Perhaps April will sort things out. Like in a MASH "For the Good of the Outfit " kind of episode.
Robert April filling in for General Clayton?
Perhaps April will sort things out. Like in a MASH "For the Good of the Outfit " kind of episode.
I gather that Una’s modifications are not heritable or at least not all of them are. All of the Illyrians in this episode appear human, unlike the Illyrians with ridges in the Enterprise episode. Presumably the human appearance and internal makeup IS heritable. Una passes as human on all scans and is compatible enough to receive a blood transfusion from the human Dr. M’Benga. La’an inherited augmented DNA from one or two ancestors several generations in the past. She is not herself an augment.It's odd because they use the language of 'passing', for obvious allegorical reasons, but it makes it seem like the modifications are random, completely at the whim of the parents, and can have completely unintended results. It almost makes it feel like 'magic' or something from a fantasy novel.
The Federation apparently does eventually amend the law to allow genetic modification to correct an illness.
DS9 Doctor Bashir I PresumeCitation please.
BASHIR: Oh, there's no stigma attached to success, Chief. After the treatments, I never looked back. But the truth is I'm a fraud.
O'BRIEN: You're not a fraud. I don't care what enhancements your parents may have had done. Genetic recoding can't give you ambition, or a personality, or compassion or any of the things that make a person truly human.
BASHIR: Starfleet Medical won't see it that way. DNA resequencing for any reason other than repairing serious birth defects is illegal. Any genetically enhanced human being is barred from serving in Starfleet or practising medicine.
DS9 Doctor Bashir I Presume
Birth defects are structural changes present at birth that can affect almost any part or parts of the body (e.g., heart, brain, foot). They may affect how the body looks, works, or both. Birth defects can vary from mild to severe.
I am not surprised. Whenever Black women do literally anything in this series that isn't quietly obeying the orders of white men, a vocal chunk of this fandom loses their goddamn minds.I see the usual youtube crowd are starting to put out videos about how "woke" and "downhill" trek is from this episode. Sighhh
It does make you wonder what criteria the Federation classifies a "serious" birth defect. Since if Geordi's eyes aren't sufficient a reason to correct his vision, that would seem to indicate it can only be used to modify life threatening conditions.DS9 Doctor Bashir I Presume
Voyager Lineage, B'Elanna's baby has some sort of spinal issue which needs to be corrected, and B'Elanna says she underwent corrective surgery for the same thing when she was a baby.It does make you wonder what criteria the Federation classifies a "serious" birth defect. Since if Geordi's eyes aren't sufficient a reason to correct his vision, that would seem to indicate it can only be used to modify life threatening conditions.
Yes, but it did appear in Enterprise on the Starfleet emblem several times.
Geordi mentions in early TNG that he has a condition that makes such procedures not work on him. It's very early on, but I forget which episode. Later in S2, Pulaski says she knows a more cutting edge treatment that could work for him, but he isn't interested in giving up his visor at that point. I presume he only, eventually, went with ocular implants because they allow him to keep some aspects of his visor-vision, but IFAIK, it's never really addressed.It does make you wonder what criteria the Federation classifies a "serious" birth defect. Since if Geordi's eyes aren't sufficient a reason to correct his vision, that would seem to indicate it can only be used to modify life threatening conditions.
I would have fire bombed Talos four after brain washing that court.
She lied.
She goes to Wellington.
Geordi mentions in early TNG that he has a condition that makes such procedures not work on him. It's very early on, but I forget which episode. Later in S2, Pulaski says she knows a more cutting edge treatment that could work for him, but he isn't interested in giving up his visor at that point. I presume he only, eventually, went with ocular implants because they allow him to keep some aspects of his visor-vision, but IFAIK, it's never really addressed.
Geordi did eventually get the visor changed to ocular implants starting with FC. Which raises a whole other series of questions.It does make you wonder what criteria the Federation classifies a "serious" birth defect. Since if Geordi's eyes aren't sufficient a reason to correct his vision, that would seem to indicate it can only be used to modify life threatening conditions.
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