I haven't watched much of DS9. I see Burnham's crimes as what they are without comparison.
And without context, apparently. There's quite a bit of nuance to Burnham's actions and the circumstances that led up to them. In all fairness, we can neither wholly condone or excuse the former,
nor can we entirely condemn or blame her for them in light of the latter, nor place sole responsibility on her in creating those. She is neither a hapless innocent victim of random chance,
nor is she some malevolent irredeemable who deserves to be locked up for the rest of her life.
Burnham did draw first blood. But only after Rejac attacked her first. But only after she trespassed on their ship. But only after
they trespassed in Federation territory and tampered with Federation property. They were looking for a fight. Burnham wanted to give them one. Would it have put a stop to everything right then and there, or would it only have proved T'Kuvma's point and put the lie to Federation claims of coming in peace and never firing first? Would the war never have started, or would it merely have started somewhat differently? Would this have been a better outcome, or a worse one?
Burnham assaulted her captain and disobeyed her orders, but she believed in doing so that she was saving Georgiou's life and everyone else's. She insisted she was acting logically, but she was clearly emotional. She made a deliberate decision that she thought was rational, but her thinking was clouded by injury and illness of both body and mind. She claimed she was only responding to the situation at hand, yet she was experiencing flashbacks of past trauma. She had also suffered a concussion, and radiation poisoning that started her very DNA unspooling like noodles. Yet she did seem to have received further treatment for at least the latter before her mutiny.
Burnham's plan was specifically to take T'Kuvma alive, and she emphasized the importance of this, yet she ended up intentionally killing him. But only because he was in the act of killing Georgiou. But Georgiou was already dead when she pulled the trigger. But she
couldn't see that from where she was standing, and Saru hadn't confirmed it to her yet, so for all she knew
in the moment she fired, Georgiou could still be saved and needed saving. Deadly force met with deadly force, in defense of another. But she had previously expressed some degree of prejudice against Klingons as well. Yet this prejudice was proven to be not entirely unjustified.
She considered herself guilty and offered no defense. Yet there were clearly mitigating factors. She was duly convicted, but her sentence was absurdly harsh to the point of injustice. She fully accepted and intended to serve out that sentence, but Lorca forced her to serve on
Discovery. Irrespective of whether it was
truly his only motivation or not, was he not right that allowing her the indulgence of safely wallowing in self-pity and recrimination while the war she failed to prevent raged on—instead of making use of her talents to aid in
resolving it—would be nothing but a further waste? Could any punishment equal the loss and guilt she has already experienced? Is punishment even what
true justice really calls for?
This is about as far from black and white, cut and dried, good versus evil, as one can get. And it's so much the better for it.
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MMoM