Depends on the source, apparently, because I used “defected” in my search term.The news hasn't been using the term defected.
Depends on the source, apparently, because I used “defected” in my search term.The news hasn't been using the term defected.
If only one person’s DNA is on the handle, and everything else is blood on the blade, the natural supposition is the one on the handle did all the killing. M’Benga was there at the time and has a special ops background.The lies save him - They think it belongs to the ambassador because it's got the DNA of the people he's known to have killed.
Should we expect that he is an absolute liar when it comes to his past deeds but absolutely honest when it comes to his present declared goals? Could it be a seeking for redemption? What if not?
Everything we know about anything in fiction is from what the authors tell us. If they decide to provide additional detail, that's great, but if they say M'Benga and Pike are old friends, then they're old friends. Just like Una and Pike presumably have a lot more background to them than we've been given details on.M'Benga being an "old friend" of Pike seems unearned and just a bone for fans wondering what happened to Boyce. It's not even clear when they served together or if they went to the Academy together (and M'Benga probably went to Starfleet Medical Academy which further complicates things)
I mean it sounds absurd, but can't they just say, "Hey Dak'rah, since you're so sincere about your reformation, you'll have no objection to Spock or another Vulcan mind-melding with you to verify that right?"And, Rah is also lying to the both sides about his past deeds, earning a big influence potential. Should we expect that he is an absolute liar when it comes to his past deeds but absolutely honest when it comes to his present declared goals? Could it be a seeking for redemption? What if not?
Everything we know about anything in fiction is from what the authors tell us. If they decide to provide additional detail, that's great, but if they say M'Benga and Pike are old friends, then they're old friends. Just like Una and Pike presumably have a lot more background to them than we've been given details on.
WHUT???? "Unearned" needs to be retired from the lexicon. How was it supposed to be "earned"?M'Benga being an "old friend" of Pike seems unearned
That would be so traumatic for the Vulcan, though. To experience the literal unchecked violence of a Klingon at war would be the same thing as an instant case of PTSD.I mean it sounds absurd, but can't they just say, "Hey Dak'rah, since you're so sincere about your reformation, you'll have no objection to Spock or another Vulcan mind-melding with you to verify that right?"
That's why they suppress their emotions. And as it is, delicate diplomatic issues affecting the galaxy are at stake, so it's the Vulcan's duty to verify any info they canThat would be so traumatic for the Vulcan, though. To experience the literal unchecked violence of a Klingon at war would be the same thing as an instant case of PTSD.
Putting it simply, Kelvin Kirk's rise from cadet to captain was unearned. It's unnatural and artificial. Just because the writer wrote it that way and thus makes the idea canon doesn't make it feel less unnatural to the audience. Obviously M'Benga's friendship with Pike isn't this extreme but I'm using an extreme example to illustrate my point. It would feel more earned if we knew exactly how M'Benga and Pike met and what they did together in the past other than hiking Kenya and MojaveIt's earned by the fact that the writers wrote it that way. What's this "earned" stuff?
Did TOS M'Benga "earn" the right to be the CMO in two episodes of that series? He shows up out of the blue in both and is given McCoy's duties in Sickbay in both. "Earning" in fiction is the purview of the writers, nobody else.
It seems a bit more nuanced than that. Although they were definitely trying to keep it ambiguous as to what actually transpired. But, really, M'Benga told him to leave, then pleaded that the guy really really should get the fuck out, and the Ambassador kept pressing. Obviously not condoning murder here, but it wasn't exactly premeditated, or cold-blooded. And we're meant to not know exactly what happened (although we suspect and are pretty sure.)Also, as much as I complain about DSC and SNW not being able to remember that Klingons aren't are friends yet, having a Klingon defector be a coward, fraud, and genocidal maniac who needed killing by the ship's kindly old doctor is way too far in the opposite direction.
From everything we've seen of Doctor M'Benga, the heart issues seem to be psychosomatic since the trigger seems to relate with the Federation-Klingon war.Also, M'Benga mentions that the drug he created was terrible for the body, so when he's clutching his heart those two times, I'm wondering, is this psychosomatic or real damage to his heart he did to himself?
Why not both? It adds extra weight to why M'Benga's power drug isn't just used ad hoc whenever needed. It would have to have pretty serious side effects to deter its use given the obvious benefits.From everything we've seen of Doctor M'Benga, the heart issues seem to be psychosomatic since the trigger seems to relate with the Federation-Klingon war.
I thought they effectively built towards M'Benga breaking. Both in the flashbacks and present day.I feel like they had a hard time deciding what the tone of this episode was supposed to be. Having a peace loving Klingon who is nicknamed “the butcher” is an interesting choice. The flashbacks I thought were well done, however I thought the reveal that M’Benga was the assassin who killed the Klingon high ranking officers was kind of forced. I really wished they would have pushed more about how having the ambassador aboard was dividing the crew and showed those tensions. Given that we know Klingon ships show up in the next episode I wonder if that’s fallout from this incident.
Or those guys were just taking way too much Pepto-Bismol.
It probably is, Doctor M'Benga stated as much in the episode.Why not both? It adds extra weight to why M'Benga's power drug isn't just used ad hoc whenever needed. It would have to have pretty serious side effects to deter its use given the obvious benefits.
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