Flint was the only person on Holberg 917-G and yet Kirk didn't simply take the ryetalyn.
Good example on your part.KIRK: We'll pay for it, work for it, trade for it.
FLINT: You have nothing I want.
KIRK: But you have the ryetalyn that we need! If necessary, we'll take it.
Requiem For Methuselah establishes that what was happening with the Ba'Ku was a long standing Federation procedure. Mr, Spock, usual seen as an ethic being, backed up Captain Kirk's actions, Mr.Spock is also the one to later state "Logic clearly dictates that the needs of the many, out weigh the needs of the few,"KIRK: Mister Flint, if anything happens to us, four deaths and then my crew comes down and takes that ryetalyn.
SPOCK: Mister Flint, unless you are certain, I would suggest you refrain from a most useless experiment.
That because the miners were willing to part with them.In Mudd's Women Kirk didn't take the Dilithium from the miners.
The Ba'Ku/Son'a left their original home world three hundred and nine years before, nowhere do any of them state how long they've been on that planet.but when a Ba'ku says something very simply and plainly -- that they've lived on the Ba'ku planet for three hundred years
The Federation Charter would have come from multiple species, some of whom might have had no difficulty with imperialism, so a ban won't necessarily exist.[imperialism]. The Federation Charter would have banned it from the start.
What people are claiming is that using the particles to to medically help many billions is right. Between the two different rights in discussion here, some put one of the rights ahead of the other.I'm still utterly baffled by the people here claiming that the forced relocation of a sovereign people is somehow the right thing to do.
Just as you (apparent) put one of the rights ahead of the other.
In a way Picard did just that, after asking Anij how old she was and later after flying the Captain's yacht to the surface to speak to the village leaders, Picard laid out the entire situation to the Ba'Ku. At this point the lovely spiritual Ba'Ku could have stepped up and simply offered to voluntarily relocate. In order to help many billions of people (no other reason). The Ba'Ku declined.But no one in the movie ever asks the Ba'ku if they'd leave for that reason, as I recall. And even still, it's simply wrong to force them to do so.
It would seem clear that the Federation either didn't recognize that sovereignty, or simply choose to ignore it for their own reasons.They basically wanted to violate a foreign culture's sovereignty and fry an entire planet for the sake of an experiment, not for the sake of a guaranteed outcome.
I don't thing that the Son'a bluffed anyone into anything, the Federation likely had the Son'a well figured out. They wanted the particles for the own purposes, while the Federation wanted the particles for a entirely different purpose (to help many billions of people).Because the Son'a had managed to bluff the UFP and Starfleet into...
The Son'a kept certain details away form the Federation, but it was no secret what kind of people they were.
