Now comes an episode that makes me think the Federation isn't such a great place. It seems that in the next 300 years we won't make much...
"Progress"
Finally, an episode of Star Trek dealing with eminent domain issues! Handled in the usual Trek way, which is having a single officer solve a complex problem that would usually engage teams of professionals.
In the runabout, Dax talks about how Morn asked her out. She said she was busy, but thinks he's kind of cute. Well, there's at least one person in the Trekverse who's into Morn porn. Then again, given that Seven had a stash of Chakotay porn, the bar isn't exactly set very high.
So Kira's got to evict these three people from a moon which is going to be used to somehow power Bajor.
I don't like getting bogged down in technical details, but from what they said it sounds like a pretty sucky plan to begin with. You've got an inhabitable moon that's apparently M-class (or whatever class a moon would be); in order to get energy from it, you will have to poison the atmosphere, making it unlivable. You already relocated 47 inhabitants, and there are 3 holdouts.
But what about all of the animals? We didn't see any, but the moon had pretty extensive foliage, so I'd assume there was a diversity of life on it. Did that life develop independently there? If so, it would be home to unique lifeforms. Even if not, some neat things might have evolved there. And the Bajoran government, with Federation help, is going to destroy all that so people can get power without having to wait a year.
And they're the good guys?
Seriously, this made me think of the
Kelo case. If you were trying to make a case against eminent domain, you couldn't do a better job. This wasn't an "Ensigns of Command" case where the threat came from an external force that everyone agreed was being dickish. This was the Federation itself engineering the destruction of a habitat.
So in the 24th century I guess they don't require environmental impact statements.
It's almost like the point of the episode is to convince us how completely fucked up the Federation is. The other great example of this, from a human resources perspective, is TMP, where Starfleet has Kirk, the guy who's replacing him, break the news to Decker that he's being relieved of command and busted down in rank.
My wife drifted in and out during this one, so I had to explain midway to her that Kira was trying to evict Mullibok before they destroyed the moon.
"Do they have to build a hyperspace bypass?" was her response.
So basically what I got from this is that Bajor (assisted by the Feds) will do whatever it wants regardless of the environmental or human consequences. Then they'll send someone to help finish building your kiln before phasering the shit out of it and setting your house on fire.
And these are the good guys?
There was an amusing B-story with Jake and Nog becoming yamok sauce/self-sealing stem bolt/Bajoran real estate tycoons that I actually liked. But even it raised some interesting implications. The government was going to negotiate with offworlder speculators who were the lone holdouts preventing them from building a waste treatment plant, but they have no problem using eminent domain to destroy the home of a veteran of the Cardassian occupation?
So this one was a real head-scratcher. I don't know what they were going for here, but it made me think that the Bajorans aren't quite as spiritual as they say they are. At the very least, they're awfully cavalier about environmental stewardship.