Sexual reproduction is irrelevant. You will be assimilated.NO.
MORE.
FUCKING.
BORG.![]()
At any rate:
I think we've had enough Changelings, WAAAAYYYYY more than enough Borg, and WAAAAYYYYY TOO MUCH Section 31.
Sexual reproduction is irrelevant. You will be assimilated.NO.
MORE.
FUCKING.
BORG.![]()
Yes.Sexual reproduction is irrelevant. You will be assimilated.
At any rate:
I think we've had enough Changelings, WAAAAYYYYY more than enough Borg, and WAAAAYYYYY TOO MUCH Section 31.
I don’t know — it’s been a major story-generator ever since it was created. It’s true that they can’t seem to decide if they’re an unmitigated evil or a necessary one, but that strikes me as realistic: a universe in which, for two hundred years, they’re always and absolutely wrong every single time strikes me as just as silly as one in which they’re actually just misunderstood heroes every time. They’re both a blight on the Federation’s record, and a source of at least some its victories. It wouldn’t make sense otherwise — if they were nothing but blight they’d have been taken down one way or another; if they were Really Heroes they’d just be Starfleet Intelligence.I think the big problem is no one (as in writers) seems to know what to do with Section 31. Or at least none of them seem to agree about what it is exactly.
The trouble with Section 31 is we haven't got a series that's built to use them properly. They were created for Deep Space Nine to resonate with Bashir's spy fantasies and Sisko's darker choices, and even that series with its political drama and greyer morality kind of left them as a problem unsolved instead of a necessary evil.
The only thing they agree on (i.e. Kelvinverse and current era) is that it should be used to make Star Trek cool.I think the big problem is no one (as in writers) seems to know what to do with Section 31. Or at least none of them seem to agree about what it is exactly.
I think the kind of writers that really know what to do with Section 31 aren't working for Paramount.
I don’t know — it’s been a major story-generator ever since it was created. It’s true that they can’t seem to decide if they’re an unmitigated evil or a necessary one, but that strikes me as realistic: a universe in which, for two hundred years, they’re always and absolutely wrong every single time strikes me as just as silly as one in which they’re actually just misunderstood heroes every time. They’re both a blight on the Federation’s record, and a source of at least some its victories. It wouldn’t make sense otherwise — if they were nothing but blight they’d have been taken down one way or another; if they were Really Heroes they’d just be Starfleet Intelligence.
Well of course, there’s also the fact that they don’t want you to know what they are, right? But I hear what you’re saying.For sure. They make stories and sometimes good ones. I just struggle to understand them as an entity because it seems every new production team that takes them goes their own way with the idea.
I don’t totally understand how M15 works… but though relatively consistent and varied reading/watching, I have an idea of it.
Section 31 is just… I don’t know what they are… not to the extent where I can believe and invest in them as a viewer.
Id like to have my mind changed.
The thing is, Starfleet vs Section 31 as a battle for the Federation's soul only works if anyone's actually standing against them. If they just let Section 31 do their thing and continue to get support from people high up in Starfleet then it seems pretty one-sided to me.Well of course, there’s also the fact that they don’t want you to know what they are, right? But I hear what you’re saying.
EDIT: Though… there’s a tendency in Star Trek, and some other fandoms, to want to see “our” side as the unmitigated good guys/utopia/etc. Sort of how it took a long time for certain parts of fandom to get that nBSG wasn’t ultimately about blowing up Cylons. Having a clear flaw like Section 31 running around out there is a useful corrective for that — to allow that, even after all the TNG propaganda, the society isn’t one-sidedly Good.
If they'd just stop mentioning Section 31 that'd work fine.Would people prefer the JAG approach and the main characters act as spies regardless of skill set?
Mileage will vary but man do I hate the bad admiral of the week trope far more and think Section 31 at least offers a measure of plausibility rather than regular corruption at the higher levels of leadership.If they'd just stop mentioning Section 31 that'd work fine.
Bad admirals was mostly a TNG trope. Homefront aside, the worst thing an admiral ever did on DS9 was work with Section 31.Mileage will vary but man do I hate the bad admiral of the week trope far more and think Section 31 at least offers a measure of plausibility rather than regular corruption at the higher levels of leadership.
But, it strains credulity for me to have Picard, or Kirk or Sisko given spy work.
But this isn't just DS9. Starfleet admirals are corruptible and apparently that's just an occupational hazard. To me, that's ridiculous.Leyton aside, the worst thing an admiral ever did on DS9 was work with Section 31.
Starfleet admirals are corruptible and apparently that's just an occupational hazard. To me, that's ridiculous.
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