... Apparently, Sisko just doesn't punch women in the face.
Timo Saloniemi
I'm all for equality in that regard, because let's face it, the bitch deserved it.
I don't condone this...but quote of the day

... Apparently, Sisko just doesn't punch women in the face.
Timo Saloniemi
I'm all for equality in that regard, because let's face it, the bitch deserved it.
They did nothing illegal in that respect, according to local laws. Sisko and O'Brien did.Besides, why the hell weren't those people dragged off in handcuffs after holding a bunch of Starfleet officers against their will and torturing one of 'em?
If Starfleet were in the habit of "dragging away" people who don't immediately bow to their will, they'd have their hands full. But not even the hippie-beating herbert Kirk really stooped to that. He was held at gunpoint or worse often enough, but his preferred solution was to punch the local leader in the face and call it even.
Apparently, Sisko just doesn't punch women in the face.
Timo Saloniemi
The colonists were always going to end up "stranded". The plan was to settle on the planet permanently, wasn't it? And murder charges? Even if Alixus hadn't set up the duonetic field to suppress all Treknology, the risks involved in establishing a colony aren't trivial. Surely the Federation expects that colonists will die in the effort to establish settlements. How could the Federation charge Alixus with murder when they send colonists out into the untamed frontier where they can be killed by any number of things, up to and including giant crystals that vaporize entire planetary surfaces?
... Apparently, Sisko just doesn't punch women in the face.
Timo Saloniemi
I'm all for equality in that regard, because let's face it, the bitch deserved it.
I don't condone this...but quote of the day![]()
But they are the only way to express morality in anything but the most irrelevantly subjective manner. Morality is about commonly approved choices, and laws are the expression of common approval.Local laws don't equate to anything approaching morality.
Why should there be evidence of such a thing? It just goes to show that Alixus held the popular vote, and all her actions were considered to be moral.Besides, I saw no evidence there were any restrictions on Alexis and her rule.
Even though it does appear that Starfleet is the sole law enforcement organization in the Federation (apart from the Secret Police of ST3), I doubt Sisko would be in a position to dictate charges that abstract. Alixus would go down on much more concrete terms anyway.Given they had access to technology the entire time there's a very credible argument Alexis could be brought up on manslaughter charges for every death there. Certainly the ending implied to me that Sisko was going to be pushing that option.
The colonists were always going to end up "stranded". The plan was to settle on the planet permanently, wasn't it? And murder charges? Even if Alixus hadn't set up the duonetic field to suppress all Treknology, the risks involved in establishing a colony aren't trivial. Surely the Federation expects that colonists will die in the effort to establish settlements. How could the Federation charge Alixus with murder when they send colonists out into the untamed frontier where they can be killed by any number of things, up to and including giant crystals that vaporize entire planetary surfaces?
So conceiving a child is murder? That inevitably leads to the death of the child, after all!
It's not. Not unless the person doing the conceiving also directly murders the child. If and when the child dies because of circumstances (say, stumbles on a poison plant, or outlives the warranty on the heart), the person doing the conceiving is innocent of murder, or indeed of any wrongdoing.
Timo Saloniemi
Well doing nothing isn't usually a crime, sure it might not be moral. However if you set up the circumstances as Alixus did in "PAradise" and then do nothing it's a crime.
Well doing nothing isn't usually a crime, sure it might not be moral.
In English law the mens rea requirement of murder is an intention to commit an act (or omission) and that there is a "high degree of probability" that such act or omission will result in the death or serious injury of another person
She commited the act of sabotage of the colony ship, setting up the dunonetic field which inhibited technology both of which she knew carried a high degree of probablilty that such acts would lead to the deaths of some of the colonists. As such those deaths are murder.
It was stipulated in Sisko's log entry that the planet was fairly close to the wormhole, and therefor DS9, any distress call would have been quickly received.it's not as though there's a 911 service out there. They could issue a distress signal, but there would be no telling when it would be answered
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