In this episode, the crew rejects having themselves cloned to help a struggling colony of clones on the grounds that doing so would violate their "individuality." I found this more of a 20th-21st century attitude toward cloning, rather than an enlightened Star Trek 24th century view, when I would have expected human cloning to be somewhat common, and of course a clone may be a genetic copy, but it is not "you," and doesn't really diminish individuality.
Secondly, after Riker and Pulaski are cloned against their wills, Riker kills the developing clones that are being made of them. This part was an obvious analogy to a pro-choice view on abortion, but to me it is a flawed analogy.
If we go with the metaphor that Riker was "raped," then what he did was more like killing a baby that resulted from a rape after the baby was born, not having an abortion during pregnancy. The pro-choice argument is about autonomy over one's body, but here the clone was already a separate entity. And in the DS9 episode "a man alone" Odo says that killing one's clone is still murder.
So was what Riker did murder? And does he have a habit of casual murder?("the vengeance factor")
Secondly, after Riker and Pulaski are cloned against their wills, Riker kills the developing clones that are being made of them. This part was an obvious analogy to a pro-choice view on abortion, but to me it is a flawed analogy.
If we go with the metaphor that Riker was "raped," then what he did was more like killing a baby that resulted from a rape after the baby was born, not having an abortion during pregnancy. The pro-choice argument is about autonomy over one's body, but here the clone was already a separate entity. And in the DS9 episode "a man alone" Odo says that killing one's clone is still murder.
So was what Riker did murder? And does he have a habit of casual murder?("the vengeance factor")