No, my abortion example is the only real-world example that even comes close; your description of it is the moron-level argument here. There aren't any other examples involving children that would involve a period of time in the choosing, as opposed to having to make an instantaneous choice without any reflection. Your knee is jerking; you're not actually thinking any of this through.
Why don't YOU provide an actual, real-world example that occurs with some frequency, and does not involve imminent danger?
The rest doesn't deserve response; it's too low. I would never be able to reach down that far.
And yet they didn't do that when that happened to Neelix.
Besides it felt more like killing a guy to resurrect her dead friends.
Damn. I guess this means that no one gets charged for murder in Star Trek as most weapons disintegrate people...Produce the body or lose your case, it is that simple.
I would say that Janeway made the only decision that made sense.
I just wish I could gain back the hour of my life that I wasted watching "Tuvix."
Our judges and elected officials? You assume I am from America or Western Europe. Well, I am. Still, children may be our future workforce, but take this example, @T'Girl.Yes children in general are more important than adults, and the laws we enacted though our judges and elected officials say so.
(and janeway is still right)
†
Damn. I guess this means that no one gets charged for murder in Star Trek as most weapons disintegrate people...
You could replicate the body.Damn. I guess this means that no one gets charged for murder in Star Trek as most weapons disintegrate people...
Murder? Where's the body. No evidence, no guilt.
Tuvix can't reappear in a new transporter accident? Where's the murder then? There he stands, living, breathing.
Oh that's right - it's only an accusation, no need to substantiate it. Maybe Janeway's an anti-Vulaxian racist too! And getting revenge for all that forced small talk with her morning coffee! Maybe she really wanted Neelix's prized saute pan!
Selfish decision? She spared her crew the responsibility of the decision. She took the bullet for all of them. Nice, demean her sacrifice by calling it petty selfishness. Yeah, Starfleet captains are always putting their petty desires before the lives of their crews. Yeah, that's what Star Trek's all about, not some random fan tangent at all....
Tuvix was a double murderer. He wanted T & N dead. Well he got what he did to others first. And why? Because he selfishly put his own needs ahead of the two men he wanted dead, and the needs of the crew. F*** him. He subscribed to his own fate first.
Produce the body or lose your case, it is that simple. The court of popular approval is irrelevant in a command structure. Tuvok took an oath and his ass belonged to Starfleet. And Neelix knew the costs and was free to leave at any time, and opted to join the crew. Tuvix was never released from those prior obligations. In fact, he counted on their sacrifices - right up until the time it bit him in his own aft. And he did not react with dignity.
You mix blue paint with yellow paint, and you get green paint. The blue and the yellow are gone.
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