That's almost Captain Kirk's motto, just swap the 2nd and 3rd words."To Fucking Go Where No One Has Gone Before."
That's almost Captain Kirk's motto, just swap the 2nd and 3rd words."To Fucking Go Where No One Has Gone Before."
There was also a artificial power source.What about the prime directive? There were people down there.
There was also a artificial power source.
To explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life, and new civilizations.Why was it any of starfleet's business?
(Crap, I tried to post to the part at 7:15 where Kirk says same thing to a bunch of cadets).Really?
I'm pretty sure risk was their business?
To explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life, and new civilizations.
That is Starfleet's business.
Why was it any of starfleet's business? What happens on a planet, stays on that planet.
Unfortunately, the Enterprise wasn't on the planet and it still was going to be a casualty of Vaal.
Trespassers will be shot.
Pretty sure you have to prove that they are a danger. You just can't shoot people who wander onto your property. Or continue shooting at them as they try to leave.
Kirk gets a lot of crap, but really, except for maybe a Private Little War and Omega Glory (his We the People speech), I think Kirk pretty much stayed within the letter of the law, technically. Other episodes like The Apple or Return of the Archons, Kirk interfered, but it was because these societies were being controlled by a computer, which was not part of those societies natural progression.I think he pushed pretty far on the Prime Directive. But, there's too many instances of Starfleet interacting openly with less developed civilizations for the Prime Directive to have been as strict as it is made out to be in the 24th century.
Kirk gets a lot of crap, but really, except for maybe a Private Little War and Omega Glory (his We the People speech), I think Kirk pretty much stayed within the letter of the law, technically. Other episodes like The Apple or Return of the Archons, Kirk interfered, but it was because these societies were being controlled by a computer, which was not part of those societies natural progression.
Other instances, Kirk and co. were trying to fix contamination (IE Piece of the Action, Bread and Circuses). Patterns of Force, both the Zeons and Ekosians actually had space flight, though I am not sure if it was warp drive. In any event, Kirk is covered because Ekos was already contaminated. Also, in my personal head canon, since so many TOS aliens looked EXACTLY LIKE humans (IE MIri's Planet, for example), Kirk may have rationalized that they were transplanted humans, and the PR didn't apply.
Turning back the clock is a shitty excuse to shake the fuck out of society that I have never agreed with.
Well, who is to say the Prime Directive wasn't amended until the TNG era where the Federation had to hide who they were and disguise themselves? In the TOS era, maybe all that was required was not to provide tech, or interfere with internal politics, but they didn't have to hide who they were?I think he pushed pretty far on the Prime Directive. But, there's too many instances of Starfleet interacting openly with less developed civilizations for the Prime Directive to have been as strict as it is made out to be in the 24th century.
I agree on both, just mentioned them because I feel they are a little iffy, but Kirk ultimately follows the PD. Tracy really did screw things up on Omega IV and Kirk was trying to put things right. I's his 2 minute speech I question, because even Spock and Bones questioned it, but like you say, when people have been killing each other for thousands of years, one speech isn't going to do anything. If it were that easy, the middle east would have been solved long ago!I think "prior contamination" would come into play in both "The Omega Glory" and "A Private Little War". In the former, Kirk merely communicated what was already a written document. In the latter, the Klingons were giving a technological leap to one group of people. Kirk merely restored the balance that existed prior to that interference.
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