Tasha's big mistake was not stunning her daughter. In the future, that's what the stun setting is for.
![]()
I'm not sure Romulan disrupters have a stun setting...
Tasha's big mistake was not stunning her daughter. In the future, that's what the stun setting is for.
![]()
Do we know that Sela's father was all about having sex with Tasha? Sela said the Romulan officer was enamored with her, perhaps there were feelings involved. In that case it might not have been a physical assault but the Romulan officer wanted a relationship with her? That led to sex and Sela was born.Sela's father demanded that Tasha have sex with him or the Enterprise-C prisoners would be executed.
Was the "relationship" between Tasha and the Romulan general strictly sexual or was there more to it? We don't know. I'm pretty sure Tasha would have liked to be somewhere else but if she had a home and a child, was it almost like family life? Until she tried to escape. But it's true that it was the only way she was allowed to live, a companion to a Romulan general. Some sort of slavery almost?It doesn't matter if Sela's father had a "crush" on Tasha or was genuinely attracted to her in any way. The fact remains, he demanded sexual favors from Tasha on pain of death. If that's not rape, what is?
Do we know that Sela's father was all about having sex with Tasha? Sela said the Romulan officer was enamored with her, perhaps there were feelings involved. In that case it might not have been a physical assault but the Romulan officer wanted a relationship with her? That led to sex and Sela was born.
Was the "relationship" between Tasha and the Romulan general strictly sexual or was there more to it? We don't know. I'm pretty sure Tasha would have liked to be somewhere else but if she had a home and a child, was it almost like family life? Until she tried to escape. But it's true that it was the only way she was allowed to live, a companion to a Romulan general. Some sort of slavery almost?
It is not "almost" a form of slavery. It IS slavery. She only had the choices of either pleasing him or something horrible happening to her. if she had been free to leave, she wouldn't have had tried to escape.
We don't know the details, where they lived or what kind of quality of life they had.
No mother would abandon her child to a father who coerced her into sexual slavery under threat of death.
Tasha should have killed Sela.
She had to extract the kid "as is" but they were still looking at years of gruesome reprogramming to straighten the girl out before you don't have to lock her in a cell for the night.
Leaving her behind was unthinkable, but what about giving the child a mercy killing?
Don't underestimate the love a mother has for her child. Tasha would never leave her baby. Especially after the childhood she had.
What if.... Tasha was on some level grateful to the Romulan officer for saving her life, then Stockholm syndrome kicks in and she develops (strong) feelings for him. For a time she doesn't even want to leave? In that case would sex be consensual? Then she gives birth to Sela and wants to get the baby away from Romulus?
Dont forget the old Testament EXPLICITLY Allows forcing a woman captured in battle into a marriage...
Romulans would have access to plentiful contraception, and rape is a crime. Prisoners can't legally give consent. Its statutory rape, even if the prisoner insists that they did give consent. The Romulan legal system would throw any Romulan making whoopy with a prisoner into a different jail.
You don't seriously believe the Romulan courts would be on Tasha's side, do you?
I mean, the mere fact that Sela's father Volskiar is a Romulan would be enough. He gets all the rights, and Tasha (as a human prisoner) has none. And of course since Volskiar is a respected General in the Romulan military, that would stack the deck even more in his favor.
So therefore, under the Romulan legal system, Volskiar can do anything he wants to Tasha without fear of consequences. These ARE Romulans, after all; on their world, prisoners (of any species) have absolutely no rights whatsoever.
Whatever type of corruption may be at work, the Romulan legal system probably started off identical to the Vulcan legal system
the Romulans began as a group of Vulcans who rejected Surak and his philosophy of emotional control.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.