you know, you're right. Dougherty did know from the beginning that the Baku weren't primitives because he knew they didn't come from that planet.
This was said in the film when?
you know, you're right. Dougherty did know from the beginning that the Baku weren't primitives because he knew they didn't come from that planet.
you know, you're right. Dougherty did know from the beginning that the Baku weren't primitives because he knew they didn't come from that planet.
This was said in the film when?
Star Trek: Insurrection said:DOUGHERTY: The Prime Directive doesn't apply. These people are not indigenous to this planet. They were never meant to be immortal. We'll simply be restoring them to their natural evolution.
you know, you're right. Dougherty did know from the beginning that the Baku weren't primitives because he knew they didn't come from that planet.
This was said in the film when?
Here...
Star Trek: Insurrection said:DOUGHERTY: The Prime Directive doesn't apply. These people are not indigenous to this planet. They were never meant to be immortal. We'll simply be restoring them to their natural evolution.
This was said in the film when?
Here...
Star Trek: Insurrection said:DOUGHERTY: The Prime Directive doesn't apply. These people are not indigenous to this planet. They were never meant to be immortal. We'll simply be restoring them to their natural evolution.
So after Picard started poking around and found out the Baku were warp capable and that they weren't from the planet.
Yeah that doesn't sound like covering his ass at all![]()
I find that "it's not the Ba'ku's planet, and that's why they have no rights" argument fascinating. United States of America, anyone?
That has never been the case. It's always the needs of the upper few that outweigh everything else.I find that "it's not the Ba'ku's planet, and that's why they have no rights" argument fascinating. United States of America, anyone?
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, anyone?
That has never been the case. It's always the needs of the upper few that outweigh everything else.I find that "it's not the Ba'ku's planet, and that's why they have no rights" argument fascinating. United States of America, anyone?
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, anyone?
That has never been the case. It's always the needs of the upper few that outweigh everything else.
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, anyone?
But in the Star Trek universe it isn't suppose to be that way...
Picard never says anything to Dougherty about them being warp capable.
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, anyone?
That has never been the case. It's always the needs of the upper few that outweigh everything else.
But in the Star Trek universe it isn't suppose to be that way...
The particles were about to be collected by a corrupt Starfleet Admiral and criminal scum that also worked with the Dominion. In the film they also talk about how the Federation didn't know about what happened there (Rua'fo talked Dougherty into ordering the attack on the Enterprise so that the Federation Council didn't get information about what happened there, because it would lead to endless debates).
None of those guys were trustworthy. Dougherty tried to butter Picard up when he said it was going to help billions. The Son'a had the technology, and the Son'a would set the price for the fountain of youth. Only the richest would get a share of it. So the Ba'ku would have lost everything for greed. And THEN it became clear that the Ba'ku were only about to get eradicated because the Son'a wanted the particles all for themselves (because they were dying) AND wanted revenge. That was actually pretty clear.
Further, there's so much to this movie that doesn't make any sense.
in UFP space
Which is why the Sona (likely) approached the Federation Council in the first place. The Federation would have realized that the planet belonged to them as soon as they found out the co-ordinates.
that the Son'a have equal claim to ...
In other words zero claim, which is just as much claim as the Baku had to the planet.
and that the inhabitants aren't primitives.
The Federation were always aware that the Baku migrated there from somewhere else. The only person in the movie who as unaware of this initially was Picard.
Exactly what should the Baku have been asked about?... but when the where they ASKED about it?
Remember ... IT ... ISN'T ... THE ... BAKU'S ... PLANET.
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SFdebris in his review of the film compares the situation to moving a few cabins that are downstream so that a river can be dammed, thus providing electricity to millions.
This is why the analogy to imperialism is a false one that substitutes loaded terms for an argument.
Also, if you reject "the needs of the many" argument, you basically reject the entire basis of democracy, the welfare state, etc.
And again, this was not about "stealing" the planet. No one was going to take the planet because it was going to be uninhabitable. SFdebris in his review of the film compares the situation to moving a few cabins that are downstream so that a river can be dammed, thus providing electricity to millions. They're not TAKING the planet, they're moving the inhabitants so they won't be harmed by a process that would harm them.
I rejected it because it didn't apply. The Son'a misused the Federation for their own plans. They wanted revenge on the Ba'ku, and they wanted the radiation for themselves. And by the end of the movie it was clear that Rua'fo would have NEVER EVER accepted "No" as an answer. It was only because the Ba'ku was inside the Federation territory that they even had to deal with relocation and all that shit. Had the planet been somewhere else, they would have just killed everybody. It never was about the many, it was always just about the few Son'a.Also, if you reject "the needs of the many" argument, you basically reject the entire basis of democracy, the welfare state, etc. Otherwise, the needs of the aristocratic few should prevail, and their wealth and power shouldn't be touched to give the masses greater control over their own lives. It continues to amuse me to see folks defending the property rights of an entitled few over the greater good for billions.
So I guess me and my 500 cult followers can settle on any random planet we want to in Federation space,
So I guess me and my 500 cult followers can settle on any random planet we want to in Federation space,
And yet what you seem to have a problem grasping was that THERE WAS NO FEDERATION SPACE WHEN THEY SETTLED THERE. The federation did not exist yet and wouldn't for a century, hell it was only a few years to a decade of humans met Vulcans for the first time
SFdebris in his review of the film compares the situation to moving a few cabins that are downstream so that a river can be dammed, thus providing electricity to millions.
A comparison that only works if the cabins are in one country and the people wanting to dam the river are from another, or did I miss the part were the Baku joined the federation before the events of the film.
Again did I miss the part were the Baku joined the federation before the events of the film, because otherwise its one nation imposing its will on another aka imperialismThis is why the analogy to imperialism is a false one that substitutes loaded terms for an argument.
Listen and pay attention THE! BAKU! ARE! NOT! PART! OF! THE! FEDERATION! So the federation has no authority over them at all.Also, if you reject "the needs of the many" argument, you basically reject the entire basis of democracy, the welfare state, etc.
And again, this was not about "stealing" the planet. No one was going to take the planet because it was going to be uninhabitable. SFdebris in his review of the film compares the situation to moving a few cabins that are downstream so that a river can be dammed, thus providing electricity to millions. They're not TAKING the planet, they're moving the inhabitants so they won't be harmed by a process that would harm them.
There's a village with a fresh water source. A company comes and claims that water source. They remove the village, pour the water into bottles and what was once free has now a price tag.
The Ba'ku wouldn't have had a problem with other people coming and building settlements and get the metaphasic radiation for free without harming anyone and without destroying anything. A planet is pretty huge.
I rejected it because it didn't apply. The Son'a misused the Federation for their own plans. They wanted revenge on the Ba'ku, and they wanted the radiation for themselves. And by the end of the movie it was clear that Rua'fo would have NEVER EVER accepted "No" as an answer. It was only because the Ba'ku was inside the Federation territory that they even had to deal with relocation and all that shit. Had the planet been somewhere else, they would have just killed everybody. It never was about the many, it was always just about the few Son'a.Also, if you reject "the needs of the many" argument, you basically reject the entire basis of democracy, the welfare state, etc. Otherwise, the needs of the aristocratic few should prevail, and their wealth and power shouldn't be touched to give the masses greater control over their own lives. It continues to amuse me to see folks defending the property rights of an entitled few over the greater good for billions.
And then there's the thing again that the effects didn't last once you left the planet. Geordi says that. He didn't know if his newly grown eyes would last.
Which means they didn't even know for sure if relocation would kill the older Ba'ku.
so... the basis of your entire argument is that territorial sovereignty is supreme and trumps all other considerations.
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