And as stated before: the Federation AGREED with Picard.
As someone whose seen the movie you know that simply isn't true. None of us know what became of the "review" done by the Federation Council.
None of us.
And as stated before: the Federation AGREED with Picard.
And as stated before: the Federation AGREED with Picard.
As someone whose seen the movie you know that simply isn't true. None of us know what became of the "review" done by the Federation Council.
None of us.
Problem with that is we did see the film, and it was immediately pointed out to Picard that his idea wouldn't work owing to the fact that it would take a decade of natural exposure to the radiation of the rings to save the Sona, a decade which they did not possess.JarodRussell;8947984 In the middle of the film said:let the Son'a set up a colony on the planet to find a better solution.
Did nobody see the film from beginning to end? It's all spelled out within the film.
Never directly stated, the Sona were producing the white, but for whom?Another point is that the Son'a were supporting the Dominion ...
No they didn't, the Federation Council announced a review. When Admiral Ball-breaker asked for a reconsideration of the Council order to relocate the Indians locate in Cardassian territory, the result after three days was "nothing has changed."And as stated before: the Federation AGREED with Picard.
And because the particle ring was itself Federation property, a natural resource that the Sona would need Federation permission to harvest.Probably because their ships needed to cross Federation territory to get to the Briar Patch (as said in the film, the Son'a didn't live in the Briar Patch).
And I'm not sure "we saw it first" is a terribly strong basis for a legal claim. The Baku chose to hide themselves away from quadrant-spanning galactic civilization whose territory grew to include the planet they were living on. Not once in all that time did it occur to them to say "Uh, guys? Just to let you know, we've already claimed this planet. Don't call us, we won't call you." They were too busy being insufferable Luddites.
We could go back and forth forever regarding what does and does not constitute a legal claim on the planet, but the thing is that this is NEVER up for debate in the movie. The movie treats the planet as Federation property.
Picard position seem to be that it was ethically wrong, not that it was legally wrong.If it is Federation property then there's nothing wrong with the Admiral's plan and Picard is in the wrong for interfering with the safe removal of the colonists.
Data even brings up that the rings radiation could be affecting their judgement along with their bodies...but fuck it, saddle up, lock and load.Picard position seem to be that it was ethically wrong, not that it was legally wrong.If it is Federation property then there's nothing wrong with the Admiral's plan and Picard is in the wrong for interfering with the safe removal of the colonists.
Picard was obviously enamored with the Baku lifestyle, his desire to preserve it was a big part of what was driving his thoughts and actions.
Picard never countered the Federation's possession of the planet or the region it occupied, nor did he contend that the particles once collected wouldn't help many billion within the Federation.
Those facts just didn't enter into his decision making process.
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^ Makes me wonder, exactly who did Riker communicate with? I mean who did he call?
Can a Commander in Starfleet simply call members of the Council directly, and have them simply run to the "phone" to speak to him?
Or would Riker have to weave his way through the bureaucracy for hours on end for each of the Council Members he wanted to talk to?
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I was thinking about this last night. I suppose if we wanted a 'get-out clause' for Picard's actions -- if we really want a get-out clause -- then we might theorize that Starfleet is acting autonomously of the Federation in this case (Starfleet being merely the military arm of the UFP, a sorta-kinda seperate entity). If this is true, then Riker running off to the Federation council to tattle about Dougherty's plan makes some kind of sense, because while certain higher-ups within Starfleet might have knowledge about the secret mission to harvest the planet, and maybe they even fully authorized it, they might still be keeping it a secret from the UFP itself, for fears that members of the council would shut them down.
The novels take the easy road, and just blames the whole thing on Section 31.![]()
The fact that Doughtery wasn't worried about Picard filing a report/objection leads me to believe that he had an official sanction from the Council.
Another episode that does it better than Insurrection: Ensigns of Command
^ Makes me wonder, exactly who did Riker communicate with? I mean who did he call?
Can a Commander in Starfleet simply call members of the Council directly, and have them simply run to the "phone" to speak to him?
Or would Riker have to weave his way through the bureaucracy for hours on end for each of the Council Members he wanted to talk to?
![]()
Secretary: Councilman, I have a urgent call for you.
Councilman: From?
Secretary: Commander Riker aboard...
Councilman: ...the Enterprise, I know. *sigh* At least it isn't Picard or that damn pet android of his. What's Riker whining about this week?
Secretary: He says there some primitive people on some backwater planet that Starfleet want to move to another backwater planet.
Councilman: Really? This shit again? What is that like the 10th or 12th time this year? Tell him I'm not in. In fact, change my com-code.
Edit: A year or so old, but basically a video version of this thread: Linkara and Nostalgia Critic tackle Star Trek Insurrection
I say it again and again in these threads: I don't know how the movie got to the filming stage without someone pointing out the huge flaws in the premise.
I say it again and again in these threads: I don't know how the movie got to the filming stage without someone pointing out the huge flaws in the premise.
Well, that's the most bizarre thing of all: it didn't. According to various sources, there is documented evidence of a studio exec who wrote extensive notes detailing all of these plot holes in the story, which was issued before a single frame of the movie was shot. For whatever reason, Piller and Berman neglected to ammend their script (maybe it was too late for a top-down rewrite?).
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