Kirk's first wish in the Nexus, was the cure for space herpes.
I will have to watch again, I thought the communicator had a built in UT.Also, given the Red Octoberesque shift in the dialog at the end, I assume the beacon had some kind of internal translator.
They've had a large magical piece of Alien Technology floating in their front yard and controlling their life & death's for as long as they can remember...Jumping to warp in plain view over a village of a non-warp species? K...
It's probably got more to do with the Federation convincing the Baul (who may not be a Fed member) to investigate an alternate food source while also trying to get them to become, a Fed member.I liked it well enough, but didn't think it was great - wound up giving it a 7, almost gave it an 8.
It did leave me wondering what the Federation's take on all this is. Given that a warp-capable society is exploiting the Kelpiens, how strictly does the Prime Directive apply here? From what Georgiou says at the end, they aren't directly intervening in the situation by contacting the Kelpiens, but are they pressuring the Baul to stop abducting Kelpiens? Would the Federation function as a United Nations type organization here, trying to get other societies to behave more ethically through the Federation's own economic and political strength? Hopefully we'll get some exploration of that at some point.
It does, that's why they specifically showed Lt Georgieu holding it up toward Saru during their conversation.I will have to watch again, I thought the communicator had a built in UT.
From this article, the writers reasoning why Geogiou thinks she's not violating the PD hereGreat article with an interview from the episode's writers here:
https://www.syfy.com/syfywire/write...-explain-how-it-fits-into-official-trek-canon
Lippoldt adds: "Part of the fun of developing this story is that we've — hopefully —created a scenario that presents a juicy moral quandary. Here, Georgiou made a case to make an exception for Saru based on several factors.
"First, that Saru is the one who initiated contact, and directly asked for help. Second, that during their interaction, Georgiou came to see that Saru displayed an understanding and knowledge of technology. And third, that Saru was only asking for himself. His people, and specifically his father, showed no interest in changing their ways. So by accepting to help Saru leave Kaminar without the rest of his people's knowledge, Georgiou is not, in fact, interfering with the normal development of the planet's civilization."
"too short" means two things for me (i didn't mention this in my earlier comment but i suspect i'm not alone here):I'm not sure I understand all the "it's too short" complaints. I mean "short" is literally in the name.
See also: TNG's Pen Pals. A girl from a pre-warp society communicates with Data using equipment at hand. It's all innocent until she legitimately asks for help, making it a distress call. The Enterprise responds to the "rando" and saves the planet. Perhaps Saru's pleas were seen as a request for asylum. His not being able to ever return is akin to the ENT-E crew erasing Sarjenka's memories in Pen Pals.There definitely was some suspension of disbelief - no technology in sight, but he's able to manipulate this stuff enough to communicate with Starfleet? Georgiou is able to convince Starfleet to break all their rules for some rando?
The fact that he was able to manipulate what he had was the reason he got their attention, that was part of the PLOT. Did you miss the dialogue where she said it took quite a fight to convince Starfleet to make an exception for him? I mean they held your and and answered all your questions.There definitely was some suspension of disbelief - no technology in sight, but he's able to manipulate this stuff enough to communicate with Starfleet? Georgiou is able to convince Starfleet to break all their rules for some rando? Warp speed in the atmosphere, in plain sight of the natives? Although the story wasn't strong enough to make me not notice these things, I still enjoyed it quite a bit.
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