As everyone who's seen INS will likely recall, Picard & Co. assist the Baku in preventing the Son'a attempts to beam them off the planet. It is later revealed that the Baku and Son'a are (or at least were) one race...the Son'a were exiled from the planet (how this was done by a race that appears to have abandoned technology is left as an exercise for the reader) after attempting to take control of the settlement. In the meantime the Son'a have developed medical issues which would require ten years of normal exposure to the Baku planet's rings to begin to reverse their condition, or far less time if they received a concentrated burst.
As everyone who's seen INS may not recall, there's an episode of TNG, "The Hunted", where a portion of a planet's population have been modified to serve as soldiers, and once the need for them was exhausted, they were imprisoned on a moon. When they eventually escape and the planet's leadership calls on Picard & Co. for aid...he demurs, citing the situation as an internal matter.
Of course, there's also the Klingon Civil War, where Picard refuses to get involved short of preventing the Romulans from interfering with events.
I'm thinking that Our Heroes may not be behaving consistently here.
Ironically, in INS it's Picard who first cites PD concerns about intervening between the Baku and the Son'a, and Admiral Dougherty who notes that, as the Baku are not indigenous to their planet, the PD doesn't apply. One wonders how Dougherty might have handled this if he'd realized the Son'a's relationship to the Baku.
Given the situation in "The Hunted" and Picard's general reticence toward violating the PD though, one wonders how he would have handled the situation if the Son'a had come to him at the beginning of the film and said, "We've returned to a planet from which we were exiled. We want to set up a colony on the far side of the planet, we won't cause any trouble for the Baku (from whom we're originally descended in any case), and even if we were going to cause trouble for them, we are descended from them, so this is an internal matter and we would kindly ask that you bugger off, since we know how you hate to get involved in such things."
As everyone who's seen INS may not recall, there's an episode of TNG, "The Hunted", where a portion of a planet's population have been modified to serve as soldiers, and once the need for them was exhausted, they were imprisoned on a moon. When they eventually escape and the planet's leadership calls on Picard & Co. for aid...he demurs, citing the situation as an internal matter.
Of course, there's also the Klingon Civil War, where Picard refuses to get involved short of preventing the Romulans from interfering with events.
I'm thinking that Our Heroes may not be behaving consistently here.
Ironically, in INS it's Picard who first cites PD concerns about intervening between the Baku and the Son'a, and Admiral Dougherty who notes that, as the Baku are not indigenous to their planet, the PD doesn't apply. One wonders how Dougherty might have handled this if he'd realized the Son'a's relationship to the Baku.
Given the situation in "The Hunted" and Picard's general reticence toward violating the PD though, one wonders how he would have handled the situation if the Son'a had come to him at the beginning of the film and said, "We've returned to a planet from which we were exiled. We want to set up a colony on the far side of the planet, we won't cause any trouble for the Baku (from whom we're originally descended in any case), and even if we were going to cause trouble for them, we are descended from them, so this is an internal matter and we would kindly ask that you bugger off, since we know how you hate to get involved in such things."