I wonder how some of his half hour interventions worked out on the whole. The brains who bet in quatloos, what do you think they taught their 'former' slaves?
Not sure how that would count as a Prime Directive violation? He was abducted by them...
I wonder how some of his half hour interventions worked out on the whole. The brains who bet in quatloos, what do you think they taught their 'former' slaves?
^ Oh, you would be responsible for a immoral and criminal act. But your guilt in the matter would come after being found to have violated a criminal law.
In the case of Kirk "kidnapping" the Ardanan leader, while he did commit the act, he was (apparently) never found to be guilty, and so he wasn't. But he still committed the act.
If he had been tried, and found (hypothetically) not guilt, he still would have committed the act, but wouldn't have been guilt of it.
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I wonder how some of his half hour interventions worked out on the whole. The brains who bet in quatloos, what do you think they taught their 'former' slaves? And the gangsters, how do you think they developed from then on? Of course, we can't blem Kirk for the strong television imperative to solve huge problems in half an hour, or for the difficulty of doing so in real life.
Kirk: "What is the penalty for murder?"by the era of TOS there is only one offense whic carries the dearth penalty.
M Five: "Death."
I wonder how some of his half hour interventions worked out on the whole. The brains who bet in quatloos, what do you think they taught their 'former' slaves?
Not sure how that would count as a Prime Directive violation? He was abducted by them...
Well, now that you mention it...Picard= weird old man...
Archer= no prime directive no nothing...
Kirk= bad boy always broke the rules tho for good reasons and he is cute in doing so.
Picard= weird old man,always by the book tho saved humanity from the Borg and the baku by breaking the Prime directive on rare occasions.
Sisko= Broke the rules on many occasions saved the Alpha Quadrant from the Dominion by assassinating a pacifistic senator <.<(shame on him) good cause bad actions.
Janeway= Forced to break and bend the Rules due to catastrophic scenarios in the Delta quadrant also exterminated the Borg in doing so saved the Galaxy and charted new never before seen parts in the universe.
Maybe the alternate universe Kirk, but Kirk-Prime often enforced rules and was really didn't become a bad boy until TWOK, when he was retconned from being a straight arrow in the Academy to someone who cheated at the Academy. TNG, DS9, and VOY reinforced the retcon of Kirk as a maverick or frequent rule breaker, when he was more often than not a sticker for rules during TOS itself.Kirk= bad boy always broke the rules tho for good reasons and he is cute in doing so.
I don't think Sisko actually broke many rules at all. Oh, yes, he did something morally questionable to bring the Romulans into the coalition against the Dominion, but he seemed to otherwise toe the company line.Sisko= Broke the rules on many occasions saved the Alpha Quadrant from the Dominion by assassinating a pacifistic senator <.<(shame on him) good cause bad actions.
Sisko was aware that DS9 couldn't be run like a proper Federation starbase, and that he needed folks like Quark and Garak as members of its community. Sisko did use leverage (namely releasing Nog from jail) to convince Quark to stay, but commanding officers can release people from confinement at their discretion (Picard bounced Riker from the brig after the events in TNG's "The Pegasus").Technically all Sisko did was to bribe Quark and to turn a blind eye to Garak. Like McNulty faking homeless murders Sisko's actions are in my opinion morally dubious but ethically right.
Maybe the alternate universe Kirk, but Kirk-Prime often enforced rules and was really didn't become a bad boy until TWOK, when he was retconned from being a straight arrow in the Academy to someone who cheated at the Academy. TNG, DS9, and VOY reinforced the retcon of Kirk as a maverick or frequent rule breaker, when he was more often than not a sticker for rules during TOS itself.Kirk= bad boy always broke the rules tho for good reasons and he is cute in doing so.
I don't think Sisko actually broke many rules at all. Oh, yes, he did something morally questionable to bring the Romulans into the coalition against the Dominion, but he seemed to otherwise toe the company line.Sisko= Broke the rules on many occasions saved the Alpha Quadrant from the Dominion by assassinating a pacifistic senator <.<(shame on him) good cause bad actions.
Maybe the alternate universe Kirk, but Kirk-Prime often enforced rules and was really didn't become a bad boy until TWOK, when he was retconned from being a straight arrow in the Academy to someone who cheated at the Academy. TNG, DS9, and VOY reinforced the retcon of Kirk as a maverick or frequent rule breaker, when he was more often than not a sticker for rules during TOS itself.Kirk= bad boy always broke the rules tho for good reasons and he is cute in doing so.
I don't think Sisko actually broke many rules at all. Oh, yes, he did something morally questionable to bring the Romulans into the coalition against the Dominion, but he seemed to otherwise toe the company line.Sisko= Broke the rules on many occasions saved the Alpha Quadrant from the Dominion by assassinating a pacifistic senator <.<(shame on him) good cause bad actions.
actually Sisko disobeyed direct orders from admirals more then 3 times during DS9 lol
Personally, I think that was more of Daystrom's ideals rather than Federation Law, since he put in it all his mentalities and what not, especially how prisons are depicted in TOS, apart from dagger of the mind.Kirk: "What is the penalty for murder?"by the era of TOS there is only one offense whic carries the dearth penalty.
M Five: "Death."
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Examples, please. Otherwise, it seems as if Sisko remained in good standing with Starfleet throughout the series, with only some reservations about his role among the Bajorans as the Emissary.Maybe the alternate universe Kirk, but Kirk-Prime often enforced rules and was really didn't become a bad boy until TWOK, when he was retconned from being a straight arrow in the Academy to someone who cheated at the Academy. TNG, DS9, and VOY reinforced the retcon of Kirk as a maverick or frequent rule breaker, when he was more often than not a sticker for rules during TOS itself.Kirk= bad boy always broke the rules tho for good reasons and he is cute in doing so.
I don't think Sisko actually broke many rules at all. Oh, yes, he did something morally questionable to bring the Romulans into the coalition against the Dominion, but he seemed to otherwise toe the company line.Sisko= Broke the rules on many occasions saved the Alpha Quadrant from the Dominion by assassinating a pacifistic senator <.<(shame on him) good cause bad actions.
actually Sisko disobeyed direct orders from admirals more then 3 times during DS9 lol
Examples, please. Otherwise, it seems as if Sisko remained in good standing with Starfleet throughout the series, with only some reservations about his role among the Bajorans as the Emissary.Maybe the alternate universe Kirk, but Kirk-Prime often enforced rules and was really didn't become a bad boy until TWOK, when he was retconned from being a straight arrow in the Academy to someone who cheated at the Academy. TNG, DS9, and VOY reinforced the retcon of Kirk as a maverick or frequent rule breaker, when he was more often than not a sticker for rules during TOS itself.
I don't think Sisko actually broke many rules at all. Oh, yes, he did something morally questionable to bring the Romulans into the coalition against the Dominion, but he seemed to otherwise toe the company line.
actually Sisko disobeyed direct orders from admirals more then 3 times during DS9 lol
And ultimately Sisko wasn't punished for his actions in "The Die Is Cast" as it wound up producing first-hand intelligence about the Dominion.Examples, please. Otherwise, it seems as if Sisko remained in good standing with Starfleet throughout the series, with only some reservations about his role among the Bajorans as the Emissary.actually Sisko disobeyed direct orders from admirals more then 3 times during DS9 lol
I can only think of one example of Sisko disobeying orders, The Die is Cast. You can beef it up to three if you include The Search and Paradise Lost. I don't since:
-The Search was all part of the Dominion simulation.
-In Paradise Lost he was disobeying an admiral who was plotting a coup.
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