^I don't disagree. But as you know, classified documents can at times be leaked...be it by a hacker, or a traitor, or just someone being sloppy....
^I don't disagree. But as you know, classified documents can at times be leaked...be it by a hacker, or a traitor, or just someone being sloppy....
Is it now?
^And your reasons would be...?![]()
I don't think Section 31 = any today's secret intelligence organization. They are obviously very different.
Layton was acting out of greed for power, not to protect the Federation, although that would have been part of it. He used young personnel, Red Squad and young captain Benteen to support his goals, and it was done very sloppily. I don't see a sign of S31 anywhere. They are very smooth, and wouldn't undermine what Federation is about and give all power to one man. They are there to protect the Federation not to destroy it. After all, Layton would have been a threat to them. Insurrection was horribly executed, I don't think that Admiral was an agent at all, may be he was working for them on a one time mission like Ross, because his views temporarily aligned with theirs.
I also don't like the idea that Section 31 existed since the founding of the Federation. How was whatever Sloan said true? No one would have known about it since then? May be it was part of the original charter as Section 31 of the constitution but was eventually cut off and Sloan used it as inspiration.
The vibe I get from the show is that Section 31 is a small organization of like-minded, self-sacrificing individuals, people who have lost a lot or don't have much to lose. It's a loose organization separated into cells of 2 or 3 people all controlled by one or two people at the top. Sort of like alqaida, but much more sophisticated. Imagine if Bashir was recruited (which in a way he was) and freely accepted entry. He would have likely only known Sloan and no one else.
Section 31 rely on a few sympathetic officers in Starfleet to turn the other cheek and feed them key information and give them a nudge here and there (like the ones in Starfleet Medical), or help provide them with special technology. Because of a lack of agents, especially at high positions, they are forced to temporarily ally themselves with others, such as Ross, in order achieve their goals, or Bashir, when they needed a walking tricorder for the operation on Romulus. There are no permanent agents, and only a few real ones, that kind of thing would be very hard to track.
I believed Sloan when he said there is no headquarters, no training academy, no files, no back up and support, no one to report to. It's all in the head of a few individuals who don't think like other 24th century officers. I also think it's a recently created organization, inspired by Section 31 from the founding of Federation. If it had been around for hundreds of years, we would have heard whispers about it.
I also wouldn't exclude the possibility that Sloan may be the actual leader of the whole thing, or at least second-in-command. There might be an element of truth to the whole admiral Fujisaki poisoning story or the story that his son was killed in an ambush. There seems to be a common thread that creeps through his fake stories.
Finally, I wouldn't discount Timo's theory that it might all be made up by Sloan, although it would be very difficult to achieve by one person.
^
If you didn't watch Enterprise, how did you come to the conclusion that it "goes against established history"?
^
If you didn't watch Enterprise, how did you come to the conclusion that it "goes against established history"?
I didn't want to derail the topic, but in brief:
The first episode kind of goes against it, doesn't it? Klingons were first met in a disastrous incident that cost many lives, not on a farm. And 5 days to Quo'nos on a Warp 5 ship? Are Klingons next to Vulcan?![]()
I heard that there were Romulans and Ferengi, although I didn't see those episodes.
I also heard that there was talk of a mysterious station, apparently referring to ds9. I mean come one, DS9 was built during occupation in the space of 2.5 or 1.5 years, not 300 years before ds9.
Plus, I can't see how the coming Romulan war is supposed to be the same as the one we read about, ie, Nuclear warhead lobbed at each other without us seeing each other.
I saw a few other episodes, some were decent, and I can't help but feel for the actors, especially Bacula, but the show doesn't look canon thanks to retardation of the producers
PS. And since I didn't watch the Romulan episodes, did the Romulans have cloak?
I don't think Section 31 = any today's secret intelligence organization. They are obviously very different.
I don't like the idea of Section 31 being involved in every little coverup that happened in Star Trek, like the book authors implicating them in Insurrection, and Layton working with them and all that nonsense.
Layton was acting out of greed for power, not to protect the Federation, although that would have been part of it. He used young personnel, Red Squad and young captain Benteen to support his goals, and it was done very sloppily. I don't see a sign of S31 anywhere. They are very smooth, and wouldn't undermine what Federation is about and give all power to one man. They are there to protect the Federation not to destroy it.
After all, Layton would have been a threat to them. Insurrection was horribly executed, I don't think that Admiral was an agent at all, may be he was working for them on a one time mission like Ross, because his views temporarily aligned with theirs.
I also don't like the idea that Section 31 existed since the founding of the Federation.
The vibe I get from the show is that Section 31 is a small organization of like-minded, self-sacrificing individuals, people who have lost a lot or don't have much to lose. It's a loose organization separated into cells of 2 or 3 people all controlled by one or two people at the top. Sort of like alqaida, but much more sophisticated. Imagine if Bashir was recruited (which in a way he was) and freely accepted entry. He would have likely only known Sloan and no one else.
Section 31 rely on a few sympathetic officers in Starfleet to turn the other cheek and feed them key information and give them a nudge here and there (like the ones in Starfleet Medical), or help provide them with special technology. Because of a lack of agents, especially at high positions, they are forced to temporarily ally themselves with others, such as Ross, in order achieve their goals, or Bashir, when they needed a walking tricorder for the operation on Romulus. There are no permanent agents, and only a few real ones, that kind of thing would be very hard to track.
^I didn't really watch Enterprise bar a few episodes, and I can't consider it cannon when it goes against established "history".
Yeah, and the United States Army was in My Lai, Vietnam, to save it from the North Vietnamese. That didn't stop those Army troops from deciding that they had to destroy the village to save it.
Section 31 is terribly incompetent, after all.
Section 31 is not there to protect the Federation; that's just their excuse. Section 31 is there to perpetuate its own power base.
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