That's not quite how it played out, the First Order was way out on the outskirts of the galaxy, and pretty much stayed out of their way while they were building up their power, so most of the Republic wasn't really aware of them or what they were up to. There were people like Leia who were aware of them and tried to warn the leadership of the Republic, but they wouldn't believe them since in their eyes the First Order was just rumors out in an area of space they weren't concerned about. That was the whole reason Leia started The Resistance and wasn't part of the Republic's leadership any more. I don't think anybody, even The Resistance was really aware of the scale of what the First Order had in their arsenal, which was why Starkiller destroying the Hosnian system was such a shock, nobody realized until then that the First Order was more than a handful of left over Imperial loyalists who couldn't move on.I'm reminded a little bit of the Star Wars sequel trilogy, were the first order is it organization made of individuals so hateful toward the new Republic that they broke away from the Empire rather than accept any idea of a peace treaty, and have enslaved entire worlds whose representatives are known to the new Republic, and have apparently kidnapped millions of children from across the galaxy to brainwash and the stormtroopers, and have the most powerful dreadnought ever created with a crew compliment three times that of the death Star - but are also somehow considered no threat whatsoever by the new Republic, who disarm because they are so unconcerned about the potential of an attack. At a certain point, the concept eats its own tail, requiring two completely contradictory things to be true as a setup in order to get to the point where the author wanted it to be, that a big really powerful force comes out of nowhere and ambushes the new Republic and conquers it, so that they can have another story about a evil dominating Empire being opposed by a small, scrappy rebellion. The setup for the story is the author wants to tell simply requires too many contradictions to actually make sense as a setup for the story itself. It requires the main villain organization to be overwhelmingly powerful and have demonstrated that in multiple places yet simultaneously be considered non-threatening.
I've gotta disagree, I've been loving the Disney era so far.Well, sometimes staying a fan in the Disney era does feel like a never-ending sacrifice...
The problem is, they already had information about entire planets being enslaved thanks to Paige and Rose Tico. And the fleet-killing capabilities of the dreadnaughts that the First Order had, as well as recognizing Snoke's command ship on sight- and both at the start of TLJ, with no time to learn these things between the time pre-TFA and then, indicating that already, they were familiar with both military forces sufficient to occupy entire planets, and military capability capable of eliminating entire fleets, at the very least.That's not quite how it played out, the First Order was way out on the outskirts of the galaxy, and pretty much stayed out of their way while they were building up their power, so most of the Republic wasn't really aware of them or what they were up to. There were people like Leia who were aware of them and tried to warn the leadership of the Republic, but they wouldn't believe them since in their eyes the First Order was just rumors out in an area of space they weren't concerned about. That was the whole reason Leia started The Resistance and wasn't part of the Republic's leadership any more. I don't think anybody, even The Resistance was really aware of the scale of what the First Order had in their arsenal, which was why Starkiller destroying the Hosnian system was such a shock, nobody realized until then that the First Order was more than a handful of left over Imperial loyalists who couldn't move on.
I've gotta disagree, I've been loving the Disney era so far.
I Am Marla was a particularly powerful and heart-wrenching episode, and the call back to Cortez in the finale was a particularly effective scene for me.Did anyone have any particular episodes or scenes that have stuck with them?
I really liked all the one on one conversations between Khan and Delmonda. As the series was nearing the end that’s what I was looking forward to each work.
Also, thinking about how the scene where Khan decides to stay with his people added to how far he had fallen at the end of TWoK because he had become totally absorbed in his vengeance beyond any care for his people. He had become totally selfish like Cortes.
Which one?There was one episode of Strange New Worlds season 3 that was far worse than Section 31.
Four and a Half Vulcans joins The Alternative Factor and Where the Children Shall Lead from the original series, Code of Honor and Shades of Gray from TNG, Profit and Lace and Let He Who is Without Sin from DS9, Threshold and Spirit Folk from Voyager, and A Night in Sick Bay and These Are the Voyages from Enterprise among others on the list of Star Trek episodes that were worse than Section 31, and that's just off the top of my head.Which one?
Speaking for myself, literally everything for me,What about it irked you so greatly?
All of this, plus the fact that it was intended to be a comedy and it just wasn't funny. Ever. Not even once during the main stretch of the episode. The only time the episode even got a smirk out of me was the scene with Doug and Spock and that was after the credits ran.Speaking for myself, literally everything for me, other than Doug the Vulcan.
The biological exceptionalism and rewinding La'an's character development of the acceptance of her ancestry from earlier in the series are the biggest things.
Can you clarify 'biological exceptionalism'?
And, honestly, this is far as I'm going to participate in this tangent. From now on any comments I make will be about the Khan series.

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