conflict is fine, but Ben should have had more sense than to blame a man who was not responsible for his wife's death.
Because, of course, real people always have completely rational feelings.![]()
Considering that Locutus murdered his wife, I'd say that Sisko did an admirable job of controlling himself. He's certainly still angry at Picard -- though I think he's also partly just angry at the way the captain of a posh ship behaves so condescendingly towards commanding officers of starbases and is lecturing him about not having the luxury to raise one's family in good circumstances -- but he didn't exactly blame Picard for Locutus's actions or try to hold Picard responsible. He's pissed and doesn't like Picard, but it's not like he actually tried to drum him out of the service or have charges pressed against him.
He reversed his decisions after being talked into doing so, not on his own recognizance. Admitting one is wrong is great, but it doesn't exactly repair the damage you've already done.
Also I'm not sure bringing up I, Borg is the way to go...you're condemning Sisko for making one planet unable to support -human- life while blessing Picard for his newfound willingness to commit genocide under orders?
Given that we know very little of Picard's actions during the Dominion War, it's entirely possible his morality didn't exactly escape undamaged either.
Damask you are so right. Or what about a mirror darkly?
Q: How does In A Mirror Darkly count as a crossover? Unless you mean the USS Defiant herself and if that's the case, I can see a valid argument for its inclusion (the ships being characters themselves).
Well we had characters from ENT cross into TOS era and we got to see Tholians again. It's definitely a crossover. Not the best but should be inculded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vU5zGmshIT8Yes, and Picard certainly never made irrational decisions while emotionally compromised...
...especially in any situations where his crew was too cowed by him to confront him directly and it took a civilian to talk sense into him...
If my new tyre blew out for no reason on a motorway and my car crashed, killing my wife, I'd be fairly pissed at the company that produced the faulty tyre. If I met the manager of that factory and he had no idea who I was or how his negligence had ruined my life, I'd target my anger at him. It may not be fair on him, it would be ignoring the 99.999999% of tyres produced at his factory that weren't defective, but that's how I'd feel.Human beings are not 100 per cent rational, and we never will be. But I think most people would acknowledge that we should have healthy reactions and emotions to events. If my car tire blows out, I shouldn't blame somebody in India for it, who I've never met and who has never seen a car in his/her lifetime. It would be wrong of me to punch a stranger in the face simply because the way he looks irritates me.
Rationality is not always possible, but healthy recognition and handling of emotions is.
But the point is that Sisko doesn't understand that, Sisko doesn't understand the Borg and he doesn't understand what it means to be assimilated by the Borg. Unlike the audience, Sisko didn't view the events surrounding Picard's assimilation, all he knows is that some guy with Picard's face was seemingly the head guy responsible for the death of his wife, and now he has to deal with that face again.But Picard was not Locutus, at least not totally. The Borg stripped Picard of his personality and sense of self, and was essentially an automaton. A Borg drone is not in control of his actions, as we know it from seeing the series.
* Subsequent episodes state that he was working at Utopia Planitia designing a ship to kill the Borg, further showing that Sisko hadn't moved past his anger towards the Borg.
* Subsequent episodes state that he was working at Utopia Planitia designing a ship to kill the Borg, further showing that Sisko hadn't moved past his anger towards the Borg.
Y'know, all this time I hadn't put two and two together. I mean, I knew he spent two years at Utopia Planitia to work on the Defiant, and I knew the Defiant was meant to be an Anti-Borg ship, but it never dawned upon me that it was really an outlet for Sisko's personal hatred of the Borg. Now I'm amazed yet slightly ashamed![]()
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