of fresh air from the rest of the season. I’d say 8 space bathyspheres out of 10.