"I used to pray to the wikiwaka birds underneath the nupidupi tree"
What exactly was achieved by Burnham's compromise ?
Now there will be a council of member worlds to look out for the interests of the member worlds in the Federation council which is a council of the member worlds that apparently wasn't looking out for the member worlds![]()
I agree to all of these. The Ni'Var and Book/Culber stories were the best of the lot today. But the Ni'Var and cadets' story were not nearly as fleshed out as they needed to be. They were all surface-level stuff. Surface-level complaints from the cadets and surface-level stuff from the Vulcans/Romulans. One quick interaction, Burnham thinks for a minute or Tilly tells one cadet to tell his backstory, and boom all problems are solved.
This gets back to the problem with Discovery's serialization. Having to service three (or 4) plots each week, they only have time for about 3 scenes for each plot: intro problem, discuss for a minute, solve. There is no time for actual dilemmas, no weighing of options, no conundrums or barriers, no ethical or moral decisions to make. Just get on to the next story beat. Just like last week we didn't learn more than about 3 surface-level details about the hibernating alien race (who were the most interesting part of the whole episode), there were no real barriers to finishing the mission other than a bit of fisticuffs and a quick tech fix, and no real exploration of why the Warrior Nun (TM) did what she did [because PLOT!] when there were many less violent options, all because there was no time.
Well, Discovery and its writers simply aren't interested in anything about the science fiction part of the show. It could take place in 2180, 2280, 2380, or 3180. The timeframe doesn't matter, and neither does the technology - they just write the characters to do what they "always do in Trek" regardless of the actual setting. This is at least the third episode this season where someone dies and there is only a rudimentary attempt to save them: "well all I have are these cloth bandages in this medkit, so I guess this guy's a goner."
If I had to synthesize a conclusion about the show from the above points, I would say the writers just don't care about the WHY of anything nor the implications of they things they put on screen. They are interested in hitting these character moments for their main characters, not in the coherency of the story or plot, or in fleshing out or fully using the future setting - it's just window dressing or framing for their character beats. Which for the most part are good character beats, just a little insubstantial in terms of the bigger picture.
Right I get what you mean. Essentially they are moving to a 2 house parliament and senate model.I think the idea is that this committee will be an independent 3rd party and will provide oversight over the Federation Council. The issue is that the Federation Council might make decisions that favor the majority but could hurt individual member worlds that are in the minority. Ni'var feels that their wishes and interests were ignored pre-Burn. They fear the same thing will happen again if they rejoin the Federation which is why they wanted an exit clause. The hope is that this third party committee will step in and prevent the Federation Council from ignoring any individual member worlds or making policies that disenfranchise individual member worlds.
I'm sure I'm not the only one who tagged Callum as dead from the beginning. I understand the plot necessity of ignoring the magic-like tech of the 32nd century for story purposes, but why make it so obvious? I didn't really get anything out of Tilly's scramble. I would have preferred something horrible like a beam through his chest or something. Something that is clearly beyond emergency medical treatment.
Otherwise, good episode. I hope this was a backdoor pilot, because I will really miss Tilly. And I really like the cadets. I love the politics of reassembling the Federation, even if it's kind of absurd (the solution). Starfleet captains claiming they are not involved in politics. Are they unaware that they are representatives of a government? And as someone who has been dealing with grief for years, I really appreciate the care of the story with regards to Book. And echoing others in this thread, the acting of those two is excellent.
With programmable matter all you need is a little box that has an EMH and that little gun Tilly had. He could just holoproject a bed and everything, holo nurse the whole lotGiven the extreme passage of time, even emergency medical equipment would have to be capable of doing FAR more advanced procedures compared to what needed to be done in sickbay using an actual physician in the late 24th century.
In fact, I'd posit that most medical procedures which had to be done in sickbays leading up to say mid 29th century should have been doable in the field by the time the Burn happened.
That's kinda how things would work with extreme passage of time and automation. They had various pen like devices already in 24th century for treatment of burns and general dermal regeneration which could be operated by virtually anyone who can point the device.
Only more complex medical procedures (or at least those that would be considered 'complex' in 31st/32nd century terms) would (realistically) be done in sickbay using physicans and possibly in the field.
Otherwise, most of the 31st/32nd century emergency medical equipment would be capable of treating majority of severe issues much like a dermal regenerator of the 24th century could.
I'd prefer they creatde stories that take this into account.
The usual ignoring of technology aside, I agree it was a relatively good send off for Tilly.
And this episode thankfully wasn't overloaded with emotional drivel.
That's how bureaucracies grow and develop. The solution was a probably-meaningless patch that will never be mentioned again and probably would have been watered down post-negotiations once Ni'Var rejoins as it would not want its own authority within the Federation to be constrained as a member world anymore than any of the others. By that time Trina's opposition will have been placated, negated, and relegated to concentrating on new issues. And if a few pensioned Starfleet officers and members of the Federation Board of Sanitation and Programmable Matter Inspectors get a nice sinecure at the end of their days, what's the harm? No one gets exactly what they want but everyone gets something .What exactly was achieved by Burnham's compromise ?
Now there will be a council of member worlds to look out for the interests of the member worlds in the Federation council which is a council of the member worlds that apparently wasn't looking out for the member worlds![]()
Speaking of EMH.With programmable matter all you need is a little box that has an EMH and that little gun Tilly had. He could just holoproject a bed and everything, holo nurse the whole lot
Given the extreme passage of time, even emergency medical equipment would have to be capable of doing FAR more advanced procedures compared to what needed to be done in sickbay using an actual physician in the late 24th century.
In fact, I'd posit that most medical procedures which had to be done in sickbays leading up to say mid 29th century should have been doable in the field by the time the Burn happened.
That's kinda how things would work with extreme passage of time and automation. They had various pen like devices already in 24th century for treatment of burns and general dermal regeneration which could be operated by virtually anyone who can point the device.
Only more complex medical procedures (or at least those that would be considered 'complex' in 31st/32nd century terms) would (realistically) be done in sickbay using physicans and possibly in the field.
Otherwise, most of the 31st/32nd century emergency medical equipment would be capable of treating majority of severe issues much like a dermal regenerator of the 24th century could.
I'd prefer they creatde stories that take this into account.
The usual ignoring of technology aside, I agree it was a relatively good send off for Tilly.
And this episode thankfully wasn't overloaded with emotional drivel.
Speaking of EMH.
Where was the EMH on the shuttle?
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