The only thing about the end of DS9 that bothered me was: WHY THE FUCK DIDN'T THEY JUST TELL HIM TO DESTROY THE FUCKING BOOK?!?!
Sure. As it plays out in the finale, his only destiny is to destroy the damn book. It's all about the book, because that one is the one and only key to ever free the pah wraiths, his "mother" even says that clearly in the whitespace at the end. They could have told him that in the very first episode. "Go find the book and destroy it. Fetch! Attaboy."Because that wasn't what he was destined to do. The Prophets are non-linear, they knew this.![]()
What good scenes? In Generations, Deanna crashed the ship. Forever after, fandom has been full of jokes about how she can't drive.The TNG women got some good scenes in the four movies, but I don't think there was much development.
Oh, so nuKirk will never, ever again peek when a woman tells him not to? Yeah, I totally believe that.NuCarol won't be remembered for much other than her unnecessary underwear scene.
Said scene was to show how wrong Kirk is in treating women, and is actually a great scene (from the way that Carol Marcus says 'Turn around' we get that Kirk learns that Carol is not like the other ladies and won't put up with this bullshit that he likes to do; thereby, Kirk leans not to do this to women ever again.
The problem with nuUhura is that she doesn't leave her boyfriend problems off-duty like a mature, professional officer would do. She bitches and whines at him during a critical mission and actually basically tells her captain to shut up while she proceeds to bitch and whine at her boyfriend.Care to elaborate? All that I (and the average moviegoer) saw was a lady who's a lover and a competent officer living life and going about her job quite well, albeit with some issues to work out beween her and her boyfriend this time aaround.Uhura was never used to any full potential due to the era in which TOS was made, her mere presence was enough of an impact to many, but she showed herself to be a warm and friendly woman with strength. NuUhura has turned my favourite character of TOS into something thoroughly unpleasant.
but from their non-linear perspective the book has never existed/exists/will always exist - they just have to pick a time and stick with it.
Writing a book and destroying it is something linear. Wouldn't it therefore be irrelevant to the prophets?
The same would apply to the pah wraiths: if they are like the prophets, they are non-linear and hence can not be destroyed because they are kindof eternal. If they are not like the prophets but linear, they wouldn't matter to the prophets because for the prophets there would always exist a time in which the Pah wraiths didn't yet exist (or not anymore)
Argh! this non-linear stuff is difficult to expain in a foreign language!
but from their non-linear perspective the book has never existed/exists/will always exist - they just have to pick a time and stick with it.
Writing a book and destroying it is something linear. Wouldn't it therefore be irrelevant to the prophets?
The same would apply to the pah wraiths: if they are like the prophets, they are non-linear and hence can not be destroyed because they are kindof eternal. If they are not like the prophets but linear, they wouldn't matter to the prophets because for the prophets there would always exist a time in which the Pah wraiths didn't yet exist (or not anymore)
Argh! this non-linear stuff is difficult to expain in a foreign language!
The pah wraiths were imprisoned at a linear point in time and about to be set free at a linear point in time. So they could have simply told him from the start what to do.
Every time they interact with a non linear being, they need to step down into the non linear realm as well.
Especially weird it becomes when you think about how Sisko taught them the concept of linear time in the pilot. So did they now always know about linear time, since they are non linear, or did they learn about it later, which would be linear?
The specific juncture doesn't matter. It was still really unprofessional. And no, I'm not excusing Worf and Jadzia. What they did was wrong, and deserved to get slapped down for it.While the mission itself may have been critical, the specific juncture at which the conversation came up didn't seem especially crucial.
Besides, it's nothing we haven't seen before, with Worf and Jadzia perhaps as the pinnacle of unprofessionalism.
Did Ezri do something she got slapped down for? I've only seen that season once, so I don't remember.^Jadzia (and Ezri) too.
Ignore me, I'm just being perverted.Did Ezri do something she got slapped down for? I've only seen that season once, so I don't remember.^Jadzia (and Ezri) too.
While the mission itself may have been critical, the specific juncture at which the conversation came up didn't seem especially crucial.
Besides, it's nothing we haven't seen before, with Worf and Jadzia perhaps as the pinnacle of unprofessionalism.The specific juncture doesn't matter. It was still really unprofessional.
It was still a great way for Kirk to learn NOT to be a complete gonadal horndog, and from his future girlfriend.
And no, I'm not excusing Worf and Jadzia. What they did was wrong, and deserved to get slapped down for it.
Hey, they were in love, weren't they?
You are talking about two separate incidents. The one you initially quoted is in reference to nuUhura bitching at nuSpock and telling her own captain to shut up while she kept on bitching, and you are confusing that with the nuKirk/nuCarol underwear scene.It was still a great way for Kirk to learn NOT to be a complete gonadal horndog, and from his future girlfriend.
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