After watching the video that fellow member Bry_Sincliar posted, I imagined what the JJ movies would have been like with DS9's characters. Perhaps it wasn't a difficult exercise: ISB wanted Trek to look epic, which is at least one thing Abrams achieved. However, I realized the dissonance between one scene in STID and the ethics of DS9 over the Prime Directive. The scene, of course, is the one where Pike dresses down Kirk and Spock for their actions Nibiru. Their counterargument was that the Prime Directive acted as a limiter to productive humanitarian action, unnecessarily condemning species to their doom when positive measures could be taken to save them. I'm sure many applauded at this affirmation of life over simple cultural preservation.
The scene would make no sense in DS9. Memory Alpha lists nine episodes in which the Prime Directive in which the Prime Directive was at issue (as opposed to 15 in TOS, 16 in TNG, and 23 in VOY). Arguably, many of the DS9 episodes listed don't really have the Prime Directive as a central focus of the episode. As far as I can tell, there are fewer than 6 mentions of the Prime Directive. Only once does Sisko make an issue of it (and arguably, it would have been a non-issue had Tosk asked for asylum). In three other instances, it is another character--Picard, Bashir, a badmiral--who bring it up. Quark makes a joke about Fergengi quoting the prime directive. Bashir complains that Section 31's actions were against "the Federation charter", which is somewhat more nebulous. That's it. The Prime Directive had almost no impact on DS9's stories, let alone the overall development of the series. Sisko became deeply entrenched in Bajoran culture, becoming a figurative deity. He was literally willing to use this in an effort to affect the political direction of Bajor in Call to Arms. And there were the notorious episodes like For the Uniform and Pale Moonlight, in which the the Prime Directive was not only not mentioned, it was jettissoned.
Did DS9 ignore the Prime Directive? Was it present in other ways? Was this another dimensions of being the anti-Trek? Or did it simply not matter to the stories being told?
The scene would make no sense in DS9. Memory Alpha lists nine episodes in which the Prime Directive in which the Prime Directive was at issue (as opposed to 15 in TOS, 16 in TNG, and 23 in VOY). Arguably, many of the DS9 episodes listed don't really have the Prime Directive as a central focus of the episode. As far as I can tell, there are fewer than 6 mentions of the Prime Directive. Only once does Sisko make an issue of it (and arguably, it would have been a non-issue had Tosk asked for asylum). In three other instances, it is another character--Picard, Bashir, a badmiral--who bring it up. Quark makes a joke about Fergengi quoting the prime directive. Bashir complains that Section 31's actions were against "the Federation charter", which is somewhat more nebulous. That's it. The Prime Directive had almost no impact on DS9's stories, let alone the overall development of the series. Sisko became deeply entrenched in Bajoran culture, becoming a figurative deity. He was literally willing to use this in an effort to affect the political direction of Bajor in Call to Arms. And there were the notorious episodes like For the Uniform and Pale Moonlight, in which the the Prime Directive was not only not mentioned, it was jettissoned.
Did DS9 ignore the Prime Directive? Was it present in other ways? Was this another dimensions of being the anti-Trek? Or did it simply not matter to the stories being told?