This is another episode, like episode 2, where I like the premise but the execution is just off. It's somewhere between a 6 or 7 for me I guess.
I'm not even going to try to understand the pedagogy of this school or its curriculum, I guess in the future they just decide to go with the Socratic method of having people learn whatever is on the mind of whoever is teaching them that day rather than having any particular classes. So today is debate day because they want that to frame the episode, fine. It's just that the way they presented the debates wasn't really interesting. Like they tell us Caleb is good, but only because he spouts facts well, but that's not how Jay-Den "wins" later in the episode so... what was the whole lesson of the debate class?
This debate framing may have worked better if it was against the War College and whatever ethos they have, or in front of a group of officers who were making decisions and were being challenged for their benevolent paternalistic racism... but he just gives the speech in front of some cadets and Ake.
Yes he's technically still arguing against Caleb's point, but it's not like Caleb's point was even wrong or something that could be argued against. If the debate was about the Federation being ignorant and racist in its approach to diplomacy, then yeah, it'd make way more sense. Not "the Federation should help people"... which is an entirely different debate altogether.
It's like someone wrote a Star Trek episode and then shoehorned in some school bullshit because it's called Starfleet Academy and not Star Trek: Discovery Even Harder.
It makes even less sense when it seems like everyone, including the other Klingon in the room who they show IS perceptive and understands what Jay-Den's father did for him - somehow miss the obvious "Vulcan Hello" answer that the writers choreograph from the very beginning when they say they won't take a planet offered to them for free. Like... I know this is the Netflix era and you just have to tell people exactly what's happening all the time and while this isn't as bad as Stranger Things Season 5, it's annoying because it undermines the characters when they tell the audience the problem and how to solve it, but the characters don't realize the very solution that's right in front of them.
My other issue is that the way Klingons are written feels so inconsistent or at least makes no logical sense, but that may be a problem I have with Klingons in general. Why wouldn't a warrior culture who goes to war all the time value people who can heal wounds? Let alone use technology to cure wounds? It's the problem that Trek always has and although once in a while they try to address it with a random Klingon scientist, it just makes the entire culture look dumb. If they truly wanted to fend for themselves, how are they keeping their ships working? Where did they get dilithium from after the Burn if not take handouts from the Federation when they were offering it to everyone?
I admittedly don't like the Klingons and always found them kind of dull even during the DS9 years (Worf's relationship with Alexander is such bullshit and I do find it weird that people are okay with Worf being a piece of shit to his son just because they hate the Alexander character), so that colours my reception to any Klingon story... but where the father letting his son go is meant to be some kind of act of love, it just makes the entire society feel so shitty. Like a father who can't say that he loves his gay son because he's so fundamentally homophobic so decides to abandon him in front of a queer support group while he drives away or something equally absurd. I don't see that as a "good" ending, but Klingons are always going to frustrate me I guess.
The overall premise is fine... the fake battle as the solution, while obvious, is fine. Jay-Den's speech - remember when this was a debate class and not a speech class? The writers seemed to forget - was fine too. I actually like the character relationships being developed in the episode, even douchebro Darem. It's just wrapped together in a package that isn't really satisfying and again, didn't need to be almost an hour long.
I dunno, I'm not sure if I'm being overly harsh or nitpicky. I don't even care about the 20th century vernacular anymore, like it bothers me but it's the least of my problems with the episode. Each of these episodes feel like they needed more passes to work out some of these issues... even if they're "made for kids" or whatever that means in terms of the impact on their quality.