When you gotta go, you gotta go?I wonder what everyone thought, when during the supposed cease fire, the biggest Klingon ship disappeared? I mean, cloaking shouldn't have been totally unknown since a couple different species had it during the Enterprise-era.
I thought it was already cloaked. But all things being equal, the Starfleet ships were certainly still reeling from the KlingonI wonder what everyone thought, when during the supposed cease fire, the biggest Klingon ship disappeared? I mean, cloaking shouldn't have been totally unknown since a couple different species had it during the Enterprise-era.
The Klingon cleeve ship (name from StarTrek.com) was a hidden weapon of T'Kuvma. It was cloaked until it rammed the Europa. The "blob" on the right pin is the ship.
![]()
Only if the writers and effects folk learn how physics works before they try again.It's interesting, but that more "analog" method of attack in a space battle (ramming with a giant cleave ship) is completely consistent with Klingon culture. I was trying to remember how uncommon it was from TNG on for the Klingons to use beam weapons during ground combat as opposed to bladed weapons.
Seems like more than 75% of the time, it's swords, knives, bat'leths, etc.
Kind of cool to think they might have a space combat philosophy that is equal to that for some situations.
Only if the writers and effects folk learn how physics works before they try again.
You mean like every unknown Vulcan power Spock suddenly remembered he had in TOS?I hated the idea that Sarek could communicate with her over vast distances. I despise when they introduce super powers to fill a plot need.
I believe the ramming ship was a different one then T'Kuvma's that had remained cloaked until the ramming maneuver.I wonder what everyone thought, when during the supposed cease fire, the biggest Klingon ship disappeared? I mean, cloaking shouldn't have been totally unknown since a couple different species had it during the Enterprise-era.
n The Apple, that was an arrested culture - not a living, growing one, so the GO didn't apply.
Ever since Spock felt the death cry of over 400 Vulcans on the Intrepid, light years away, I've more or less had to accept as canon there are some things about Vulcan mysticism that really work, and work at FTL speeds. Fortunately, it does seem to be extremely limited and so not a reliable power a Vulcan may call upon. Such powers tend to get in the way to many traditional story lines.You mean like every unknown Vulcan power Spock suddenly remembered he had in TOS?
There was evidence those same feeders had been doing that job for 10,000 years. For the admiralty to second guess a captain who had boots on the ground while they had no first hand experience isn't the sort of thing StarFleet tends to do - they trust their captains. From everything they could discern, it was arrested, and they were going to lose the ship, too, unless they acted as Kirk did. Then maybe another, then another, each time StarFleet sent a ship to look for the last one that went missing. Starfleet agreed Kirk acted appropriately.Although Starfleet Command could reasonably argue had they chosen to do so that Kirk's evaluation of the state of cultural development on Gamma Trianguli VII was not sufficient justification to break the Prime Directive. Whether or not a sentient computer system pretending to be a deity was keeping the Feeders of Vaal in a state of arrested development and stunting their evolution may well have been viewed as a purely local affair and the duty of the natives themselves to gradually change or overthrow as more and more of them grew over time to resent the rule of Vaal. The culture on the planet was at best in an Iron or Bronze Age level of cultural and technological development and centuries if not millennia away from anything resembling an interstellar spacefaring capability.
"All the times?" I think it was pretty much established the majority of those 11 cited cases were nothing of the kind. The prime directive didn't apply in most of those instances, and for good and fairly obvious reasons, despite what some fans mistakenly thought, and only a few times might it even be close enough to warrant further discussion.Had Kirk not had the connections he did, the friends with flag officer rank that he enjoyed and such an accomplished track record as a starship captain he may well have been court martialled and drummed out of Starfleet for all the times he blatantly violated General Order 1 and came up with convenient excuses for why he did so. I'm not saying Kirk was morally incorrect because in almost every case depicted in the series you could defend his actions from a humanitarian and ethical point of view, but from Starfleet Command's perspective the man was as big a menace with the Prime Directive as he would one day be considered with the Temporal Prime Directive.
That's right! I forgot about that. So yes, not quite as elaborate and surgical as directed communication, but certainly a canonical similarity. And very similar to Kenobi's force-overload at the same time that Alderaan got fried.Ever since Spock felt the death cry of over 400 Vulcans on the Intrepid, light years away, I've more or less had to accept as canon there are some things about Vulcan mysticism that really work, and work at FTL speeds.
Every one of those instances was reviewed by StarFleet Command and Kirk was judged to have acted appropriately. Therefore, there was no violation of the Prime Directive. It may have seemed so, or like he was skirting GO #1, but he never crossed the line in StarFleet's opinion.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.