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Kirk's execution of Nero/Optimus Prime "Any Last Words?" TF2

Good points. If we were supposed to think that the Vulcans had it right, that suppressing one's emotions is always a good thing, then Spock should have completed his Kolihnar training and gotten rid of those messy human emotions. But, of course, that's not what he does--in that timeline or the new one.

And in the new movie, you can argue that trying to deny his anger is what caused Spock to become "emotionally compromised" in the first place. Leading him to maroon Kirk, etc.

If one doesn't react angrily to seeing one's planet destroyed and one's mother killed before your eyes, then you've seriously lost touch with your humanity . . . .
You forgot one thing, Spock is not (totally) human. You suggest that Spock should have expressed his anger earlier and not in a distorted form like marooning Kirk. In what way should he have done it? Should he have tried to immediately strangle Kirk? Should he have gone on an intercept course with the Narada? You tell me what option he had that does not lead to anything but more suffering.

It is obvious that ST09 plays in a post 9/11 climate and you US folks guys did not react cool like the Britains did when Al-Qaeda stroke there. Perhaps this is behind our argument?

By the way, on the political level your argument is used for the most ugly causes. European xenophobia which is, believe me, far worse than in the US (lest you think I am one of those arrogant Euro-Jerks because of the former point), is rationalized by centrist politicians like this: "Some folks are antisemitic so we gotta create an outlet and be a bit antisemitic lest everything explodes one day."
So much about moderation, wisdom and the golden middle.
 
I am glad that my father never told me to execute revenge whenever I have such feelings.
.

But did your father tell you it was "wicked" to even have such feelings?

You already conceded that Kirk acted properly. It's not like he tracked Nero down and killed him just for the hell of it. But you seem to think that it's a disgrace that he and Spock weren't feeling the right emotions at the time. That (gasp!) part of them enjoyed getting revenge on Nero for all of his atrocities--and that (gasp!) they weren't ashamed of their baser, human feelings. And that Star Trek characters shouldn't experience negative emotions unless they later see the error of their ways.

That's the not the Star Trek I remember. At the end of "This Side of Paradise," Kirk hears that his men have already broken up several fights down on the planet. Kirk takes this as a good sign that things are getting back to normal . . .

Have you seen Murder by Decree? There's a great scene where Sherlock Holmes, that paragon of logic, loses his temper when confronted with an appalling crime.

A stern-faced Victorian tries to rebuke Holmes: "Your manner is offensive."

"Then you may take it, sir," Holmes replies passionately, "that I am offended!"

The point being that anger is a perfectly logical response to some situations. And is nothing to be ashamed of.

That doesn't mean you have to go out on a killing spree every time someone pisses you off . . . .
 
But it is nonetheless a benchmark and as Spock has always been pretty close to it it pains me to see him deviating from it. Fall of a hero and so on.

Interesting. But the thing is, I don't think Spock was ever meant to be the benchmark. McCoy and Spock were supposed to represent two extremes, emotion and logic, each with their own pluses and minuses.

Kirk was supposed to be benchmark, trying (not always successfully) to strike a balance between the two.

But, somewhere along the way, in part because Nimoy was so appealing as Spock, some fans began to think that Spock was supposed to be the role model, not Kirk. And that the Vulcan philosophy was something to aspire to.

(Never mind that the Vulcans have never been as peaceful and virtuous as some fans like to pretend.)
 
But did your father tell you it was "wicked" to even have such feelings?

You already conceded that Kirk acted properly. It's not like he tracked Nero down and killed him just for the hell of it. But you seem to think that it's a disgrace that he and Spock weren't feeling the right emotions at the time. That (gasp!) part of them enjoyed getting revenge on Nero for all of his atrocities--and that (gasp!) they weren't ashamed of their baser, human feelings. And that Star Trek characters shouldn't experience negative emotions unless they later see the error of their ways.

That's the not the Star Trek I remember. At the end of "This Side of Paradise," Kirk hears that his men have already broken up several fights down on the planet. Kirk takes this as a good sign that things are getting back to normal . . .

Have you seen Murder by Decree? There's a great scene where Sherlock Holmes, that paragon of logic, loses his temper when confronted with an appalling crime.

A stern-faced Victorian tries to rebuke Holmes: "Your manner is offensive."

"Then you may take it, sir," Holmes replies passionately, "that I am offended!"

The point being that anger is a perfectly logical response to some situations. And is nothing to be ashamed of.

That doesn't mean you have to go out on a killing spree every time someone pisses you off . . . .
Some years ago I might have agreed with Adorno who said that "those who think are not angry" but today I agree with Pope Gregory I that "reason can object evil with more power if it allies itself with anger" (I only have a German translation of the Latin original and my own translation into English is not perfect).
More angry people might actually make a difference in these decaffeinated times.

I am not in general for cold rationality, this would be boring as hell. I am totally on the side of Sherlock Holmes which is by the way a great example.
I merely think that if I saved my child instead of two people I don't know I would not be an ethical agent, I'd have to be forced to weight the lives equally respectively someone else would have to make the decision.

About the movie, I felt that something is wrong about it it and the 'blow up the Narada' scene together with the other scenes we talked about are the only moments in which I can put my finger on what feels wrong to ME. Obviously, as always with art, this is totally subjective. I just feel that Trek's principles got lost, that "EmoSpock" and Kirk have something of youthful rebels and that they could have channeled their natural adolescent urges better.


Interesting. But the thing is, I don't think Spock was ever meant to be the benchmark. McCoy and Spock were supposed to represent two extremes, emotion and logic, each with their own pluses and minuses.

Kirk was supposed to be benchmark, trying (not always successfully) to strike a balance between the two.

But, somewhere along the way, in part because Nimoy was so appealing as Spock, some fans began to think that Spock was supposed to be the role model, not Kirk. And that the Vulcan philosophy was something to aspire to.

(Never mind that the Vulcans have never been as peaceful and virtuous as some fans like to pretend.)
I don't think that the Vulcans are nasty warriors but Vulcan is certainly not a nice place.
In my eyes it is a rigid society that keeps its stupid ancient rituals in order to quell dissent. If somebody questions marriage rituals what prevents them from questioning emotional suppression?
You could even argue that they are similar to their distant relatives. Sure, they have no imperial goals and no Tal Shiar but you don't need a police state in order to maintain certain dogmas.

The Rommies channel their emotions and direct them towards the goal of unlimited expansion whereas the Vulcans suppress their emotions but both cultures strive hard to keep their dogmas intact.

I don't want to idolize them, I wouldn't wanna be part of their culture but in the particular instance of a cold-ethical issue there is something great about Vulcan ideology.
If it comes to something like the Genesis Project I rather listen to McCoy and if it comes to making quick, intuitive or seemingly paradoxical decisions I put my money on Kirk. In other words, again I totally agree with you that Spock is part of the troika and not more than that.
 
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You're looking for a ludicrous all-or-nothing approach here [...]
It means that we shouldn't be looking for absolutism.

I totally accept your accusation that I am the crazy totalitarian.

I don't think you're a crazy totalitarian. But I do think you're looking for the narrative to endorse your particular brand of moral absolutism, and I don't think that's fair to the film or the characters.

And Spock's entire character arc in the TOS films is all about him finding a different balance for himself than tends to be seen as appropriate in mainstream Vulcan society. "Logic, logic... Logic is the beginning of wisdom, Valeris. Not the end."

You basically agree with Sarek that it is OK to give in to one's desire for revenge.
No. I basically agree with Sarek that sometimes it's wrong to try to pretend you're not angry, that sometimes anger deserves expression.

Good points. If we were supposed to think that the Vulcans had it right, that suppressing one's emotions is always a good thing, then Spock should have completed his Kolihnar training and gotten rid of those messy human emotions. But, of course, that's not what he does--in that timeline or the new one.

Or, at least, if not that the Vulcans are wrong in general about how to behave, then that the Vulcans are wrong about what's right for Spock as an individual.

One of the concepts I've always liked from the novels, actually, is from Diane Duane's Spock's World. She identifies the philosophy of stoicism that Surak taught as being called cthia; she writes that Humans typically translate cthia as meaning "logic," but that a more accurate translation would be "passion's mastery." Throughout the novel, she suggests that Surak did not so much teach complete emotional suppression as partial suppression, with leeway given for emotions that are not harmful or whose expression is necessary for mental health. The implication being that modern Vulcan society had taken Surak's teachings too far, had become more "fundamentalist" than he'd intended.

If one doesn't react angrily to seeing one's planet destroyed and one's mother killed before your eyes, then you've seriously lost touch with your humanity . . .
Or, in Spock's or Sarek's case, their Vulcanity. ;)

I am not saying that you always can or should be a sublime ethical agent. This would be lunatic. But it is nonetheless a benchmark and as Spock has always been pretty close to it it pains me to see him deviating from it. Fall of a hero and so on.

I really think that you're projecting onto Spock a level of morality he has never actually possessed. Spock has always had a ruthless streak to him, a utilitarian pragmatism that sometimes sweeps aside issues of ethics. As far back as "Where No Man Has Gone Before," was advising Kirk to kill Gary Mitchel long before Mitchel actually became hostile to the crew; in Star Trek VI, he committed an invasive, nonconsensual mind meld with Lieutenant Valeris in order to obtain the names of the assassination conspiracy members, which more than a few people have argued amounts to the moral equivalent of rape. And, of course, Spock insisted that Edith Keeler must die (even though you'd really think that simply taking her with them back to the 23rd Century would have the same effect, removing her from history and preventing the rise of a pacifist movement).

By contrast, merely taking some satisfaction in the death of Nero, whom he had tried to save and been rebuffed by, seems quite mild.

You suggest that Spock should have expressed his anger earlier and not in a distorted form like marooning Kirk. In what way should he have done it? Should he have tried to immediately strangle Kirk? Should he have gone on an intercept course with the Narada? You tell me what option he had that does not lead to anything but more suffering.

Amongst other things, during the transit time, he could have gone to his quarters for a while to cry, and perhaps having Nyota with him to make things a bit more bearable. Or he could have hit the gym, perhaps taken his anger out on a punching bag, or at least by running on a treadmill. There are all sorts of ways to express and channel one's anger that don't require completely losing control -- that, in fact, would have enabled him to better control himself while on duty.

Frankly, if nothing else, Spock should have recognized that he was too emotionally traumatized by the death of his mother and the destruction of his entire planet to continue serving as acting captain.

It is obvious that ST09 plays in a post 9/11 climate and you US folks guys did not react cool like the Britains did when Al-Qaeda stroke there. Perhaps this is behind our argument?
Okay. Now, you're not a native English speaker, so I'm going to give you some leeway here and assume you didn't understand all the connotations of the vocabulary you just used.

Let me explain something: "cool," in the context of describing emotions, is a highly informal word. It carries a connotation of unimportance. Saying that someone was "cool" with something, or "reacted cool," implies that the thing to which they were reacting was not significant.

Do you see where that statement can come across as deeply offensive?

The 9/11 attacks were not like any other terrorist attack. They weren't like the 2005 London bombings. They weren't like the Madrid bombings. That's not to take away from those tragedies, mind you. But 9/11 was quite literally the largest, most devastating terrorist attack in human history.

Two thousand, nine hundred seventy-seven people were killed excluding the perpetrators -- including, I might add, 11 citizens of Germany. More than six thousand people were injured. Over three hundred of the dead were members of the New York City Fire Department, and other first responders. Two of the largest buildings in the world were destroyed, the emergency response services were utterly overwhelmed, and the entire city was absolutely crippled. And 9/11 is still claiming victims, as more and more people who worked at the wreckage site trying to find survivors succumb to various cancers brought about by the carcinogens released by the buildings -- and that's to say nothing of how many unknown numbers of people across all of New York City have died or may die from having been exposed to those carcinogens released into the city's atmosphere; that shit did not stay put, after all.

The 9/11 death toll was 56 times larger than the London bombings death tolls, and it's still climbing. You would literally have to start talking about the Blitz in order to find an event in recent British history truly comparable to the death toll of 9/11. So, no, we did not react as "cool" as the British did to the 2005 London bombings. And if someone had killed three thousand Britons, injured six thousand more, destroyed Canary Wharf, destroyed part of the Defense Ministry HQ, decimated the London fire department and Metropolitan Police, crippled the entire London metropolitan area for days, and was still claiming more victims years afterwards because of the environmental effects of the attacks? Had London suffered the worst terrorist attack in human history? I rather think the United Kingdom would have had a very similar reaction as the United States did to 9/11.

European xenophobia which is, believe me, far worse than in the US (lest you think I am one of those arrogant Euro-Jerks because of the former point), is rationalized by centrist politicians like this: "Some folks are antisemitic so we gotta create an outlet and be a bit antisemitic lest everything explodes one day."
So much about moderation, wisdom and the golden middle.
I don't think anyone here is trying to say that it's okay to have any and all feelings. Feelings of prejudice and bigotry are not okay; they're signs that something is wrong with you and you need to seek treatment, frankly. But being angry at the man who murdered your parents and killed billions is not a sign that anything's wrong -- it's a perfectly healthy and appropriate reaction. The issue there is finding a healthy way to channel and express that anger so that it doesn't overwhelm you, instead of trying to pretend that you can just bottle it up and it will go away.
 
I'm sorry. But from an ethical and military stand point, Kirk made the right decision.

To allow Nero to fall through the black hole, even in a shredded ship, means there exists a chance that he escapes justice.

Agreed.

It's simple logic, really: 1) Kirk offered to help. 2) Nero rejected that help. 3) Kirk then regarded Nero as a threat and acted accordingly.

Nero could have gotten away, so Kirk's "execution" was defense - of the Enterprise and of countless innocents.

And I submit that is entirely understandable to feel 'relief' at the death of a mass murderer such as this. It doesn't mean we're on their level, or that we enjoy killing, or death makes us happy. It's just an emotional release. Kind of like this:

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35pfllMiLag[/yt]

The Vulcan Science Academy's entry council were the ones being transgressive, by indulging in gross anti-Human prejudice -- essentially telling Spock that he's inferior to full Vulcans for being half-Human. They transgressed, and Spock behaved completely appropriately.

The way that Spock said "Live long and prosper" with an utterly pissed off tone, was probably my favorite line spoken by ANY Spock I've ever heard. :techman:
 
I really think that you're projecting onto Spock a level of morality he has never actually possessed. Spock has always had a ruthless streak to him, a utilitarian pragmatism that sometimes sweeps aside issues of ethics. As far back as "Where No Man Has Gone Before," was advising Kirk to kill Gary Mitchel long before Mitchel actually became hostile to the crew; in Star Trek VI, he committed an invasive, nonconsensual mind meld with Lieutenant Valeris in order to obtain the names of the assassination conspiracy members, which more than a few people have argued amounts to the moral equivalent of rape. And, of course, Spock insisted that Edith Keeler must die (even though you'd really think that simply taking her with them back to the 23rd Century would have the same effect, removing her from history and preventing the rise of a pacifist movement).

By contrast, merely taking some satisfaction in the death of Nero, whom he had tried to save and been rebuffed by, seems quite mild.
I think precisely the other way around.
When Spock says "kill Gary Mitchell while you can" or "Edith Keeler must die" to Kirk he is the sublime ethical agent I am talking about.
When he mind rapes Valeris he is not because his anger comes to the surface and when he follows his father's advice to not suppress his desire for revenge he is the very opposite of it.

I thought my argument is pretty clear, killing someone can only be ethical if you do it without enjoying it. Any judge is expected to behave like this.


Let me explain something: "cool," in the context of describing emotions, is a highly informal word. It carries a connotation of unimportance. Saying that someone was "cool" with something, or "reacted cool," implies that the thing to which they were reacting was not significant.
Nonsense, the British reacting cool to the Al-Qaeda attacks has nothing to do with a lack of significance. They were sad and perhaps angry but not revenge-hungry.


Do you see where that statement can come across as deeply offensive?

The 9/11 attacks were not like any other terrorist attack. They weren't like the 2005 London bombings. They weren't like the Madrid bombings. That's not to take away from those tragedies, mind you. But 9/11 was quite literally the largest, most devastating terrorist attack in human history.

Two thousand, nine hundred seventy-seven people were killed excluding the perpetrators -- including, I might add, 11 citizens of Germany. More than six thousand people were injured. Over three hundred of the dead were members of the New York City Fire Department, and other first responders. Two of the largest buildings in the world were destroyed, the emergency response services were utterly overwhelmed, and the entire city was absolutely crippled. And 9/11 is still claiming victims, as more and more people who worked at the wreckage site trying to find survivors succumb to various cancers brought about by the carcinogens released by the buildings -- and that's to say nothing of how many unknown numbers of people across all of New York City have died or may die from having been exposed to those carcinogens released into the city's atmosphere; that shit did not stay put, after all.

The 9/11 death toll was 56 times larger than the London bombings death tolls, and it's still climbing. You would literally have to start talking about the Blitz in order to find an event in recent British history truly comparable to the death toll of 9/11. So, no, we did not react as "cool" as the British did to the 2005 London bombings. And if someone had killed three thousand Britons, injured six thousand more, destroyed Canary Wharf, destroyed part of the Defense Ministry HQ, decimated the London fire department and Metropolitan Police, crippled the entire London metropolitan area for days, and was still claiming more victims years afterwards because of the environmental effects of the attacks? Had London suffered the worst terrorist attack in human history? I rather think the United Kingdom would have had a very similar reaction as the United States did to 9/11.
I merely pointed out the obvious, that the Brits reacted calmly whereas you Americans immediately went on a revenge mission. Not my problem that you are offended by the truth.
If you wanna play around with numbers, let's do it. 3000 people died in NY, millions died in Afghanistan and Iraq. A cooler, more Spock-like reaction to 9/11 which I advocate the entire time might have prevented all of this. Doesn't mean that you don't go after the criminals, just without the desire to avenge the dead.
 
Nonsense, the British reacting cool to the Al-Qaeda attacks has nothing to do with a lack of significance. They were sad and perhaps angry but not revenge-hungry.


I merely pointed out the obvious, that the Brits reacted calmly whereas you Americans immediately went on a revenge mission. Not my problem that you are offended by the truth.

I live in Northern Ireland and was watching British tv and reading British newspapers after 7/7. There was definitely an element of the British public that was revenge-hungry. This can be seen in the reaction to the shooting of Jean-Charles Menezes on the underground in the days afterwards - some of the tabloids had a real 'Gotcha!' vibe, until it turned out that he was a totally innocent man. Even left-wing commentators like Tony Parsons admitted that it felt like 'we were striking back' when Menezes was shot.

I'm no defender of the Bush regime but I would not say that they 'immediately went on a revenge mission' after 9/11. I was sure at the time that they'd have been bombing Middle East countries that night, but instead they took their time, went to the UN, got a mandate and put together a coalition to invade Afghanistan. Admittedly, this was the last time they did anything resembling sensible (and in hindsight, the invasion of Afghanistan may not have been sensible) but your characterisation is totally unfair. And let's not forget that 10000s of Americans protested against the Iraq War.

I should also point out that I'm Irish, am generally quite critical of a lot of US foreign policy and loathe the way the Bush regime used 9/11 to push their neo-con agenda. But even I find your attitude here grossly offensive. God knows how I'd feel if I was a New Yorker.
 
They attacked Afghanistan because Pakistan and Saudi-Arabia, the countries which are the main sources of Sunni fundamentalism of the Al-Qaeda type, could not be attacked. The nasties bullies beat you up in the schoolyard and instead of doing something against them you beat up the small kid
You are offended by me pointing this out and not by the actual human suffering? Sick.
 
I merely pointed out the obvious, that the Brits reacted calmly whereas you Americans immediately went on a revenge mission. Not my problem that you are offended by the truth.

There's something to be said for not having the military ability to carry out such a mission. It's easy to claim the high ground when you don't have the ability to punish those that harm you.

I'm sure that the men who carried out the mission to capture/execute Osama Bin Laden were pretty proud of themselves after dispensing justice. They rid the world of a pretty large asshole permanently, Kirk did the same with Nero.

Nero said he'd rather die than surrender to Kirk and he got his wish.
 
I thought my argument is pretty clear, killing someone can only be ethical if you do it without enjoying it.
If that is your argument (and yes, I do see where you said essentially the same thing earlier in this thread) then perhaps you'd be good enough to explain why you feel that what Kirk did was unethical. You've been more or less stating it as a given, up to this point—indeed, you've repeated the assertion several times—but what is it that leads you to believe that Kirk derived enjoyment from the act of ordering Sulu to fire on Narada and seeing it destroyed?
 
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They attacked Afghanistan because Pakistan and Saudi-Arabia, the countries which are the main sources of Sunni fundamentalism of the Al-Qaeda type, could not be attacked.

The nasties bullies beat you up in the schoolyard and instead of doing something against them you beat up the small kid

You know, I was toying with the idea that you were just oblivious to what it feels like for a given nation to be the target of the worst terrorist attack in human history, but, with this, I'm officially writing you off as someone who just doesn't know what he's talking about.

The United States invaded Afghanistan because the Taliban-controlled parts of Afghanistan were the ones serving as al Qaeda's primary base of operations. The Taliban had openly allied itself with al Qaeda and was providing it with shelter. The Taliban refused to hand Osama bin Ladin over or to re-ally itself with the United States; instead, it waited until 5 October 2001 to offer to try bin Ladin in an Afghan court if the United States provided "solid evidence" of his guilt. This was unacceptable to the United States -- it had just lost unknown thousands of its citizenry (the body count was still uncertain at that point), and it was not going to allow any other country to try bin Ladin first, let alone the government that had been supporting him and sheltering him. The offer was refused, the Taliban refused to submit to U.S. demands that bin Ladin be handed over and continued its alliance with bin Ladin, and, therefore, the United States and its allies began their war on 7 October 2001.

And do bear in mind that the Taliban had throughout that point been fighting a civil war with a faction called the Northern Alliance, with which the U.S. allied in its war against the Taliban and al Qaeda. So it's not as though all Afghans were the victims of the United States, here.

Pakistan had not yet become al Qaeda's primary base of operations; that did not happen until bin Ladin and his lieutenants escaped Afghanistan and entered the mountainous northwestern regions of Pakistan, where the Pakistani government has little power over the autonomous tribes. Eventually, bin Ladin made his way to central Pakistan; while many Taliban and al Qaeda forces, and their allies, remain in the northwestern regions, many in the U.S. government suspect that elements of the very fractured Pakistani government sheltered bin Ladin until his death this year.

Saudi Arabia was not attacked because it was neither a base for al Qaeda nor did its government support it. In fact, Saudi Arabia had stripped Osama bin Ladin of his Saudi citizenship before the 9/11 attacks. It is true that 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis, and that many of the religious movements that motivate al Qaeda and its supporters originate in Saudi Arabia, but that does not mean that Saudi Arabia is actually responsible, in whole or in part, for the attacks, and does not mean that it should be been attacked.

You are offended by me pointing this out and not by the actual human suffering? Sick.

You're the only one here who seems unoffended by human suffering. You're too busy talking about how Americans are "revenge-crazy" to show respect for those who died in the worst terrorist attacks in history, or for the people affected by it. And you've also refused to acknowledge the most obvious thing in the world: If a government is supporting a terrorist organization that launches a major attack like 9/11 and subsequently refuses to disavow its connection with that terrorist organization, then that government has itself committed an act of war against the victimized nation, thus giving the victimized nation the right to go to war with that government in order to prevent it and that terrorist organization from being able to launch attacks in the future.
 
They attacked Afghanistan because Pakistan and Saudi-Arabia, the countries which are the main sources of Sunni fundamentalism of the Al-Qaeda type, could not be attacked. The nasties bullies beat you up in the schoolyard and instead of doing something against them you beat up the small kid
You are offended by me pointing this out and not by the actual human suffering? Sick.


Perhaps you might want to gain a little more understanding of events before you let your ego walk away with you. The Taliban in Afghanistan were sheltering and supporting Al-Qaeda, who were behind the attacks.


You condemn "revenge" and yet you think the U.S. should have been attacking MORE countries after 9/11, ones that had less to do with it than Afghanistan?


Sick.


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Damn it Sci, thanks for stealing my thunder.
 
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