Once they had the virus in his blood they could grow more in any case. So there had to be more going on than a simple (and hardly foolproof) way to distract the captain. Wasn't it mentioned at some stage that Odona's father had hoped Kirk would stay there with her - how does that mesh with her being the first volunteer for the deadly disease? Were the Gideonites hoping to secretly return Kirk to his ship once their supply of the virus had been assured? Y'know the old trick: Wait til he's asleep, transport him back to his bed on the Enterprise and hope he'd write the whole experience off as a dream?
Three different approaches, quite possibly proposed by three different council members, and since no-one could agree on which to follow they just went with them all?!
The fact that Gideon can feed and care for such an overblown population does suggest a sophisticated technology - the only issue appears to be the depressing nature of living on a crowded planet.
Gideon has to have had something appealing to the Federation; their "jealous tradition of isolation" hardly makes them suitable candidates in its own right. Or did the Feds really just want another (planet) feather in their cap?
Three different approaches, quite possibly proposed by three different council members, and since no-one could agree on which to follow they just went with them all?!
But it seems the Federation is bending over backwards to accommodate the eccentricity of the Gideonites, apparently in hopes of getting them to stop their clamshelling...if Gideon really knows how to stop Starfleet sensors, the planet might be technologically highly advanced. They have successfully maintained their isolationism despite there being less polite forces out there than the Federation; perhaps we should assume that it is a triviality for them to replicate starships or, if need be, shoot those down from orbit in order to enforce the isolation. Perhaps the considerable technological lead of Gideon (their insincere protestations and displays of ignorance aside) is what makes the Federation so accommodating here?
The fact that Gideon can feed and care for such an overblown population does suggest a sophisticated technology - the only issue appears to be the depressing nature of living on a crowded planet.
Gideon has to have had something appealing to the Federation; their "jealous tradition of isolation" hardly makes them suitable candidates in its own right. Or did the Feds really just want another (planet) feather in their cap?