Since The Doctor's not flesh-and-blood, Starling may not have perceived that as being a particularly evil act? He doesn't have the exposure to the EMH that we do.That said, he was certainly willing to have people (e.g., Rain, Tom and Tuvok) killed in order to protect ChronoWerx and he had no compunctions about inflicting torture (e.g., subjecting The Doctor to pain subroutines) to get what he wanted.
Since The Doctor's not flesh-and-blood, Starling may not have perceived that as being a particularly evil act? He doesn't have the exposure to the EMH that we do.
I honestly didn't find Starling that compelling. Ed Begley, Jr. played him too cartoonishly 'bad corporate executive' for me to call him a villain. (Likely an acting choice by Begley rather than what the script calls for.)
I'd probably rate Starling a 2.5 out of 10 on the villain scale.
Wanting what you want without caring a whit who gets hurt in the process seems to make for a high villainy index to me.
1 more because he hooked the Doc up with a really cool mobile emitter.
Good evening.
On a scale of one to ten, one being "Villain? He in no way deserves the title of 'villain'.", five being "Villain with some sympathetic motives, yet undeniably a villain." and ten being "Absolute monster.", where would you rank tech mogul Henry Starling?
Hmmm. He was ready to annihilate billions just to make a profit
Starling is willing to risk danger in the future for gain to society now. That's exactly what mankind has done for decades. We knew in the 90s that our immediate actions which benefited us today were causing damage which wasn't going to be paid for decades, but we still chose (and still choose) to jump on a plane to go on holiday, or drive to the shop, etc.
I think he's a 2 to 3 on the scale, mainly because of the (potentially baseless) threat to LA.
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