Then the Martians showed up.Klaatu and Gort tried way back in the fifties; it didn’t take.
Then the Martians showed up.Klaatu and Gort tried way back in the fifties; it didn’t take.
When Anan and Kirk are arguing that humanoids are inherently war-like, Anan shouts "Your general order 24!", suggesting it speaks for itself regarding Kirk's war-like nature. Even though Kirk has control of the Eminian capitol, he doesn't object and say it wasn't real. He calls Scotty and cancels the order.My entire life I just assumed it was another Kirk Bluff and that Scotty knew it. It wasn't until message boards that I realized most fans actually believe they were going to genocide that planet.
But that would also be the same if it was a bluff. And, to bluff the inherently war-like civilization, you would need a bluff / scare tactic that they would understand in their own terms. IDK. I can't rationalize it as legit.When Anan and Kirk are arguing that humanoids are inherently war-like, Anan shouts "Your general order 24!", suggesting it speaks for itself regarding Kirk's war-like nature. Even though Kirk has control of the Eminian capitol, he doesn't object and say it wasn't real. He calls Scotty and cancels the order.
But he doesn't cancel it until after Anon 7 and Fox have left to talk to Vendikar—and every other native Eminian is 15 feet away. So he would be basically putting on a show for no one.But that would also be the same if it was a bluff. And, to bluff the inherently war-life civilization, you would need a bluff / scare tactic that they would understand in their own terms. IDK. I can't rationalize it as legit.
I think it was supposed to be part of his point that his brand of warfare is so horrific that they never actually have to follow through.But he doesn't cancel it until after Anon 7 and Fox have left to talk to Vendikar—and every other native Eminian is 15 feet away. So he would be basically putting on a show for no one.
I know it all worked out in the end, but this must have been before The Prime Directive was introduced.
My entire life I just assumed it was another Kirk Bluff and that Scotty knew it. It wasn't until message boards that I realized most fans actually believe they were going to genocide that planet.
There is a streak of "White Savior" in Star TrekWhich, really, comes across as pretty arrogant and maybe analogous to Western powers deciding that native peoples' aren't living right and need Western guidance.
TBF, in TNG I'm not sure we ever really saw Our Heroes come across any similar scenarios? I don't once recall Picard saying that a civlization's intended path had been altered and that it was on them to restore it to what it should be.It seems like in TOS there's this expected path of development for all civilizations (Hodgkins's Law?), and if a starship comes across a culture that's stagnant or not developing in the proper way, say, because they are serving a giant reptilian robot or because they are engaged in a perpetual virtual war or because they are ruled by a master computer, they are allowed to alter the culture to put them back on the correct path. Such things are unheard of in TNG where they wring their hands over whether they should even take action to save the lives of people about to die.
I forget, how did they handle the female devil chick? But that was technically a TOS/P2 script.TBF, in TNG I'm not sure we ever really saw Our Heroes come across any similar scenarios? I don't once recall Picard saying that a civlization's intended path had been altered and that it was on them to restore it to what it should be.
Picard showed her to be an alien fraud who had taken advantage of the planet’s inhabitants. He then left it to the inhabitants to decide what to do with her.I forget, how did they handle the female devil chick? But that was technically a TOS/P2 script.
So, he "broke the prime directive" to set them back on their natural path.Picard showed her to be an alien fraud who had taken advantage of the planet’s inhabitants. He then left it to the inhabitants to decide what to do with her.
Well there was the added complication that Audra was also laying claim to the Enterprise and crew because they were in orbit of the planet when she “returned” to claim what she asserted to be her rightful property due to the terms of the age old agreement made with the inhabitants ancestors. So Picard found himself, like Kirk, party to an agreement they had had no say in. As such Picard felt he had no obligation to play or be bound by rules he had never agreed to, just like Kirk.So, he "broke the prime directive" to set them back on their natural path.![]()
I think the closest we got was the Edo in the episode "Justice".TBF, in TNG I'm not sure we ever really saw Our Heroes come across any similar scenarios? I don't once recall Picard saying that a civlization's intended path had been altered and that it was on them to restore it to what it should be.
Is it weird that General Order 24 (kill that planet to death) came after General Order 7 (No Go Talos)? That's what 17 general orders in a decade. Did 24 only come in during Season 1 and Kirk wanted to be the first to take it for a spin?
It seems like in TOS there's this expected path of development for all civilizations
Which, really, comes across as pretty arrogant and maybe analogous to Western powers deciding that native peoples' aren't living right and need Western guidance.
Kirk would have convinced 'God' to kill itself, go away, or phasered it into oblivion.I think the closest we got was the Edo in the episode "Justice".
Kirk would have convinced 'God' to kill itself, go away, or phasered it into oblivion.![]()
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