Perhaps, just as Dr. Crusher disagreed with Picard's POV 100%. Since Crusher only looked at one side of it – a short-term side to alleviate immediate suffering, and the long-term stuff didn't seem to matter to her or occur to her.This was a TNG plot done badly in Enterprise. Justification for letting Valakians to die was weak and callous, and the whole thing did what ENT often did, failed to do what a prequel should. But I think that's enough of that, we obviously disagree.
And Picard's adherence to the PD condemned one planet not to death, as the Ornarans thought, but a good deal of suffering as they went through withdrawal, but Crusher said they wouldn't die from that. So they would naturally learn they no longer had the plague and were finally free of the drug. But then the worse addiction kicks in, often not considered. The Brekkians were 100% dependent on the Ornarans for everything else. They had no industry, save the drug trade. So now they'll have no food, clean water, clothes, etc. and countless numbers of them probably will die. Crusher may not have considered that, or cared, since they were low-life drug dealers and probably deserved it. She did say she didn't care for them, and never once did she really express any concern for them or what would happen to them should their only industry collapse.
Of course I never cared too much for certain aspects of that episode as I felt it was badly contrived, unlike those circumstances in Dear Doctor, which seemed more plausible. First, the whole idea they had both the drug and the payment in transit seemed wrong. Why are they still carrying the payment back to Ornara? They were at the 4th planet in the Delos system, which didn't appear to be Brekka or Ornara. So the payment should have already been on Brekka.
Regardless, the idea two or three faulty spaceships are carrying all the trade goods required by another planet is just ludicrous. That's enough to carry a potent drug, but not enough to carry the trade goods for all of Brekka back.
Nevertheless, we needn't dwell on the apparently faulty story details to examine the prime directive. This episode, in particular, is the one I quote that shows Picard feels it mostly deals with and applies to "less developed" civilizations (non-warp-capable), and not just anyone, and that history has shown us time and again however well intentioned a quick fix might be, the long-term consequences are often disastrous. And it would squarely be the Federation's fault if they interfered.
Ultimately, though they interfered by saving the people and the drug in the first place that would have otherwise been lost and accelerated the end results, the end results were left on track when they departed by not giving them the repairs for their two remaining ships. It was as "hands off" as they could get at that point. Maybe it's callous to let millions suffer when they could offer a non-addictive version of the drug, but can one starship really do that? Might it not become their full time job to manufacture drugs long enough to wean them off the drug, as well as support the Brekkians until they could build up more industry? How many years must they do this to prevent all suffering, and should they go before they totally fix other people's problems, are they really responsible for the suffering left behind?
I think not. It's not their job, nor their responsibility to do all that there, and every where else, too, lest others suffer. Nor do I feel that is actually a callous attitude. Crusher disagreed. I agreed more with Picard.
But it's fine if you like that episode more than Dear Doctor. I just felt DD did a pretty decent job as a forerunner for Picard's attitude, though I'm pretty sure Beverly would not have approved.
Not a great analogy really, there's little evidence to suggest we wiped out Neanderthals or enslaved them. In fact the best that can really be drawn from the evidence is we prospered where they failed. Theories have been put forward to suggest there would have been violent conflict on local scales but it's hard to extrapolate that to an extinction event given the number of other hominid species we would have been in competition with but survived to become the ancestors of many of the species we see today.
More likely would be a combination of losing out in terms of resource competition, absorption into the homo erectus/sapiens gene pool or (the prevailing theory) being decimated by transcontinental drift of pathogens as we spread into Europe.
Doubtless we contributed to their decline but it's hard to claim realistically we "wiped them out".
Well, we could discuss the actual science, but that's hardly the point, and my analogy stands up as a good example for how the Prime Directive might apply there in that real situation, or a fictitious one similar enough to it that you see the larger point I'm making.
One can contrive various reasons an alien culture might help out one species but not another, on this planet 75,000 years ago, or another planet, thus giving one species the upper hand they otherwise would not have had, and through their interference or intervention, determine which of two (or more) competing species would come out on top. The aliens do not even have to have all their facts right, or a "good" reason by human standards to believe things will work out as they figure they might down the road. The POINT is, such interference can consign one race to subservience or even oblivion where, had no such interference been made, they could have achieved dominance or even sole dominion over the world.
I wasn't really suggesting Homo Sapiens actively hunted down and killed every Neanderthal, BTW.
As for the science, considering how we are as a species, I have little doubt we killed a bunch of Neanderthals, and they killed a bunch of us, and we bred with them, and we were at peace with them at times, too. The entire gambit of interaction is on the table. But on the whole, we out paced them, and when ever limited resources would make all the difference, we monopolized enough of them that the Neanderthals ultimately failed. Had an advanced civilization interfered, it might have turned out differently.
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