A good question since it's not at all clear. My guess would be they want to lay claim to the planet for strategic or territorial reasons and this was their way of "developing" the planet. It could also have been a test of sorts to see what the Federation would do and how far would they go.Why were the Klingons so interested in this world to begin with? What was the value there that they would be willing to get involved? Was it just some way of messing with the Feds, or what?
Good point. I forgot about the "Day Of The Dove" reference.We know from Mara in "Day of the Dove" that the Klingon Empire in the 23rd century was poor and in need of resources and land to feed its people. (Maybe that's why the destruction of Praxis, just one moon, threatened the whole empire's survival -- because it was teetering on the edge already.) So they may have wished to conquer Neural as a farming or mining world. Gaining a foothold near Federation territory would be good too.
toonloon said:BTW, I checked at the Orion Press and they don't have a treatment for this episode. I was curious to see if there were many changes to the script.
I'd be wary to accept that as a fact of life, when it can be as easily taken as her parroting or simply adhering to the Empire's justification for grabbing more lebensraum from the lesser species.Good point. I forgot about the "Day Of The Dove" reference.We know from Mara in "Day of the Dove" that the Klingon Empire in the 23rd century was poor and in need of resources and land to feed its people. (Maybe that's why the destruction of Praxis, just one moon, threatened the whole empire's survival -- because it was teetering on the edge already.) So they may have wished to conquer Neural as a farming or mining world. Gaining a foothold near Federation territory would be good too.
All they know is guns and blowing shit up, do you think the average Klingon Knows how to install a toilet main?Or maybe they're just really bad managers and administrators.![]()
No wonder they're often in a bad mood.All they know is guns and blowing shit up, do you think the average Klingon Knows how to install a toilet main?Or maybe they're just really bad managers and administrators.![]()
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I'd be wary to accept that as a fact of life, when it can be as easily taken as her parroting or simply adhering to the Empire's justification for grabbing more lebensraum from the lesser species.Good point. I forgot about the "Day Of The Dove" reference.We know from Mara in "Day of the Dove" that the Klingon Empire in the 23rd century was poor and in need of resources and land to feed its people. (Maybe that's why the destruction of Praxis, just one moon, threatened the whole empire's survival -- because it was teetering on the edge already.) So they may have wished to conquer Neural as a farming or mining world. Gaining a foothold near Federation territory would be good too.
The idea of a spacefaring empire being resource-poor is rather strange, unless it's some super-rare element they're low on that they're dependent on.
I remember David Gerrold in one of his books saying that the word disruptor in Klingon might translate as "shake it till it falls apart weapon."![]()
For clarity's sake, certain klingonaase technical terms have been translated as their Federation standard equivalents: thus warp drive, transporter, disruptor instead of the more literal anticurve rider, particle displacer, vibratory destructor (most literally: the "shake-it-till-it-falls-apart-tool").
We'll have to disagree on the doubtful aspect then. The idea that the Empire isn't poor isn't contradicted by her being the 'good German'. One can believe the party line and still be sympathetic as a character. One can even go along with it, even with misgivings. Rommel certainly did.I'd be wary to accept that as a fact of life, when it can be as easily taken as her parroting or simply adhering to the Empire's justification for grabbing more lebensraum from the lesser species.Good point. I forgot about the "Day Of The Dove" reference.
Doubtful. It's evident that the intent was to portray Mara as a sympathetic, reasonable character and to give some insight into the Klingons' side of things through her. She was kind of the Klingon equivalent of the "good German" in WWII films, the person on the other side who wasn't like the warmongering leaders, who represented the decency of the masses and didn't deserve to be hated. So I really think we were meant to take Mara's words at face value. I mean, the whole message of the episode was denouncing hate and pointless conflict, so it would be inconsistent for the story to paint Klingons in a purely negative light.
Given today's understandings, yes, but Star Trek is full of such unrealistic assumptions. It's no different from having starships run out of power if they can't get some rare made-up element from a hostile planet, even when there are countless stars they could collect unlimited power from. Although ST at its best aspires to a fairly credible portrayal of space travel, even at its best it's more concerned with using space and aliens as allegories for our own issues. So such contrivances are just part of the show.
I remember David Gerrold in one of his books saying that the word disruptor in Klingon might translate as "shake it till it falls apart weapon."![]()
No, that was from The Final Reflection by John M. Ford -- the "Researcher's Note" which prefaced the novel-within-the-novel. From p. 16-17:
For clarity's sake, certain klingonaase technical terms have been translated as their Federation standard equivalents: thus warp drive, transporter, disruptor instead of the more literal anticurve rider, particle displacer, vibratory destructor (most literally: the "shake-it-till-it-falls-apart-tool").
Oh, right. Now it comes back to me.I remember David Gerrold in one of his books saying that the word disruptor in Klingon might translate as "shake it till it falls apart weapon."![]()
No, that was from The Final Reflection by John M. Ford -- the "Researcher's Note" which prefaced the novel-within-the-novel. From p. 16-17:
For clarity's sake, certain klingonaase technical terms have been translated as their Federation standard equivalents: thus warp drive, transporter, disruptor instead of the more literal anticurve rider, particle displacer, vibratory destructor (most literally: the "shake-it-till-it-falls-apart-tool").
We'll have to disagree on the doubtful aspect then. The idea that the Empire isn't poor isn't contradicted by her being the 'good German'. One can believe the party line and still be sympathetic as a character. One can even go along with it, even with misgivings. Rommel certainly did.
I'm not convinced as I see them being just as sympathetic even though they can be drawn as following an imperial policy that is acquisitive and expansionist.We'll have to disagree on the doubtful aspect then. The idea that the Empire isn't poor isn't contradicted by her being the 'good German'. One can believe the party line and still be sympathetic as a character. One can even go along with it, even with misgivings. Rommel certainly did.
But my point is that Mara was symbolic of the intent of the story, which was to reject the idea of pure hate toward an enemy and promote the idea of putting differences aside. So it follows, thematically, that Jerome Bixby intended Mara's description of Klingon conquests being motivated by poverty and hardship to be truthful -- to show that Klingons were not simplistically evil monsters but had understandable motives behind their seeming villainy.
So yes, if this were some sort of documentary, it would certainly be possible based on the facts at hand that Mara was lied to. But in fiction, things exist or occur for reasons, often with the goal of conveying a certain message or theme. Stories have a unifying logic behind them that reality generally lacks. Given the themes that pervaded "Day of the Dove," it would be inconsistent if Mara's description were false. Clinging to the assumption that Klingons were absolutely evil and motivated only by rapacity is missing the thematic point of the episode.
Just dropped in to point out that Gene Coon did no writing on this script. As stated above, Don Ingalls wrote the first draft, Roddenberry rewrote it, and Ingalls, disliking the final script, apparently because his was even more overtly anit-Vietnam War, substitued the pseudonym "Jud Crucis" on his Story By credit. In an old Starlog interview Ingalls said this was a bit of word play to suggest "Jesus Crucified," meaning that he felt he and his script and ideas/ideals had been well, crucified.
Sir Rhosis
But what about Kor's statement in "Errand of Mercy", where when Kirk accuses the Klingons of openly boasting about conquering half the Galaxy his reply is "And why not?! We're the stronger!"
Sure, he mentions something about the Feds messing up Klingon trade routes but that's BS motivation.
That's a good point about Day of the Dove, but as it was written AFTER this episode, you can't really apply it's reasoning retrospectively.
I thought Jud Crucis WAS Gene Coon, but I concede to your greater knowledge about the scripts and the writing process.
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