If there's one thing I don't like about Section 31 it's that since their introduction they've become the Star Trek universe's boogeymen in that everything shady that goes on is their doing. The novels have made Section 31 behind Kirk's mission to steal a cloaking device in The Enterprise Incident, the discovery of the Omega Molecule and subsequent drafting of the Omega Directive and the events of Insurrection. TATV even implied they were involved with Admiral Pressman and the whole Pegasus fiasco.
them
You know, some things can be the actions of douchebags who aren't involved with secret black ops agencies.
Because humanity must break the rules.I don't understand why Section 31 is needed. Isn't Starfleet/Academy protocols and mission statements enough?
It's kind of...hokey. Even that scene it was like watching Get Smart. Where's the shoe phone??
That would make a good discussion topic.Because humanity must break the rules.
I thought Federation sticking to their ideals and being successful in a galaxy full of hostile and ruthless aliens was a little naive.
There's a reason why I like the idea of S 31 slipping in at the beginning of Starfleet and its charter in ENT. There are still those who feel they must do something in the face of grave threats, no matter what.Perhaps, but it was also, well, the show!
Since the earliest episodes of TOS season 1, the Federation before it even had a consistent name, was depicted as going to the aid of enemies and doing things potentially detrimental to themselves because they were morally right. The show got all tied up in knots about its perfect utopia later on and yes, that got dumb, but the core idea of a benevolent, alturistic, morally upstanding organisation was there all along. The idea of S31 (especially the idea of it as something that is necessary) undermines that whole humanist concept that we can be better than we are.
Although we don't know what section 31 of the charter actually says. It could be that their existence and nature go far beyond what the clause intended. It may even be something as generic as "Starfleet are charged with the defence of Federation worlds from threats external and internal using if necessary extraordinary measures in times of need"."They're part of the Starfleet charter"
Dr. Jeff Webber.I always called him MacGyver. You mean he goes by another name?
That's what it was in DS9 and ENT. Hell, that's what it would be in this very bonus scene if not for the inclusion of the fact that they have Starfleet-adjacent branding and, thus, what that implies about the randos standing around in "Context."Yeah, S31 could turn out to be a rogue organization of fanatics with no per se legal authority, but I'm not holding my breath.
No. Not according to Harris, who very explicitly stated in "Divergence" that the Starfleet Charter, Article 14, Section 31 contains "a few lines that make allowances for bending the rules during times of extraordinary threat." [http://www.chakoteya.net/Enterprise/92.htm]That's what it was in DS9 and ENT.
Quite. The idea of a clandestine organisation with deniability all the way up having their own special Delta design and ships with wink wink registration numbers is absurd. If you're going to do cloak and dagger, at least make them vaguely secretive.Can you imagine this guy handing out little black badges to members of *his* Section 31?![]()
Are you fucking shitting me? RDA is the universally accepted abbreviation for Richard Dean Anderson, the show's fucking lead actor for the first eight seasons!
He made limited apperances in Season 8, but still had a role as the general of the base. He had some hilarious interactions with Ba'al in "Zero Hour." He also camoed in Stargate: Atlantis' premier episode, which was shot in the same time frame.I seem to remember that he was in the last episode of the series. Am I mistaken?
As I told you, I've only watched the series once and it was a long time ago.
He made limited apperances in Season 8, but still had a role as the general of the base. He had some hilarious interactions with Ba'al in "Zero Hour." He also camoed in Stargate: Atlantis' premier episode, which was shot in the same time frame.
RDA had requested a more limited schedule to spend more time with his family.
I liked Lorca because Jason Isaacs is a good actor and he gave the character a sense of depth and complexity that often transcended the actual dialogue he was given to work with. That doesn't mean I agreed with a lot of what the character said or did. He was a complete prick a lot of the time. (In that first confrontation between Lorca and Stamets about the purpose of his research, for instance, I was totally on Stamets' side.)i am surprised with the backlash against Section 31. Everybody seemed to have loved Lorca (before he was turned into a Bond villian) and his "end justifies the means" attitude...
That's why I dislike it, myself. The whole concept of the Federation is about idealism succeeding... about justice prevailing, about civilization progressing. If you can't buy into that, there are plenty of other SF shows out there with more cynical attitudes.I always loved the idea. I thought Federation sticking to their ideals and being successful in a galaxy full of hostile and ruthless aliens was a little naive. Section 31 made the Trek universe more believable to me...
Indeed. It could be something the organization has twisted beyond recognition, akin to the way groups of "Tenthers" in the U.S. today have a self-serving take on "states' rights" based on a distorted reading of the Tenth Amendment that has simply never been supported by the federal courts, ever, at all.Although we don't know what section 31 of the charter actually says. It could be that their existence and nature go far beyond what the clause intended. It may even be something as generic as "Starfleet are charged with the defence of Federation worlds from threats external and internal using if necessary extraordinary measures in times of need".
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