Sisko

Discussion in 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine' started by Horta, Mar 10, 2018.

  1. at Quark's

    at Quark's Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    We also have to count intentions in. Probably it wasn't Sisko's intention to kill anyone, just forcing the colonists off the planet. We don't know if exposure to that trilithium resin would have been immediately fatal, or that the colonists still would have had a couple of hours/days to pack their bags (but probably the sooner they were off the planet, the better).

    Picard on the other hand was willing to let people die who didn't have a means of escaping that fate.

    So what is worse? Initiating a lethal action that people have sufficient means to escape from (even if it means leaving their homes behind), or not initiating it, but still refusing any help to people who can't escape? I honestly don't know. And for me, legality (whether it is against starfleet orders or not, whether someone has sworn to uphold the prime directive or not) doesn't even enter into that equation at all.
     
    Last edited: Mar 14, 2018
  2. Bad Thoughts

    Bad Thoughts Vice Admiral Admiral

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    There drops the other shoe.

    Sisko never bombarded a planet. We've adjudicated For The Uniform ad infinitum. Before proceeding, please review A Taste of Armageddon (looking into my tagline wouldn't hurt either.)
     
  3. JirinPanthosa

    JirinPanthosa Admiral Admiral

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    In retrospect it was a really bold choice to start your spinoff by having your lead character hate the beloved lead character of the series it's spinning off from. That set the tone off DS9 rebelling against the idealism of TNG.
     
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  4. kkt

    kkt Commodore Commodore

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    Not just in retrospect. At the time, too. It goes with the Q episode's "I'm not Picard!"
     
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  5. Qonundrum

    Qonundrum Vice Admiral Admiral

    Fair questions.

    But looking at all the inconsistencies given to Picard in "The Drumhead", especially in "First Contact: The Movie" where more years had passed but decided Picard shouldn't be there, etc, etc...

    Oh, how many people who are being raped try to destroy an entire Federation? I would surmise that what Picard went through is much closer to cult indoctrination, with Locutus being the end result, admitting that most cults use more persuasive forms indoctrinating.

    Oh, and as a survivor of a sexual assault myself - which is something I did not ask for, if you really want to know what that feels like, I'll be more than happy to adumbrate one day - and even after decades the emotions are still raw - this is not atypical for many survivors of this sort of thing, so Sisko's reactions are not outlandish and, indeed, are somewhat relateable to me, especially if I ever had to deal with the (humans) who did what they did to me and what I've had to deal with... I'll leave it at that, for now.

    And in a way, I was half-hoping Picard would talk about it, but he avoided the situation because he was still having emotions too. But that didn't help, did it?

    ^^this. Eddington's intentions were to kill, and Sisko had much bigger concerns.

    What was worst was to let Eddington continue to go around poisoning planets and having "the needs of the many" be upended by the Cardassians ending the treaty and making a real mess. Sisko did pretty much everything else to stop an outright traitor, even saving lives that Eddington was willing to murder as a diversion. Sisko had little choice in the matter.
     
    Last edited: Mar 15, 2018
  6. Qonundrum

    Qonundrum Vice Admiral Admiral

    After re-reading the thread, feeling a need to respond to Discofan due to real life issues that happened to me as impetus and then checking/editing because I was a bit steamed, I went back to the thread. Thank you for also mentioning "cult", which is far closer to what Picard went through. "Blackmail" also works as a more cogent reason. "Rape" is not the strongest analogy, especially made by those who've likely never been assaulted or raped.

    That's true. People get stimulated all the time but most people try to look the other way or other things, and obviously people certainly don't forcibly impose themselves by force. One's looks are not an invitation to touch. But, again, Picard was not raped. Neither literally nor allegorically. He's closer to a Prisoner Of War, molded with nasty cult indoctrination tactics of sorts to get him to reveal the enemy than anything approaching a rape victim, and there are big differences.
     
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  7. Prax

    Prax Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Overacting is part of the gig. That's why the producers were so keen on hiring actors that could believably perform dramatic, over the top scenes.

    As to the coversation above, Picard was invaded physically and mentally. His every cell, and thought, and then used as a weapon against his friends and their families. I don't think "rape" quite covers it.

    When I see that scene with Sisko, I very much don't like Sisko, and maybe we're not supposed to. When he mentions the battle, Picard looks away in shame, and my sympathies immediately gravitate to him.
    In the second meeting, I feel like Picard should be questioning this guy's fitness to command, and maybe he has reservations. Sisko did a 180° immediately after being made an important relgious leader by some local tribe... seems like an opportunity for the kind of abuse/corruption Starfleet has had to constantly be vigilant against.
     
  8. Bry_Sinclair

    Bry_Sinclair Vice Admiral Admiral

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    That is a great scene, I love the seething anger under Sisko's surface and that fact that it's directed towards someone almost anyone else in the fleet would consider a legend and a hero, it shows just who Sisko is in a nutshell, he's a man who thought he had his life arranged and planned out, thought he'd be with the woman he loved for the rest of his days (despite the danger of his career), but in the moment that that was taken from him, when he was powerless to do anything to help her, when he just had to leave her behind, nothing had prepared him for that. On some level he knew Picard wasn't to blame (the fact at the end of the episode he forgives him for that shows this) but on a far more visceral level the man is a symbol for his loss and pain, so Sisko directs all of his feelings at him, even though a lot of that will be the anger he has for himself at the loss of Jennifer.

    It's amazing to think that that personal journey for Sisko, to find forgiveness for himself and to begin to properly deal with his loss and heartache, and really mourn his loss was simply the first episode of this wonderful series. It's one of the many reasons I am a hardcore Niner and why I love Sisko (and the other characters) because of the nuances that he has.
     
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  9. Riker'sMailbox

    Riker'sMailbox Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    I think that Avery Brooks has a unique voice and a unique style of acting. I think he definitely crossed over into overacting, at times. However, I think that Sisko was a unique captain in a unique circumstance and the casting was brilliant. Sisko was written to be more passionate, more off the cuff than Picard. A captain like Picard may not as fared as well as Sisko on DS9. Brooks did a great job of selling a captain that had to balance a delicate diplomacy between Bajor and the Cardassians and was at the front lines of one of the most catastrophic wars in Federation history, all the while being a single father and a religious figure. Brooks was able to sell it all.

    As for the Picard/ Sisko scene. I am willing to extend some grace to a man that saw the love of his life, the mother of his child die. There is no handbook nor timeline for grief and I am okay with a bit of irrationality on the part of Sisko. We also needed to see where he started from to appreciate where he ended.
     
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  10. Kilana2

    Kilana2 Vice Admiral Admiral

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    His performance in Far Beyond the Stars was outstanding, at least for me.
     
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  11. Nakita Akita

    Nakita Akita Commodore Commodore

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    To me he shouldn't have gone off on Picard.
    Mainly due to being a professional.
    The pain of losing his wife, that could take a lifetime and never go away.
    But being a professional, he should have set aside his emotions and acted in a professional fashion.
    He can go into a private room later, or prior to meeting with Picard and deal with his emotions.
     
  12. Discofan

    Discofan Admiral Admiral

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    Absolutely, I found his lack of restraint unprofessional too. Plus nothing he said to Picard made sense. He basically accused him of being in the pay of the borg while to anyone else in the world Picard was as much of a victim if not more than Sisko.
     
  13. Jayson1

    Jayson1 Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Some people are just better at hiding their feelings than others. I think Sisko showed his professionalism by simply doing his job without his trauma influencing him. He must have been doing a good job at Utopia Planita to even get offered the command. He didn't go down the Captain Maxwell route of keeping everthing inside and before you know it your waging war on Carddisians without your government even approving of it.

    Jason
     
  14. Discofan

    Discofan Admiral Admiral

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    There's a name for people who wage private wars: Murderers.
     
  15. kkt

    kkt Commodore Commodore

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    Legally, of course you're right, but the psychology of someone waging a private war against a nation-state that is doing horrible things is quite different from a typical murder for passion or material gain.
     
  16. Discofan

    Discofan Admiral Admiral

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    The psychology can be used as extenuating circumstances but it can't change the fact that its murder. The only time when terrorism ceases to be murder is when the terrorists take over and become the new government, they can then retroactively pardon themselves.
     
  17. Prax

    Prax Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    It's self-defence, which usually is not murder. Sometimes it's revenge, though.

    what's morally different between killing in a state sanctioned war vs killing in a private little war?
     
  18. Discofan

    Discofan Admiral Admiral

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    A serial killer could be construed as waging a kind of private little war.
     
  19. Jayson1

    Jayson1 Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    But wouldn't that just be all in his mind? I might think I am the sexiest man alive but the world isn't going to conform to my beliefs.

    Jason
     
  20. Discofan

    Discofan Admiral Admiral

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    Sure, but what exactly is a "private" war? Wars are supposed to be waged by states or countries, not individuals. So I'll ask you again, what's the difference between a serial killer/mass murderer and someone waging a private war?