A rose by any other name.The law doesn’t call them subhuman. In fact it’s the opposite.
Was it? I don't know. As an autistic person, who struggled much the same as young Julian, I find genetically augmenting neurodiversity away to be completely horrifying. I've learned to thrive as I am. When I think of the way Julian says, "You never gave me a chance", I feel it in my bones. How many parents would engineer away every "late bloomer" and neurodiverse individual simply because it reflects poorly on them? Or because they don't want the responsibility of a child with special needs? The Julian Augment storyline isn't perfect, but I think it's a necessary topic for idealistic speculative fiction to tackle.The DS9 episode was dumb and narrow-minded. They should have known better.
The law doesn’t call them subhuman. In fact it’s the opposite.
Una mentions directly that it was the Starfleet slogan pre-Federation. This is almost certainly a deliberate nod to Enterprise.Una says the episode title is the pre-Federation starfleet motto. Which is true, it shows up several times on the starfleet emblem in Enterprise
I wonder how that came up in the writing process. Did the writer know that? Did someone else in the the writers room know? Was it a complete coincidence?
I think Julian's story is the other side of Una's.Was it? I don't know. As an autistic person, who struggled much the same as young Julian, I find genetically augmenting neurodiversity away to be completely horrifying. I've learned to thrive as I am. When I think of the way Julian says, "You never gave me a chance", I feel it in my bones. How many parents would engineer away every "late bloomer" and neurodiverse individual simply because it reflects poorly on them? Or because they don't want the responsibility of a child with special needs? The Julian Augment storyline isn't perfect, but I think it's a necessary topic for idealistic speculative fiction to tackle.
This is a society that banned all androids to the point that they let children die. lolThis issue is just baked into the ST universe thanks to the Eugenics War and Khan. I actually thought this episode did a great job linking the Federation's fear of genetic augmentation to past travesties. And, shocker, people and organizations aren't always rational. Fear frequently trumps rationality. And these types of cruel things can persist on their own inertia for far, far too long until enough people stand up and challenge it.
This episode did a great job of showing how Starfleet/Federation is less than perfect. And the extreme fear of genetic augmentation that causes injustices is just one example of how it's less than perfect. It fits in rather well IMHO.
But this episode isn't really about genetic augmentation anyway. It's an allegory. The writer found a clever way to use an aspect of Trek's existing lore to say something important about today's relevant issues. I applaud that!
That was my take as well. Had her attorney bothered to follow up with questions on his opinion of Una's service since then, he would have been happy to do so. Instead the attorney decided to attack his record and grandstand which didn't accomplish anything. Una even confronts her later about it.To clarify regarding April, he didn't say he wanted her punished now. He said that, hypothetically, he would not have recommended her for Starfleet years ago if he had known that doing so would violate regulations.
Which is not his finest moment, and we saw that this wounded Una, but he was talking about not admitting her to Starfleet decades ago, not throwing her in prison now.
My impression is that he thought his clout as character witness, extolling Una's outstanding career in Starfleet, would help convince the court to go easy on her. He planned to defend Una, only to find himself under attack, and was pissed off, in part, because he had imagined himself sticking up for Una.
All of which, yes, leaves hanging the fact that he would have rejected her application years ago if he had known she was an Augment, which is something he's going to have to do some soul-searching about.
Those were his words in that court room, before he met Pike later in his quarters, and April had the nerve to be upset at Pike because Pike wouldn't let them all sweep it under the rug. He can claim he wanted to defend Una's character all he wanted, but he threw her under the bus when the time came to stand up for her, because he wanted to protect his career, and his prejudices.
I agree, but I guess this is why the episode didn't completely work for me. The scifi mcguffin they used for the allegory wasn't set up to be as intrinsic as someone's gender, sexual, or racial identity... even if they declare April to be racist.I didn't sympathize with him, my response was "don't let the door hit you where the good lord split you."
In matters of civil rights, if you get upset that someone wants to defend their very existence instead of take a plea deal that sweeps it under the rug while erasing them as a person, you're complicit in the injustice. April is complicit in the injustice, and he showed repeatedly that in the matter of someone else's rights, he's more than willing to look the other way if it protects his interests.
Let's redo the court room scene, but this time in our time period.
Those were his words in that court room, before he met Pike later in his quarters, and April had the nerve to be upset at Pike because Pike wouldn't let them all sweep it under the rug. He can claim he wanted to defend Una's character all he wanted, but he threw her under the bus when the time came to stand up for her, because he wanted to protect his career, and his prejudices.
Right, not admitting someone to an organization and sending them to 20 years in jail are very different things
Pike knows he'll survive any court martial because he's still in Starfleet years later for the delta radiation accident
Actually Pike will be lucky if he doesn't survive the court martial and kicked from Starfleet. Because then he'll be saved from his cursed fate.
Then the galaxy will be conquered by Romulans.
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