What was a botanist doing in a cave anyway? There are no plants in caves.
Are you accusing me of trolling?![]()
And even though I directed the original comment at him, neither was I talking about him, just making a statement. Soooo much miscommunication...like the O'brien's marriage. It's hard to be civil living with a Pah Wraith...I wasn't even talking to you, wtf.
There is no facepalm emoticon! So thiswill have to do.
I'm really interested in the smashed Pah Wraith tablet from the first teaser of Picard...Who's the Pah Wraith going forward? I'm telling you, Keiko's coming back to Picard and she's going to show herself once and for all...Or it's Dr.Jurati...It was just a joke.
Everybody knows the only Ptah Wraith was Jadzia.
You quoted his post with my quote in it. If I misunderstood then I apologize but some clarification would be helpful.I wasn't even talking to you, wtf.
Perhaps it is similar to “Kirk drift”; I do not understand it either.I am not sure how the "Keiko is a bitch" or "Keiko hates Miles" tropes got started. It seems pretty clear that Keiko and Miles love each other deeply. But they are both their own people. Keiko isn't going to fawn all over Miles; to her, she's a husband who she loves but also acts like a child sometimes. She forgives him a lot but she's also going to stand up for herself when he's being unreasonable or when being on the station leaves her with no real job to do. They act like a real married couple, they will not agree ALL the time and they are secure enough in their relationship that they can express it.
She forgives him a lot but she's also going to stand up for herself when he's being unreasonable or when being on the station leaves her with no real job to do.
This is also an argument as to why I do not believe the supposed currency-less œconomy of the U.F.P. can ever work.Yeah I agree, Keiko's behaviour is pretty much exactly what I'd expect from a civilian and a trained scientist being pigeonholed as a school teacher a zillion light years from home.
This is also an argument as to why I do not believe the supposed currency-less œconomy of the U.F.P. can ever work.
These Starfleet officers that work for free, have shifts and free time are relocated with their families to dangerous places. I would actually say that Benjamin Sisko is a very bad parent for exposing his child to such dangers, after the other parent of said child already died for similar dangers, when there not even be financial compensation for it.
What man would expose his child to such dangers, not to mention living on a space station with few peers the latter's own age, when he can simply resign and raise his child in peace on Earth and be paid the same?
Ridiculous, irresponsible parenting to say the least. — Jake Sisko all but died many times.
Societies reward risk with financial compensation.Riskless societies wither and are supplanted. The Sisko was being a good parent for showing his child a life of service.
I would certainly say that few children come out undamaged from being raised in a war area on a military base with little to no peers of their own, which is what Jake Sisko's childhood was.Children are not some delicate crystalline structure that must be raised in first-world pristine environments for their parents to qualify as good persons.
Which makes it all the stranger that the U.F.P. does not compensate in some way to draw more manpower to the war effort.And considering how quickly the entire federation was attacked in the subsequent war, defining a safe space isn't quite so easy. Maybe it is generational thinking. I was probably in the last few years of elementary school that did bomb drills. There was no overwhelming concept of safety. ICMB's didn't care where you lived. They still don't, but that's another matter.
Who did not understand who he was in the first episode, but they later were revealed to have engineered his birth?It'd be kinda cute if the Pah-Wraiths created Keiko in much the same way as the Prophets did Sisko...
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