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About Mirror Georgiou in ”Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2“

It looks like it went on to decide all organic life was a threat or problem and systematically killing everyone was the only way to stop the choas. But no, we never learn exactly why.
Makes sense to me. My main question would be who program Control in the first place and if that was a reflection of their personality.
She's a genocial, cannibalistic psychopath. She's only on "our side" because she's got a Momcrush on a duplicate of her daughter.

My reaction to the scene was laughter. She's crazy.
Has she done those things in this universe where they are considered wrong?
 
Makes sense to me.

I'm realy not sure how. It only fully turned into that killer version after merging with the Sphere data. The Sphere was a several hundred thousand year old benevolant entity. It's last act was to save Discovery, and imprinted it's principles on the data it uploaded, the self aware ship protecting itsef but not attacking Enterprise, helping them take the data to the future.

How the not actually alive Control, a vicious and evil program, was able to overcome and overwrite the possibly living data of the Sphere and corrupt it's ethical coding is weird.

A conflicted emergent creature sure, but what we got just lazily went "evil AI" for the sake of the story and isn't consistent with the way around the two halves met.
 
I'm realy not sure how. It only fully turned into that killer version after merging with the Sphere data. The Sphere was a several hundred thousand year old benevolant entity. It's last act was to save Discovery, and imprinted it's principles on the data it uploaded, the self aware ship protecting itsef but not attacking Enterprise, helping them take the data to the future.

How the not actually alive Control, a vicious and evil program, was able to overcome and overwrite the possibly living data of the Sphere and corrupt it's ethical coding is weird.

A conflicted emergent creature sure, but what we got just lazily went "evil AI" for the sake of the story and isn't consistent with the way around the two halves met.
It's consistent with almost every single AI style story I have read over the past 20+ years. TOS did it with the M5, Nomad and the like.

It's neither new, nor terribly creative, but it is understandable to me.
 
She's a genocial, cannibalistic psychopath. She's only on "our side" because she's got a Momcrush on a duplicate of her daughter.

My reaction to the scene was laughter. She's crazy.

Seven of Nine did some comparably immoral things as a borg. Should she have been thrown out of the Voyager when she didn't offer perfect Starfleet behavior? The Klingons engage in plenty of things the Federation considers pretty horrific, yet they are still allies in the TNG-VOY era, again, serve in Starfleet. Should they be thrown out of Starfleet and disavowed as allies when they don't measure up on every level?
 
That's the problem though, they created a new setup, an interesting one. Then just did a hard swerve into absolute nonsense to setup the finale undoing all that work.
 
That's the problem though, they created a new setup, an interesting one. Then just did a hard swerve into absolute nonsense to setup the finale undoing all that work.
I did not see anything especially new regarding Control. It felt pretty rote to me, in terms of AI set up.
 
I did not see anything especially new regarding Control. It felt pretty rote to me, in terms of AI set up.

I meant an emergent AI having a good influence in the form of the Sphere data, preventing it from going genocidal. That would have been interesting. Getting the Borg merged with the machines from the Matrix, in space, just killing everyone again isn't new.
 
Seven of Nine did some comparably immoral things as a borg. Should she have been thrown out of the Voyager when she didn't offer perfect Starfleet behavior? The Klingons engage in plenty of things the Federation considers pretty horrific, yet they are still allies in the TNG-VOY era, again, serve in Starfleet. Should they be thrown out of Starfleet and disavowed as allies when they don't measure up on every level?
No and no. The key difference of course being that in neither example did the show present the immoral things these characters did as “the right thing” and ask the audience to cheer and root for their immoral acts.
 
I meant an emergent AI having a good influence in the form of the Sphere data, preventing it from going genocidal. That would have been interesting. Getting the Borg merged with the machines from the Matrix, in space, just killing everyone again isn't new.
Yes, it would have been interesting. However, since Star Trek has established that machines merging can create more harmful or destructive goals I do not see this as requiring much explanation.

YMMV.

No and no. The key difference of course being that in neither example did the show present the immoral things these characters did as “the right thing” and ask the audience to cheer and root for their immoral acts.
I feel no inclination to cheer for Mirror Georgiou, nor do I think it is being presented as such.
 
Yes, it would have been interesting. However, since Star Trek has established that machines merging can create more harmful or destructive goals I do not see this as requiring much explanation.

I should have stuck to expecting nothing good to come from this series, season 2 changed that slightly, but you're right.

I feel no inclination to cheer for Mirror Georgiou, nor do I think it is being presented as such.

The real challenge is going to be season 3. If they're right about her being with them in the future and didn't somehow stay behind like I thought, then she's going to have no reason to listen to anyone. Section 31 and Starfleet aren't around to let her play spy to get those worse Mirror tendancies under control. It'll all be about protecting Michael by any means she considers necessary.
 
No and no. The key difference of course being that in neither example did the show present the immoral things these characters did as “the right thing” and ask the audience to cheer and root for their immoral acts.

I already said it once, but I'll say it again, I didn't cheer what Georgiou was doing. I didn't see it as the "right" thing. I didn't think it was, I don't think CBSAA was trying to tell me it was. If Burnham or Saru were around, they would've said something to Georgiou or reacted in some sort of negative way. No one else was there.

When she brought up an over-the-top solution in the Briefing Room of the Enterprise, everyone dismissed her suggestion out of hand. DSC isn't spelling things out for us at every turn in every instance. They're relying on us to connect the dots ourselves.
 
I should have stuck to expecting nothing good to come from this series, season 2 changed that slightly, but you're right.
Seems like an overgeneralization but OK...:shrug:
The real challenge is going to be season 3. If they're right about her being with them in the future and didn't somehow stay behind like I thought, then she's going to have no reason to listen to anyone. Section 31 and Starfleet aren't around to let her play spy to get those worse Mirror tendancies under control. It'll all be about protecting Michael by any means she considers necessary.
That will certainly be an interesting journey to see.

When she brought up an over-the-top solution in the Briefing Room of the Enterprise everyone dismissed her suggestion out of hand. DSC isn't spelling things out for us at every turn. They're relying on us to connect the dots ourselves.
Making us think for ourselves? The horror!
 
I feel no inclination to cheer for Mirror Georgiou, nor do I think it is being presented as such.
Really? Another character (notably one that's not from the Mirror Universe; so no excuse there) even cheers her on in the dialog (“Yum yum!”) when she expresses her desire to see Control/Leland suffer. You are telling me when you watch that scene and see Georgiou laughing at Control/Leland in pain you get the feeling the writers want you to think about what a horrible thing that actually is she is doing?

I just think I would have been more comfortable had they chosen such a moment to comment on what an inhuman behavior this actually is.

I already said it once, but I'll say it again, I didn't cheer what Georgiou was doing. I didn't see it as the "right" thing. I didn't think it was, I don't think CBSAA was trying to tell me it was. If Burnham or Saru were around, they would've said something to Georgiou or reacted in some sort of negative way. No one else was there.

When she brought up an over-the-top solution in the Briefing Room of the Enterprise everyone dismissed her suggestion out of hand. DSC isn't spelling things out for us at every turn. They're relying on us to connect the dots ourselves.
My problem is that they present her as a hero akin to Saru and Burnham. They don't call into question that what she's doing is right. In fact, they do the exact opposite, they say that it's cool that Georgiou enjoys the torture (Nhan in the episode and Michelle Paradise in the interview).
 
My problem is that they present her as a hero akin to Saru and Burnham. They don't call into question that what she's doing is right. In fact, they do the exact opposite, they say that it's cool that Georgiou enjoys the torture (Nhan in the episode and Michelle Paradise in the interview).

I guess you missed the scene where she suggested create a supernova and everyone in the room rejects the idea as being immoral.
 
Really? Another character (notably one that's not from the Mirror Universe; so no excuse there) even cheers her on in the dialog (“Yum yum!”) when she expresses her desire to see Control/Leland suffer. You are telling me when you watch that scene and see Georgiou laughing at Control/Leland in pain you get the feeling the writers want you to think about what a horrible thing that actually is she is doing?

I just think I would have been more comfortable had they chosen such a moment to comment on what an inhuman behavior this actually is.
I don't need commentary to know this behavior is not right.

My reaction is very simple-torture is wrong. That is part of my moral compass, has been for a long time. I don't need the writers telling me what to think when I am perfectly capable of thinking for myself. People on the "good side" can do evil things. It happens and is part of storytelling.
My problem is that they present her as a hero akin to Saru and Burnham. They don't call into question that what she's doing is right. In fact, they tell us the exact opposite, that it's cool that Georgiou enjoys the torture (Nhan in the episode and Michelle Paradise in the interview).
As I said above-I am capable of figuring this stuff out.
 
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