They'd (the writers) have to kill all the ones who stayed with Equinox, otherwise they'd send the message that it's okay to commit genocide to improve your own life.



It's a Karma Houdini. They commit genocide on innocent aliens without any remorse, and in the end they get to go home and live happily ever after without any negative consequences.
It's also why I don't like "Pale Moonlight" that much, Sisko's character should have been different after doing something like that. Writers' fumbled, bad.
And... what if they depict the murderers as being apprehended and imprisoned for the rest of their lives?
Not really, he became an awful hypocrite actually. All that blather about how the dream will never die in "Far Beyond the Stars" and then he went and destroyed the dream himself.I would argue that Sisko was a different man after "In the Pale Moonlight," but that the change was subtle.
And... what if they depict the murderers as being apprehended and imprisoned for the rest of their lives?
I doubt the victimized survivors of their genocide would think kindly to that.
And besides, you were one of the ones arguing that locking up the Maquis wasn't an efficient solution.
I would argue that Sisko was a different man after "In the Pale Moonlight," but that the change was subtle.
Not really, he became an awful hypocrite actually. All that blather about how the dream will never die in "Far Beyond the Stars" and then he went and destroyed the dream himself.
Belanna may have left the Academy after one year but the experience she learned in the Maquiz made her a damn good engineer enough to become Voyager's Chief Engineer.
Chakotay was a officer before he left Starfleet to join the Maquiz[sic],so that they had both starfleet training and were alble to use Starfleet equipment and computers
Chakotay ran his ship like a Starfleet ship, BUT his ship his crew acted on there instincts and when it had to be done.
I think that the friction was forgotten by the later seasons. But when Voyager became a mixed crew ship Chakotay's crew were out numbered plus if they wanted to get home there would have to be a bit of give and take on both sides ,in the end they all got home-minus the ones who got killed when Voyager/Maquiz[sic] Ship was scopped[sic] up from the Badlands and desposited in the Delta Quadrant and also the ones who got killed during the transit back to Earth
Chakotay ran his ship like a Starfleet ship, BUT his ship his crew acted on there instincts and when it had to be done.
Source?
If a work of art has them captured, and then nothing else happens to them nor is their any sort of restitution to the victims, then yes I think they got off easy.
It would've been like Dukat simply being marooned on some random planet no one knows about to live off the rest of his life without anyone coming after him. And no one would care enough to go after him
As for the unintentional murder thing, said mass murderer/war criminal had done things to merit the death penalty whereas said other person didn't.
Sisko got away with too damn much in DS9, and in the end he got a karma houdini of his own by becoming a God.
Funny, people say Archer/Janeway got a Houdini for their actions but nobody brings up Sisko's own houdini acts.
I didn't ask if they got off easy, I asked if you think that a work of art that depicts them as being imprisoned for the rest of their lives for their crimes is saying that committing that crime is okay by not depicting something worse than life imprisonment as happening to them.
Personally, that sounds like a fine punishment for Dukat to me -- especially since Dukat's ego is such that it would probably drive him mad that no one cared enough to go after him.
]Mass murder merits the death penalty? Really?
And to think, I thought part of the point of Star Trek was that they'd renounced the death penalty.
I for one never had a problem with seeing Janeway and Archer commit morally ambiguous acts.
Chakotay ran his ship like a Starfleet ship, BUT his ship his crew acted on there instincts and when it had to be done.
Source?
Where is your source that he didn't? Chakotay's problem probably wasn't with Starfleet per say, but with Federation Policy. Now Starfleet enforced that policy, but that isn't to say that even Starfleet agreed with it 100%. Even Admiral Nechayve understood the Maquis position.
You are all assuming that Chakotay was forced to abide by Starfleet regulations, but the truth is we don't know that, and the decision to become a Starfleet crew could have just as easily have been his as anyone else's.
There really is no direct proof of anything related to Trek, only interpretation.
Brit
I didn't ask if they got off easy, I asked if you think that a work of art that depicts them as being imprisoned for the rest of their lives for their crimes is saying that committing that crime is okay by not depicting something worse than life imprisonment as happening to them.
Yes, because then we just see them in their jail cell going "Nyah-Nyah! I killed a few species but all that happened to me is that I'm in a jail cell! Can't do nothing to me now!"
I have to wonder why you're so against genocidal, heartless maniacs being killed off.
Personally, that sounds like a fine punishment for Dukat to me -- especially since Dukat's ego is such that it would probably drive him mad that no one cared enough to go after him.
That's karmic death, he'd kill himself in that case. I'm talking about a horrible character who does evil things and then nothing really bad happens to him in the end.
I for one never had a problem with seeing Janeway and Archer commit morally ambiguous acts.
Would you have less problem if it was Sisko or Kirk pulling such acts? Because those two get a pass for everything.
Sometimes when a character is just that evil, they have to be killed off somehow whether it be by the cast's hands or not. That's my opinion.
Or give them a fate worse than death (which also is more than just sticking them in a room).
If Chakotay ran his ship like a Starfleet one, Tuvok wouldn't have needed to whip part of his crew in shape and explain Starfleet rules & regulations to them in "Learning Curve" or th fact that they said flat out "they'd do their part on the ship but wanted nothing to do with Starfleet rules."And in and of itself, it doesn't mean a lot. Maybe he punched a few of them to get them into the uniform, still doens't mean it wasn't his idea in the first place.
Again it's a matter of interpretation and proof of nothing.
Brit
Sometimes when a character is just that evil, they have to be killed off somehow whether it be by the cast's hands or not. That's my opinion.
Or give them a fate worse than death (which also is more than just sticking them in a room).
And it's fair enough to say that you think a character ought to be killed off, but that doesn't mean that any story that doesn't kill off a character such as you describe is actually depicting mass murder/genocide as being okay.
Well, there's the episode where Chakotay punches someone and calls it the Maquis way...
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.