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The Omega Directive.... thoughts?

You missed the part where Riker tries every setting on his phaser and none of them work, since Yuta's conditioning rendered her impervious to all phaser hits except vaporize.
But that's not what happens. Riker's gun has sixteen settings, according to the carefully exhibited green-light display and certain later episodes. Riker tries out two, then jumps several notches ahead all the way to make-disappear. This after already stopping Yuta in her tracks.

Riker could have been blasting Yuta at the previous setting forever. Or then just twice or thrice more, as she was going down, becoming noticeably weaker with every shot. But that would only have stopped Yuta - it wouldn't have stopped Yuta from starting anew.

Riker acted to save another person's life; doing so is not murder.
There's no law to that effect in any country I know. There may be mitigating circumstances that alleviate or remove punishment or even guilt, but Riker's case would involve none of those - as there was no need to kill. If a drunkard comes at your friend with a knife, and you kick him once after which he keeps on crawling towards your friend, then you kick him again after which he just lies there, waves his knife and mumbles threats, then when you draw your submachine gun and shoot him to bloody pulp, it's definitely murder.

Of course, Riker is both a solider and a policeman by profession. Perhaps he simply follows different rules. But that's classic Starfleet militarism in action.

Are you saying then that the preponderance of training that is focused on at the Academy revolves around the application of the art of the war, to the vast exclusion of any other pursuits?
No. What I'm saying is that Starfleet is thoroughly militaristic. That has nothing to do with "war", and indeed most societies go militaristic for purely domestic reasons.

It's all semantics, really. Archer seemed to have the view that Starfleet was not military.
And indeed semantically, the US Navy is not a military. It's a navy.

Those two things were the semantic opposites of each other back when said Navy was created. A military was a land army exclusively, a thing you assembled for war, and the ultimate bogeyman was a standing army you had to maintain through peacetime. A navy was something you needed even in peacetime, or at least could not retire at the end of a war or conjure to existence only when needed. The Trek situation could nicely reflect that: Starfleet has duties outside war, while the Military (be that the official name of that organization, or Archer's, Forrest's and Picard's pejorative for it) is a war machine that does brainless drills Picard thinks are beneath his own all-veteran, actively adventuring team...

The Omega Directive in practice wouldn't really work. What about all those alien intelligences who took over the Enterprise for example. They'd have access to the "Omega Directive" from the Computer. Surely the Borg would know if Picard knew.

Then again, the Borg did know. And this was hardly a concern for our heroes.

The point would not be to stop the galaxy from knowing. The point would be to stop ignorant primitives, such as the subjects of the UFP government, from knowing, as this would already alleviate the problem significantly. At the very least, when the universe exploded, the UFP could claim "It wasn't us! Not our fault!"; at best, well- or ill-meaning UFP experiments on Omega could be postponed indefinitely, hopefully till a time when UFP was mature enough not to even try.

Timo Saloniemi
 
Yes but that wasn't Kirk willing to wipe out a planet because it disagreed with his philosophy on life.
Then why would Kirk be wiping those planets of life?

Kirk would killing vast numbers of Klingons on planets with his starship's weapons because of his (and others) philosophy of life.

A philosophy that the Klingons didn't share..
 
Well, not that it takes an especially long period to review, but here are the episodes that I think fit within your description of orbital bombardment in TOS
Errand of Mercy spoke of "destroying life on a planetary scale."

Timo's comment that prompted my rendering of episodes, referred to said bombardment being used by Starfleet when a way of life somewhere did not appeal to them, and in another statement basically said the same actions were taken if the inhabitants looked at them the wrong way. I didn't include Errand of Mercy in my list, because such a planetary attack did not take place and was never going to take place.

The quotation you cite didn't come from the episode itself, from Kirk, or Kor for that matter. It was actually spoken by Ayelborne, one of the Organians. Now, I won't forswear that race being more than slightly perceptive of the subjects of their observations, as they had been aware of both for hundreds of years. But study and knowledge, even by such advanced creatures, doesn't equate to a certainty that some actions would inevitably occur. In the context of what I tried to establish to challenge Timo to back up his hyperbolic assertions, I don't think that this episode applies.

Are you saying then that the preponderance of training that is focused on at the Academy revolves around the application of the art of the war, to the vast exclusion of any other pursuits?

No. What I'm saying is that Starfleet is thoroughly militaristic. That has nothing to do with "war", and indeed most societies go militaristic for purely domestic reasons.

And indeed semantically, the US Navy is not a military. It's a navy.

Those two things were the semantic opposites of each other back when said Navy was created. A military was a land army exclusively, a thing you assembled for war, and the ultimate bogeyman was a standing army you had to maintain through peacetime. A navy was something you needed even in peacetime, or at least could not retire at the end of a war or conjure to existence only when needed. The Trek situation could nicely reflect that: Starfleet has duties outside war, while the Military (be that the official name of that organization, or Archer's, Forrest's and Picard's pejorative for it) is a war machine that does brainless drills Picard thinks are beneath his own all-veteran, actively adventuring team...

Timo Saloniemi

Militarism is the belief or desire of a government or people that a country should maintain a strong military capability and be prepared to use it aggressively to defend or promote national interests. (wikipedia)

The opinions or actions of people who believe that a country should use military methods, forces, etc., to gain power and to achieve its goals, a policy of aggressive military preparedness.( Merriam-Webster)

A person skilled in the conduct of war and military affairs. (Free Dictionary)

Navy

The branch of a nation’s armed services that conducts military operations at sea. (Oxford Dictionary)

The part of a country's military forces that fights at sea using ships, submarines, airplanes (Merriam-Webster)

I don't know what purpose you're trying to achieve by parsing the meanings of military vs. militaristic and navy vs. military. Such distinctions don't seem to recognized by the, admittedly basic, function of the simple definitions offered above. Yes, I'm aware that there have been militaristic societies that were not at all times of their existence, actually involved in military adventurism, such as Japan long before WWII. But I think it's been unusual that such a society has been resolute throughout the course of its run, in not using that capability that conveys its national identity, for territorial or resource expansion or by imposing its will by defeating a categorical enemy, even if the declaration of such pursuits was formally proscribed. That doesn't diminish the philosophy perhaps being primarily an instrument to further national unity or in the suppression of dissent.

You also assert a distinction between a navy and the remainder of a military foundation without really explaining why its maintenance during peacetime should materially be seen as serving a different purpose than that of what you seem to describe as a society's true war machine. Without providing such real world descriptors, you simply move to say that Starfleet might be a good example of this fundamental structure. Lacking such a basic definition of the crux of the variation you claim, the argument seems more like a tautology than a solid case being drawn that has the capacity to convince someone of its verity.

Frankly, I don't feel particularly inclined to get involved in a semantical dispute that, as has happened lately elsewhere around these parts, devolves into a tiresome and seemingly endless harangue.

I would simply prefer for you to address my reply to the original and basic concern, your assertion of the common quality and quantity of the TOS Starfleet taking devastating offensive action against civilizations for no warranted or justifiable rationale, which in this post anyway, you've simply sidestepped. You offered a discrete characterization of such events that I think I've realistically put in doubt. Your turn to likewise explicitly support your contention.


Yes but that wasn't Kirk willing to wipe out a planet because it disagreed with his philosophy on life.
Then why would Kirk be wiping those planets of life?

Kirk would killing vast numbers of Klingons on planets with his starship's weapons because of his (and others) philosophy of life.

A philosophy that the Klingons didn't share..

I don't know that in this specific situation, destruction of planets inhabited by the other was about to take place, the conflict as we know about it being confined to the space above Organia (and elsewhere) between two opposing fleets of starships. Granted, it wouldn't be much of a jump to think that the depredations you described might have evolved organically from such a wellspring. Such actions though can't be attributed to Kirk specificall,y or his alleged philosophy, whatever that might mean. He's simply representing Starfleet's imperatives and there's nothing shown that minimizes those to be drawn on a trivial or inconsequential basis. Additionally, I don't see the basic recognition that conflict is coming to fruition here, but it's being something inflicted on the Klingons against some fundamental beliefs of theirs. Their intention in forcefully taking over Organia is plain enough and that a cataclysmic conflagration might develop from that, doesn't seem to give them any pause. So, what exactly is the nature of the disconnect you claim on their part?

Unless you're arguing that the varying sides should adopt a state of inertness, any meaningful action can be said to be informed by a frame or philosophy that denotes some specific intention, whether it be logic, self-aggrandizement, xenophobia, or any number of other reasons. That the Organians would be proved correct at some point in the future about the nature of the relationship between the two rivals is irrelevant at this time. Their enmity there and then is justified due to the history, fear and ignorance of the other, self-perception of strength and justice, and countless other factors that both sides of this and other conflicts from time immemorial have come to embrace. It may or may not be played out with the prejudice you cite as coming from one side only, but there's no inevitability that such will be the case, with a concomitant level of destruction, as it can be mitigated by the acts of an exceptional individual or random circumstances.

History will inevitably be a harsh teacher to both sides, but those lessons must be borne to reach that promised future of comity and cooperation and two civilizations that will at least have one less perceived impediment to making a future at least somewhat more driven by sanguine and accepting ideals.
 
Yes but that wasn't Kirk willing to wipe out a planet because it disagreed with his philosophy on life.
Then why would Kirk be wiping those planets of life?

Kirk would killing vast numbers of Klingons on planets with his starship's weapons because of his (and others) philosophy of life.

A philosophy that the Klingons didn't share..

There's no way that Kirk ever threatened or implied that his ship was going to threaten Klingon civilian in this episode. Kirk told Sulu to get his ship out of there to avoid the conflict. He didn't casually threaten to wipe out a Klingon world or Organia because he didn't like them. The original post implied that Kirk /Starfleet was threatening to raze planets in 1/4 episodes and I'm struggling to find 2 episodes in the entire series where it was done in the casual manner the post implied.

There are other things that Kirk/Starfleet did that I disagree with but its not this (in this case) . Just as I was against Picard/Janeway for letting primitive worlds perish because of the Prime Directive.

Kirk also didn't seduce women in 1/4 episodes. Maybe 1/10.
 
I don't know what purpose you're trying to achieve by parsing the meanings of military vs. militaristic and navy vs. military.
Two very simple and completely separate things.

1) IMHO, Starfleet perfectly meets all the definitions of militarism as regards its role in its respective society and universe. The audience and apparently also the UFP citizenry is expected to unquestionably bow to the rule of the military, to the extent that no evidence of civilian policing or politics overriding the military rule of Starfleet is presented in the shows and movies. Whenever Starfleet, in the form of a group or clique within, goes out of the line and tries to initiate a war or a coup, it's up to a group or a clique within Starfleet (the heroes) to countermand it, there existing no alternatives.

Whether Starfleet at some point actually goes to war or not is rather immaterial to its militarism. It exists on basis of the potentiality; it exploits that justification for existence without shame; and absent another, perhaps more objective viewpoint to the Star Trek universe and the UFP, it really appears to run the whole show, down to writing its own laws on the spot and then bragging about them in official logs.

The only sound of dissent we ever really hear is David Marcus. And perhaps Joe Sisko, but his objections are more specific, and he's at least still in speaking terms with his militaristic son.

2) Military vs. Navy is an old distinction that could well be resurrected for the simple and single purpose of explaining why two characters in onscreen Star Trek (Admiral Forrest in "The Expanse" and Captain Picard in "Peak Performance") claim that Starfleet is distinct from the Military. This has extremely little to do with militarism at any level: even the organization that Forrest suspected might rub badly on Captain Archer was not qualitatively different from Archer's own organization (a bunch of rifle-toting specialists helping a starship with onboard and planetside combat, neatly following if not a single then at least a shared chain of command). It's just a convenient excuse for those two bits of dialogue.

Such distinctions don't seem to recognized by the, admittedly basic, function of the simple definitions offered above.
I see nothing wrong with the "militarism" definition. And the "military" one is simply a thing that grew outdated about 200-150 years ago; I just postulate it came back for Star Trek, much like so many things from the 1960s disappeared ITRW and then reappeared in Trek.

I would simply prefer for you to address my reply to the original and basic concern, your assertion of the common quality and quantity of the TOS Starfleet taking devastating offensive action against civilizations for no warranted or justifiable rationale, which in this post anyway, you've simply sidestepped.
"Not warranted or justifiable"? Not my words. I simply find Starfleet's warrants and sense of justice alien and even disgusting on occasion.

As recapped, Kirk uses orbital bombardment against local ways of life in "Return of the Archons", "The Apple" and "This Side of Paradise" solely on basis of him personally disliking said ways. There's also an element of self-defense there, but that's all due to Kirk himself provoking the situation - and "Omega Glory" establishes that Starfleet/UFP laws forbid using self-defense as an excuse. For a militaristic organization, laws mean little, though, and evidently Kirk's superiors fully agree, at least in this timeline.

Kirk further uses threat of extreme force in situations of categorically forbidden self-defense in "A Taste of Armageddon", and applies or tries to apply actual force in various other gunboat-diplomacy incidents such as "Corbomite Maneuver" or "Spectre of the Gun".

These are the highlights. What TOS lacks is a counterbalance, a situation where Kirk would step back when he can. "Omega Glory" shows him hypocritically accusing a fellow CO for Kirkisms; "Errand of Mercy" has him backing off under pain of, well, pain. This does not paint a positive picture of the man or his organization.

TNG brings some relief from this pattern as Picard is better equipped to defend himself without resorting to actual use of force (the "speak softly and carry a big stick of dynamite" thing, often ridiculed by the audience as huddling behind shields and not firing back apparently does not meet the criteria of conventional bravery). In DS9, Sisko, a man of lesser means, again vents his anger at civilians via orbital bombardment, though, and seemingly receives nothing but support from his colleagues and superiors. Funny how in a similar situation, the crew of one Garth of Izar reputedly rebelled, and the CO was established as a villain...

Frankly, I don't feel particularly inclined to get involved in a semantical dispute that, as has happened lately elsewhere around these parts, devolves into a tiresome and seemingly endless harangue.
There are two levels to this: debate taking place at TrekBBS, and demagoguery taking place within the Trek universe. I hope the former remains at the "tiresome" level and doesn't unduly offend anybody; my point in engaging in it is to fight the latter, where Starfleet philosophies are generally unquestionably hailed and even advantageously compared to those of militant Earth organizations, IMHO wholly without reason.

I guess that fundamentally I want to question the entertainment-inherent concept that heroes can do no wrong - as that very thing is actually at the rotten root of militarism...

Also,

Kirk also didn't seduce women in 1/4 episodes. Maybe 1/10.
That's a welcome correction factor for my hyperbole, too. Please take that as implicit in the near future. :)

(Although the 1/4 thing really was supposed to reflect those episodes where Kirk actually came to deal with an alien way of life, choosing a live-and-let-live stance in at most 3/4 of the cases. Many TOS episodes would fall outside the scope of that debate.

Not as many as one might at first think, mind you. Why did Kirk kill the Doomsday Machine, or the Space Amoeba, or the Dikironide Cloud, say? A Picardian policy of level-headed study would have made it all the easier to later deal an effective comeuppance to these species of alien life - a quick kill out of disgust and fear just reduced the UFP resources for coping with them.)

In terms of the original topic, Omega Directive is in fact something of an opposite of the general Starfleet tendency to "run the show", dictate policies, displace populations, blackmail with mass destruction or assassination of key leaders etc. It's an example of rule of law and restraint, reducing the leeway of individual field commanders and the role of subjective moral ponderings against hopefully democratically decided definitions of common good. And closely (but advantageously) compares to the old General Order Seven...

Timo Saloniemi
 
TNG brings some relief from this pattern as Picard is better equipped to defend himself without resorting to actual use of force (the "speak softly and carry a big stick of dynamite" thing, often ridiculed by the audience as huddling behind shields and not firing back apparently does not meet the criteria of conventional bravery). In DS9, Sisko, a man of lesser means, again vents his anger at civilians via orbital bombardment, though, and seemingly receives nothing but support from his colleagues and superiors. Funny how in a similar situation, the crew of one Garth of Izar reputedly rebelled, and the CO was established as a villain...

Frankly, I don't feel particularly inclined to get involved in a semantical dispute that, as has happened lately elsewhere around these parts, devolves into a tiresome and seemingly endless harangue.
There are two levels to this: debate taking place at TrekBBS, and demagoguery taking place within the Trek universe. I hope the former remains at the "tiresome" level and doesn't unduly offend anybody; my point in engaging in it is to fight the latter, where Starfleet philosophies are generally unquestionably hailed and even advantageously compared to those of militant Earth organizations, IMHO wholly without reason.

I guess that fundamentally I want to question the entertainment-inherent concept that heroes can do no wrong - as that very thing is actually at the rotten root of militarism...

Also,

Kirk also didn't seduce women in 1/4 episodes. Maybe 1/10.
That's a welcome correction factor for my hyperbole, too. Please take that as implicit in the near future. :)

(Although the 1/4 thing really was supposed to reflect those episodes where Kirk actually came to deal with an alien way of life, choosing a live-and-let-live stance in at most 3/4 of the cases. Many TOS episodes would fall outside the scope of that debate.

Not as many as one might at first think, mind you. Why did Kirk kill the Doomsday Machine, or the Space Amoeba, or the Dikironide Cloud, say? A Picardian policy of level-headed study would have made it all the easier to later deal an effective comeuppance to these species of alien life - a quick kill out of disgust and fear just reduced the UFP resources for coping with them.)


Timo Saloniemi
Kirk killed the Doomsday Machine and the Space Amoeba because they had just wiped out billions of inhabitants on nearby planets and were intending to wipe out billions more. Now if I was being cruel I would say that Picard would have AOKd them doing this if the planets were not developed enough for his liking. That its only natural and that the Federation shouldn't interfere.
If we believe in what the two episodes state that the Doomsday Machine was just a killing machine, what problem do you have with Kirk destroying it? Space Amoeba was just a rampant animal, so I got no problem with it being wiped out.
Also as you point out Sisko had less means than Picard. Well so did Kirk. Basically the NCC1701 was out there alone and had to do whatever she could to save lives. The victims, not non-senient lifeforms.
The gas cloud in "Obsession" was a bit different. Spock implied that it reasoned but I still got the overall impression it was some sort of animal. Maybe they could have tried to communicate with it better. But they were on the battlefield so to speak. Without the luxury of immediate communication with Starfleet Central. Without any back up.
 
Whether Starfleet at some point actually goes to war or not is rather immaterial to its militarism. It exists on basis of the potentiality; it exploits that justification for existence without shame; and absent another, perhaps more objective viewpoint to the Star Trek universe and the UFP, it really appears to run the whole show, down to writing its own laws on the spot and then bragging about them in official logs.

I don't want to insert something as a counterargument that isn't explicitly established as canon. Still, can't we reasonably wonder, as has been done on countless threads before, that there is a civilian authority, at least on Earth, that has the capacity, if not responsibility, to make substantive contributions to Federation policy and protocols, that would naturally have an impact on how Starfleet operates, at least nominally? Admittedly, being in a deficient position to cite what has or hasn't been fleshed out about such a body, I would ask you to let me know if such as been categorically ruled out as existing, or if it does, has been shown to deal with only "local", parochial matters.

You're saying that essentially Starfleet rules Earth, as an example, which I don't believe has ever been stated, or likely inferred. Further, that it does so in a way that defines Earth as being a militaristic entity, the foundations of which may be drawn as a means to make the population submissive or aggressive handmaidens in support of a supremacist planetary identity and to eliminate the possibility of any thoughtful dissent. Alternately, the purpose could be to effectively make the raison d'etre of the civilization to be a perpetual war making enterprise, justified by any number of rationales, ranging from actual existential threats to the most capricious of whims of individual commanders, that will always find sanction under the umbrella of the prevailing power structure.

We certainly observe more than a little of life on Earth, though skewed to the locale of Starfleet Command and its local environs. It's hard to make sweeping characterizations of the underpinnings of society based on these fragmentary views, but IMO they don't strike me as being redolent of being highly regimented, that openly militates dogmatic positions of the supremacy of the state, or whose populace has been cowed, whipped into a frenzy, or is just oblivious. I remarked on an actual historical example of a militaristic society that developed in Japan in the latter parts of the 19th century through WWII. One could also point to post-Bismarckian Germany that also essentially formed the character of the society towards that same conflagration. Would you characterize what we see of Earth during Trek as being similar to those constructs, or are there other real world milieus that strike you as reasonable models therein? Honestly, I just can't see such comparisons bearing the weight of an objective examination based on the evidence we see, however limited.

2) Military vs. Navy is an old distinction that could well be resurrected for the simple and single purpose of explaining why two characters in onscreen Star Trek (Admiral Forrest in "The Expanse" and Captain Picard in "Peak Performance") claim that Starfleet is distinct from the Military. This has extremely little to do with militarism at any level: even the organization that Forrest suspected might rub badly on Captain Archer was not qualitatively different from Archer's own organization (a bunch of rifle-toting specialists helping a starship with onboard and planetside combat, neatly following if not a single then at least a shared chain of command). It's just a convenient excuse for those two bits of dialogue.

There is a difference in citing distinctions to a strictly military component and using that to claim that in either of these instances, Starfleet is being typified as a naval organization that in your earlier comments you referenced as being separate from the active aspects of a functioning war machine, one that is necessary to maintain during peacetime. You still don't really address what justifies that ongoing need for one and not the other, and in fact unless I'm misunderstanding the intent of the first line above, you seem to be stepping back from that reference, as if it's just a neat historical use of semantics to shield Starfleet's true character. The conversation in the Expanse appears to me to simply explain that Enterprise, in leaving for a mission in which there are so many unknowns, ranging from the anecdotal dangers of the area of space they will be entering, to the potential contact with a race that has unilaterally shown malign intent to Earth, would be prudent in including in their complement, personnel whose sole purpose and organization is a military one. The implication of the discussion, as I take it, is that the MACOs wouldn't be a mere amplification of a capability that is already manifestly present aboard Enterprise, but will serve as a distinct element that Archer feels may very well need to be deployed to more reliably ensure the integrity and success of the mission, however that might have come to be defined. Outside this particular scenario, the idea that this nascent version of Starfleet clearly considered itself as a military venture, would seem first to more clearly articulate an assured sense of purpose, that it would seem to me, could only become more lucidly focused with actual real world experience being acquired. Secondarily, the braking mechanism that the Vulcans had placed on the active deployment of Starfleet, would seem unlikely to have been predicated on an understanding and appreciation that Earth was honing their capability to be a strictly, or primarily even, military one.

As for Picard, it's been said many times, that it's clear that his Enterprise's brief was often one defined by the diplomatic realm, and that by this time frame in Starfleet's development, the use of military force to obtain objectives, was a single element in its toolkit, implicit in its being available, but just as clearly explicit in the falling back to that eventuality to be regarded seriously as a final resort. In the sense that Picard bristles at the suggestion that it is a valid descriptor at all of Starfleet's role. might be his perception that the application of force, when absolutely necessary, does not define the one applying it as a military agency, as such, but simply in that individual case using an instrumentality that is part of an integrated whole that comprises the package of what Starfleet vessels maintain to most effectively succeed in their missions, but one element that is restricted programmatically and reflexively to be used only in tightly defined parameters. That certain individuals or like minded groups in positions of authority have circumvented these rules to utilize this component as a strictly offensive force to pursue their own imperatives, outside of condoned tactics, doesn't change the paradigm that the organization runs by, it just shows that some of its members choose to emphasize their personal judgement over the corporate dictates that they had previously pledged to uphold.

"Not warranted or justifiable"? Not my words. I simply find Starfleet's warrants and sense of justice alien and even disgusting on occasion.

As recapped, Kirk uses orbital bombardment against local ways of life in "Return of the Archons", "The Apple" and "This Side of Paradise" solely on basis of him personally disliking said ways. There's also an element of self-defense there, but that's all due to Kirk himself provoking the situation - and "Omega Glory" establishes that Starfleet/UFP laws forbid using self-defense as an excuse. For a militaristic organization, laws mean little, though, and evidently Kirk's superiors fully agree, at least in this timeline.

Kirk further uses threat of extreme force in situations of categorically forbidden self-defense in "A Taste of Armageddon", and applies or tries to apply actual force in various other gunboat-diplomacy incidents such as "Corbomite Maneuver" or "Spectre of the Gun".

These are the highlights. What TOS lacks is a counterbalance, a situation where Kirk would step back when he can. "Omega Glory" shows him hypocritically accusing a fellow CO for Kirkisms; "Errand of Mercy" has him backing off under pain of, well, pain. This does not paint a positive picture of the man or his organization.

Right, I used those words rather than repeat what I perceive to be foolish sounding characterizations of Kirk taking destructive actions simply because of his own personal bias or that the offending culture looked at him the wrong way. Those were your words. You've pointed to a few examples that slightly extend the reach of the ratio that you provided as to such actions taking place. Not that they all actually conform to your contention. There is no planetary bombardment in Archons as I have reviewed it. Actually, Landru is actively attempting to destroy the Enterprise, which Kirk chooses not to confront with an attempt of force from the ship. Kirk also learns that Landru successfully used the same strategy against the episode's eponymously named ship. If you're substituting the challenge Kirk makes to the computer, as making the case for planetary disruption, I would counter that the argument he uses is not mere sophistry and verbal manipulation to save his skin and the ship, but as worked out by Spock and him, reflects a reality, conveniently dropped in I'll admit, that this form of Landru has corrupted what the original meant to maintain, and in so doing has fostered a sterile and inorganically driven society. Albeit without a jury to render the verdict, Kirk's logic is powerful enough to convince the machine that it has deviated from its own Prime Directive (nice touch there) and should forfeit the suzerainty it holds over its subjects. I don't know that you would argue that other Starfleet captains would have chosen to leave the situation as it was, even to the point of the destruction of their command, but I might foresee some using their ship's weaponry, as you claim was the case here, in lieu of expending the effort to intuit the reality of what was really was going on in the society and change the dynamic without violence.

I totally miss your reference as far as This Side of Paradise goes. Your submission, I suppose, would be that he doesn't like the route of development that the colony has taken and feels compelled to express that personal prejudice. In fact, the colony isn't functioning as its members themselves intended it to, for the simple fact that it was physically impossible to do so without the intervention of the spores. Did Sandoval and the rest, find and struggle with the challenge that they had volunteered to take on? No, they were essentially entrapped in a years long sleep, with the will to recognize and confront the situation taken away by the effect of the spores. Would you argue that the spores are sentient beings? I don't know if that case was made in the episode. Regardless, the attack you are pointing at here, didn't destroy anything, unless we are maintaining that the spores are actually alive in their hosts and not just having caused an effect on them. In any case, we're not shown or given any evidence that the "bombardment" killed any of the plants that were still rampant in the environment. I think we can also take Sandoval's reaction afterwards to represent a positive response to Kirk's action, at least as the leader of the colony, as a recognition of lost time and opportunity in the mission's purpose.

As I said earlier, I don't think one can justify Tracey's decisions as showing Starfleet enlightenment or adherence to policies. He was nominally protecting a society, not even for a warped notion that it was more deserving of it on an objective basis than its enemies were. His whole motivation appeared to be keeping them alive long enough so that he could wrest the supposed immortality element from their biology, being able to do that once another starship showed up as he calculated would happen. Then with his ability to use subterfuge and guile to obscure his crimes, he would be in the position to claim the glory and acclaim that such an epochal discovery would inevitably be bestowed upon him. For the supposed hero of the piece, he illustrated precious little from beginning to end, that would distinguish him with that appellation, at least as I see it, a view that seems to be pretty ubiquitous from the comments of many, many others. Also, I certainly don't think that the Kirkisms you refer to, would have been taken by their progenitor if he had been placed in the same situation. I can't say for sure what course of action he would have taken, but I don't doubt that he would have accepted death in the final instance, before allowing himself to irrevocably compromise Starfleet principles. I must be missing the point, clear to you, that he cavalierly disregarded the protocols regarding the exercise of self-defense, at least to the extent of violating his mission and furthering the cultural contamination that Tracey had no compunction to introduce.

I can't qualify the Corbomite Maneuver as representing a threat, the fact that Balok knew it was a bluff notwithstanding. It was simply a rhetorical device that Kirk came up with as a last resort to buy some time. Such a strategem certainly wouldn't transgress Starfleet precepts in this instance. I might be in the minority in believing this, but I'm dubious that Balok ever intended any harm to Enterprise. He admitted as much when referring to his menacing dummy identity as his own way of bluffing Enterprise into accepting that his was a malevolent character and insuperable powers. I think he was simply testing them with this overwhelming seeming scenario, to gauge how their reactions spoke to a suitability of their civilization being able to provide him with the companionship that he ultimately confessed was his true desire.

Spectre of the Gun? A strictly diplomatic mission that was met with open hostility and then a seeming death sentence. If one interprets it as strictly the Melkotians' means of testing an alien civilization's motivations, methods, and morality, the fact that Kirk chose to ignore the buoy, actually suited what the Melkotians wanted to occur all along. Basically, the method they used to judge the worthiness of allowing first contact. If a particular visitor's intentions weren't strong enough to choose to continue their attempt to approach the planet despite the warning, the Melkotians may simply have deemed them not of particular interest to engage with in any event. I simply don't get your reference to gunboat diplomacy being displayed by Kirk. He didn't destroy the buoy, nor was it mentioned in the warning that it would be obliterated by any further advance. It seems likely that it was the next aspect in the Melkotians' plan; blowing up their own device as a means of warranting the challenge they would be inflicting on the landing party. The application of logic permitted them to pass the test without the use of violence. Kirk's impulse at the end supplying the Melkotians with a point of dialogue that served to further their beneficial impression that this was a race that had mastered the capability of restraining primal impulses even in the face of unrelenting provocation.

Kirk wasn't personally brought to backing off in Errand of Mercy. That was a quadrant wide display of intent by a vastly superior race that would not brook the outbreak of hostilities regardless of any individual combatants understanding or philosophy. But what was so absolutely halted, was not some blithe or capricious contretemps that had no real standing in galactic geopolitics. These were two sides that, at that time in their relationship, had categorical, if not existential disputes that drew them into lethal conflict time after time. That a peaceful resolution could come to pass between them in time, didn't mean that violence of extreme measures would not have to play out for yet some time. This was certainly not an individual resolve or determination that Kirk arrived at in a vacuum.

TNG brings some relief from this pattern as Picard is better equipped to defend himself without resorting to actual use of force (the "speak softly and carry a big stick of dynamite" thing, often ridiculed by the audience as huddling behind shields and not firing back apparently does not meet the criteria of conventional bravery). In DS9, Sisko, a man of lesser means, again vents his anger at civilians via orbital bombardment, though, and seemingly receives nothing but support from his colleagues and superiors. Funny how in a similar situation, the crew of one Garth of Izar reputedly rebelled, and the CO was established as a villain...

Staying within the TOS realm only, I don't find it odd or funny that Garth's orders were disobeyed by his crew and he was taken in charge. One can only imagine it likely that at that earlier time when the injury and impact of his treatment on Antos had only just recently occurred, his ability to mask his delusionary rage was not nearly as honed as the passage of time would allow, so that his crew would have responded to the illegality of his commands as the clear signal of someone who had lost possession of his reasoning and could justifiably and within Starfleet procedures, be removed from command and confined so as to turn him over to the appropriate authorities. Were Sisko's demeanor and means of warranting his subsequent hostile actions, equally obvious in being commonly perceived as the behavior of a madman, to that degree?

Frankly, I don't feel particularly inclined to get involved in a semantical dispute that, as has happened lately elsewhere around these parts, devolves into a tiresome and seemingly endless harangue.

There are two levels to this: debate taking place at TrekBBS, and demagoguery taking place within the Trek universe. I hope the former remains at the "tiresome" level and doesn't unduly offend anybody; my point in engaging in it is to fight the latter, where Starfleet philosophies are generally unquestionably hailed and even advantageously compared to those of militant Earth organizations, IMHO wholly without reason. I guess that fundamentally I want to question the entertainment-inherent concept that heroes can do no wrong - as that very thing is actually at the rotten root of militarism...
Also,
Kirk also didn't seduce women in 1/4 episodes. Maybe 1/10.
That's a welcome correction factor for my hyperbole, too. Please take that as implicit in the near future. :) (Although the 1/4 thing really was supposed to reflect those episodes where Kirk actually came to deal with an alien way of life, choosing a live-and-let-live stance in at most 3/4 of the cases. Many TOS episodes would fall outside the scope of that debate. Not as many as one might at first think, mind you. Why did Kirk kill the Doomsday Machine, or the Space Amoeba, or the Dikironide Cloud, say? A Picardian policy of level-headed study would have made it all the easier to later deal an effective comeuppance to these species of alien life - a quick kill out of disgust and fear just reduced the UFP resources for coping with them.) Timo Saloniemi

It seems like you're saying that both the Log and the Amoeba would have both been rendered inert or destroyed by Picard. but only in a more thoughtful and deliberative manner? If such was going to be the end result anyway, why endanger cumulatively billions of lives in the very near future, just so one could be lauded for thinking comprehensively before coming up with perhaps a less spectacular and definitive way of achieving the deed. Certainly contemplativeness has a place in coming to decisions that are multifaceted in their contemporaneous dimensions and potential future unintended consequences, a place that Kirk unarguably might have fruitfully visited somewhat more often. But these two situations simply don't seem to apply. First, I find it dubious to classify the Log as a species. I don't recall that being done in the episode directly. To our knowledge, it was a machine of epic destructive proportions that didn't seem to make any distinctions as to its objects of attack, other than IIRC, its needing to be fed. One can very reasonably maintain that the quick determination of how to deal with this mass killer was more helpful to Starfleet, than a similarly successful but time consuming tack would've been, even if no other lives were lost, as we are left at the end of the show with the prospect of more of them wandering throughout the galaxy. Having that understanding of its weakness sooner than later, could only be seen as a pure positive. The Amoeba as a species, no question though not likely a sentient one, but it posed the same immediate threat that had to be neutralized and at least in its elimination, all evidence of its existence was not lost for future study, any alleged botched tests put aside!

I don't refuse to concede that Kirk and others in Starfleet committed no errors in judgement, clearly for some of the latter individuals, outright malfeasances and gravely criminal acts. I've often cited Kirk's rashness and foolhardiness in WNMHGB, tarring him with the brush of a rookie coming up, obviously lacking in such a signal trial that demanded patience and foresight. But as a whole, I cannot come anywhere close to judging his actions as a lone marshal, setting an agenda as he arbitrarily and summarily saw fit. I would contrarily say, in fact, that for a leader that valued action, at times impulsively, he was perhaps surprisingly sensible to the arguments that logic, discretion, and wisely proffered counsel were quite often made available to him.
 
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the Omega Directive is an oxymoron of a thought provoker. On one hand you have a particle, and energy source you know to be the most powerful thing of all time. Perhaps on a level beyond what v'ger or the iconians possessed.
The little device that 7 stabilized before it was beamed off ship and destroyed,... it was fully stable and operational but when destroyed, it ruined subspace in an area of size larger then the Sol System....
The directive is essential a document saying that "we know is massively powerful and vital.. and until we can find a way to harness it and make it safe for US to use.. we have to destroy it whenever found, no matter if the people have made it safe."
The way the episode alluded to it as being so powerful.. the device voyager ejected and destroyed could probably have given the TOS enterprise a power output greater then a borg cube has.
 
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