Section 31 is nothing more than a conspiratorial cabal filled with deluded extremists who willingly break the Federation's laws for their own selfish purposes. They may claim to have the Federation's best interests in mind, but they are just extremist vigilantes because they're not part of the Federation government.
Mind if I borrow this for my Section 31 fan film?
Two of my favourite factions in DS9 - the Maquis, and Section 31 - simply because both challenge the notion of what the Federation is all about. They were antagonists, but not in the traditional sense of adversary like the Cardassians and the Dominion were.
Yes: exaggeration. But did anyone else feel like this?
Two of my favourite factions in DS9 - the Maquis, and Section 31 - simply because both challenge the notion of what the Federation is all about. They were antagonists, but not in the traditional sense of adversary like the Cardassians and the Dominion were.
First off, Section 31 does not challenge the notion of what the Federation is all about because they are a criminal organization! That would be like saying the Mafia challenges the notion of what the United States is all about just because the Mafia is a secretive band of thugs and killers. Also, do we even know if the whole Founder plague was effective? The Female Changeling surrendered not because of the virus but because Odo showed her the Federation would show the Dominion mercy and wouldn't be vindictive. If anything, Section 31 damn near jeopardized that. Just because they claim to be fighting for the Federation's best interests doesn't mean they're right.
I dislike the principal of having the need for Section31 to help make the Federation what it is today. If it couldn't exist as a utopian society based on it's own values then it doesn't really deserve to exist at all.
However, the idea of Section31 is a realistic one and also from a storytelling point of view an excellent one. I love to hate Section31
I dislike the principal of having the need for Section31 to help make the Federation what it is today. If it couldn't exist as a utopian society based on it's own values then it doesn't really deserve to exist at all.
However, the idea of Section31 is a realistic one and also from a storytelling point of view an excellent one. I love to hate Section31
Me, too!
They were supposed to be morally dodgy, and pretty vilainous, but also not your usual har-har we're so evulz organisation. Like everything else in DS9 (except for series 7 Dukat), Section 31 was like that: it gave you room for discussion, to defend or condemn it, because good, like the truth, is in the eye of the beholder.
Besides, you could hardly portray the Obsidian Order and the Tal Shiar as ruthless and terrible, but then make Section 31 look all righteous and shiny. It would have been pretty hypocritical.
I think that if all big governments have intelligence agencies (that are not part of the military, mind), it would be naive to believe that the Feds don't, despite their smug, superior, holier-than-thou goody-two-shoes mentality.
To be fair though, the list that you put down aren't really all that concentric, ie Vic Fontaine has nothing to do with the Pah Wraiths or Section 31. I think it's especially clear in today's serial-heavy world that that several arcs and subplots can co-exist as long as there's a clean separation for the most part between them.
The majority of the war, in terms of what we saw on screen, was still fought in the usual TOS/TNG sense, in that battles were either fought offscreen, or between only a couple ships in dogfight, or merely hinted at, esp. when it came to one side suffering considerable losses.
To be fair though, the list that you put down aren't really all that concentric, ie Vic Fontaine has nothing to do with the Pah Wraiths or Section 31. I think it's especially clear in today's serial-heavy world that that several arcs and subplots can co-exist as long as there's a clean separation for the most part between them.
The fact that Vince has nothing to do with the Pah'Wraiths or anything is exactly my point. There so many things in there to spilt up the characters and story, so everything got messed up. While it is possible to have arcs co-existing, you have to be careful. If you look at NuBSG, there are lots of arcs at the same time, but it seems like they have been planned, they tend to build well and then come to a thought out and interesting climax. They are never forgotten, but they are never overdone. Not true with DS9.
This I'd have to call out, because there were times when we did see TOS/TNG ship battles take place sometimes offscreen, or in piecemeal (say, if Picard was separated from the ship and the story would divide focus between him and the ship). The final battle in TUC is a good example: the action alternated between the ships and the assassination plot, but it's clear that time passes. It depends on how the battles serve story function. Battles with more urgency (as you put it) are going to play out differently than a battle in the teaser. If it's war, you'll expect to see more battles in general, but we can compare a routine patrol to, say, the Defiant about to get destroyed if not for the Klingons. In the former, you'll see Sisko calmly call out a seemingly generic order (Beta Pattern Whatsitz), but in the latter, you'll see much more input by the crew, more worry from Garak and Nog, and more yelling by Sisko.In TNG/TOS the battles actually matched what was going on in the ship, Kirk or Picard would order phasers fired and they would fire them. In DS9 Sisko can say 'Commander, initiate Beta defense plan' (or whatever) in the same time it takes for the Defiant to destroy seven ships and traverse the entire battlefield. The sense of urgency seen outside the ship is never matched inside the ship.The majority of the war, in terms of what we saw on screen, was still fought in the usual TOS/TNG sense, in that battles were either fought offscreen, or between only a couple ships in dogfight, or merely hinted at, esp. when it came to one side suffering considerable losses.
Sorry, to bring us off topic...![]()
I dislike the principal of having the need for Section31 to help make the Federation what it is today. If it couldn't exist as a utopian society based on it's own values then it doesn't really deserve to exist at all.
However, the idea of Section31 is a realistic one and also from a storytelling point of view an excellent one. I love to hate Section31
Me, too!
They were supposed to be morally dodgy, and pretty vilainous, but also not your usual har-har we're so evulz organisation. Like everything else in DS9 (except for series 7 Dukat), Section 31 was like that: it gave you room for discussion, to defend or condemn it, because good, like the truth, is in the eye of the beholder.
Besides, you could hardly portray the Obsidian Order and the Tal Shiar as ruthless and terrible, but then make Section 31 look all righteous and shiny. It would have been pretty hypocritical.
I think that if all big governments have intelligence agencies (that are not part of the military, mind), it would be naive to believe that the Feds don't, despite their smug, superior, holier-than-thou goody-two-shoes mentality.
Well, on paper, the Federation's leadership doesn't even know that Section 31 is even helping them out. So yeah, they're smug and superior, but they're also ignorant about this sort of thing, too.
That's typical human though: all goody-two-shoes as long as on the surface, all is well. Humans will not abandon their ruthless survival instincts in a couple centuries, it's just not going to happen. I love it how several alien species call the Feds' bullshit on their so-called "superior morality", among them, of course, Cardassians.
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