"Tomorrow Is Yesterday" (And Forgotten History, chapter one, part one)
If the Lazarus incident was indeed a dream, then at least we can see where the time travel claim, a detail that went nowhere in the episode, was conjured from. Kirk must have time travel on the mind.
The relevant section in Forgotten History, short as it is, is a must for contextualizing this, and it grants the episode some real historical significance. After the apparently non-replicable accident over Psi 2000, this is the Federation's rediscovery of time travel as a verified possibility within their understanding of physics. Indeed, Kirk's adventure here will be the prototypal time travel experience so far as the later Federation will be concerned. True to the (probably inevitable) reputation he will later acquire as the Donny Don't of Time Travel, he rather screws this up.
I must agree with Delgado, in the Forgotten History fragment, that Kirk didn't handle this at all well. I'm sure the damage to history will be far less if you just beamed the guy straight down, confused, rather than giving him a tour and then telling him "by the way, you're a prisoner here and you can never see your children again, LOL". That just means that when he makes his inevitable escape attempt you're cementing your status as antagonists, oppositional, threatening. He's a military officer; he's going to report in about a clear threat to national security - yes, he'd do that anyway, but now you've made it inevitable that he'll report it and truly mean it. You're potentially risking far worse contamination. Also, what sort of dangerous future knowledge could Christopher possibly have acquired from a quick eyes-only tour of the ship? "I know that one day there will be big spaceships and matter transportation devices. Now, puny mortals, watch as I play the stock markets and bend this planet to my whims!" I don't see how anything he knows - which is the vaguest and broadest information possible - translates into anything useful to an "unscrupulous" sort.
Again, the relevant snippet from Forgotten History helps here, because it makes a point of this being new to Starfleet, and of the lack of any standing orders or official procedures dealing with a scenario such as this. This is new territory, and Delgado acknowledges that any officer in Kirk's position is forced to make it up as they go. For now.
First Appearances of Things That Are Important
The Black Star in Sector 006. I count it as important, since we'll see it again on several occasions and it becomes one of the most important locations in Federation space so far as the DTI is concerned. Okay, so we didn't actually see it here.
Antonio Delgado
Continuity
Delgado confirms that Starfleet Intelligence has kept an eye on reports of time travel over the last century, with the Temporal Cold War of Archer's time taking the role of historical mythology as much as anything; apparently, Archer’s time travel exploits are not public knowledge, and SI has been making sure that any stray incidents remain out of the public eye. They’ve been treading cautiously; Delgado, of course, thinks it’s time to stop gingerly paddling and posting NO BATHING signs and start swimming.
The Cygneti have either joined the Federation or are working closely alongside it, since they're trusted enough to overhaul the computer systems on a top-of-the-line starship - and since everyone treats their reprogramming as a frustrating or amusing prank and not an act of potential hostility. This builds on the initial Human-Cygneti contact of a century prior; it seems Cygnet retains its reputation for extensive ship-repair facilities. Vanguard also named the Cygnet system as supporting (or staging) colonists, so the Federation is invested here one way or the other. Regarding the Cygneti protest-joke, one wonders how common this sort of thing is in the UFP. It's an increasingly vast Federation and none of them can agree on anything. Do Tellarites try to reprogram computers to be argumentative and belligerent, for example? The idea of a constant low-level intra-Federation war over things like this amuses me.
Kirk names the organization under the umbrella of which Enterprise's mission is encompassed as UESPA, which as well as being true is also, presumably, a way to avoid any more awkward political explanations. No need to force consideration of other planets just yet, Spock aside. One alien might be easier to get a grasp on than a community of planets filled with them. The story of how Starfleet restructures itself into one fully integrated force is as yet untold, but I'm sure it has to do with the general pattern I've seen emerging here of a Federation that's grappling with its identity and structure, with concerted efforts by the core worlds to reign everyone in and establish a more unified and monolithic approach. Very soon the UESPA arrowhead will represent Starfleet in its entirety.
So, you can't transport someone without a communicator? Well they transported Christopher alright, didn't they? Or is it a range thing? This doesn't really make sense.
"Do you want another baby, honey?"
"Yes. Make sure we name him Sean Jeffery. That's important future information that I have, after being told that I can't return to Earth with important future information and have to stay with the future people against my will, only I then have to return to Earth after all, begrudging though they are, because they need a Sean Jeffery, but for some reason they explain that to me even though the whole point was to avoid the possibility of my future knowledge changing things".
"That's nice, dear".
If the Lazarus incident was indeed a dream, then at least we can see where the time travel claim, a detail that went nowhere in the episode, was conjured from. Kirk must have time travel on the mind.
The relevant section in Forgotten History, short as it is, is a must for contextualizing this, and it grants the episode some real historical significance. After the apparently non-replicable accident over Psi 2000, this is the Federation's rediscovery of time travel as a verified possibility within their understanding of physics. Indeed, Kirk's adventure here will be the prototypal time travel experience so far as the later Federation will be concerned. True to the (probably inevitable) reputation he will later acquire as the Donny Don't of Time Travel, he rather screws this up.
I must agree with Delgado, in the Forgotten History fragment, that Kirk didn't handle this at all well. I'm sure the damage to history will be far less if you just beamed the guy straight down, confused, rather than giving him a tour and then telling him "by the way, you're a prisoner here and you can never see your children again, LOL". That just means that when he makes his inevitable escape attempt you're cementing your status as antagonists, oppositional, threatening. He's a military officer; he's going to report in about a clear threat to national security - yes, he'd do that anyway, but now you've made it inevitable that he'll report it and truly mean it. You're potentially risking far worse contamination. Also, what sort of dangerous future knowledge could Christopher possibly have acquired from a quick eyes-only tour of the ship? "I know that one day there will be big spaceships and matter transportation devices. Now, puny mortals, watch as I play the stock markets and bend this planet to my whims!" I don't see how anything he knows - which is the vaguest and broadest information possible - translates into anything useful to an "unscrupulous" sort.
Again, the relevant snippet from Forgotten History helps here, because it makes a point of this being new to Starfleet, and of the lack of any standing orders or official procedures dealing with a scenario such as this. This is new territory, and Delgado acknowledges that any officer in Kirk's position is forced to make it up as they go. For now.
First Appearances of Things That Are Important
The Black Star in Sector 006. I count it as important, since we'll see it again on several occasions and it becomes one of the most important locations in Federation space so far as the DTI is concerned. Okay, so we didn't actually see it here.
Antonio Delgado
Continuity
Delgado confirms that Starfleet Intelligence has kept an eye on reports of time travel over the last century, with the Temporal Cold War of Archer's time taking the role of historical mythology as much as anything; apparently, Archer’s time travel exploits are not public knowledge, and SI has been making sure that any stray incidents remain out of the public eye. They’ve been treading cautiously; Delgado, of course, thinks it’s time to stop gingerly paddling and posting NO BATHING signs and start swimming.
The Cygneti have either joined the Federation or are working closely alongside it, since they're trusted enough to overhaul the computer systems on a top-of-the-line starship - and since everyone treats their reprogramming as a frustrating or amusing prank and not an act of potential hostility. This builds on the initial Human-Cygneti contact of a century prior; it seems Cygnet retains its reputation for extensive ship-repair facilities. Vanguard also named the Cygnet system as supporting (or staging) colonists, so the Federation is invested here one way or the other. Regarding the Cygneti protest-joke, one wonders how common this sort of thing is in the UFP. It's an increasingly vast Federation and none of them can agree on anything. Do Tellarites try to reprogram computers to be argumentative and belligerent, for example? The idea of a constant low-level intra-Federation war over things like this amuses me.
Kirk names the organization under the umbrella of which Enterprise's mission is encompassed as UESPA, which as well as being true is also, presumably, a way to avoid any more awkward political explanations. No need to force consideration of other planets just yet, Spock aside. One alien might be easier to get a grasp on than a community of planets filled with them. The story of how Starfleet restructures itself into one fully integrated force is as yet untold, but I'm sure it has to do with the general pattern I've seen emerging here of a Federation that's grappling with its identity and structure, with concerted efforts by the core worlds to reign everyone in and establish a more unified and monolithic approach. Very soon the UESPA arrowhead will represent Starfleet in its entirety.
So, you can't transport someone without a communicator? Well they transported Christopher alright, didn't they? Or is it a range thing? This doesn't really make sense.
"Do you want another baby, honey?"
"Yes. Make sure we name him Sean Jeffery. That's important future information that I have, after being told that I can't return to Earth with important future information and have to stay with the future people against my will, only I then have to return to Earth after all, begrudging though they are, because they need a Sean Jeffery, but for some reason they explain that to me even though the whole point was to avoid the possibility of my future knowledge changing things".
"That's nice, dear".
Last edited: