After his bone headed decision in I Borg, who could blame her?
How can Picard have an ethical, legal or professional duty to abandon and violate his ethical and legal oath?
After his bone headed decision in I Borg, who could blame her?
Space... the final frontier.
These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise.
Its five year/ongoing mission to explore strange new worlds.
To seek out new life, and new civilizations.
To boldly go where no man/one has gone before.
Did I miss anything? Nowhere does it mention that the Enterprise mission is the same mission for the entirety of Starfleet.
There's obviously a lot more to the Starfleet charter than a motto. One that includes empowering individuals to kill on the Federation's behalf in its defense.
Because it would protect the group of people (these in federation) that he supposedly is sworn to protect.How can Picard have an ethical, legal or professional duty to abandon and violate his ethical and legal oath?
I was watching that episode(s) not too long ago, and they give you the impression that it did effect all Borg and forever changed them. I don't know if part 1 and 2 have different writers, but at the very end of part 2, Hugh finally makes the statement "We can't go back to the collective"In hindsight, it turns out that releasing Hugh back into the collective only would have affected his own ship and wouldn't have spread to the entire galaxy-wide hive
Because it would protect the group of people (these in federation) that he supposedly is sworn to protect.
One of Picard's superior officers told Picard that his decision was wrong and if the opportunity presented itself again he was to destroy the Borg..
I sometimes wonder if Picard truely has a grasp on what "the enumerated binding principles of Starfleet" actually are.Yes, which Picard felt was contrary to not only his own ideals but the enumerated binding principles of Starfleet so there's at least a significant amount of disagreement about what should get prioritized.
How can Picard have an ethical, legal or professional duty to abandon and violate his ethical and legal oath?
Because it would protect the group of people (these in federation) that he supposedly is sworn to protect.
"They invade our space and we fall back. They assimilate entire worlds and we fall back."
One of Picard's superior officers told Picard that his decision was wrong and if the opportunity presented itself again he was to destroy the Borg..
I sometimes wonder if Picard truely has a grasp on what "the enumerated binding principles of Starfleet" actually are.
Admiral Nechayev (Descent): "Your priority is to safeguard the lives of Federation citizens, not to wrestle with your conscience."
Not just Picard's oath, Picard went on that he is bound not just by an oath, but also bound by his "conscience to uphold certain principles," in other words Picard personal point of view outside of his oath.That line, in response to him objecting that her actions would violate his oath , seems to admit that that being the priority is her opinion, that the oath itself does go against her preferred course of action but she feels it shouldn't be considered and wishes others would also disregard it.
It is pretty disturbing that an admiral and other leaders feel committing genocide against an opponent group should be the expected, default standard decision if there's the opportunity to do so and I think it's better if captains, other crew and different admiral-level leaders consider that antithetical to what the organization should be and how it should act.
^Part of the reluctance to consider Starfleet the military is that if that a military organization generally does have the connotation of being pretty aggressive or even ruthless in tactics if not in general. Considering it the military would make the organization in past series generally seem oddly docile and non and/or the characters deceptive as they claim their missions and main purposes are peaceful.
That line, in response to him objecting that her actions would violate his oath, seems to admit that that being the priority is her opinion, that the oath itself does go against her preferred course of action but she feels it shouldn't be considered and wishes others would also disregard it.
Admiral Janeway from the futureAfter his bone headed decision in I Borg, who could blame her?
Like Admiral Pressman, Picard must have some powerful friends in positions of authority.
I sometimes wonder if Picard truely has a grasp on what "the enumerated binding principles of Starfleet" actually are.
Admiral Nechayev (Descent): "Your priority is to safeguard the lives of Federation citizens, not to wrestle with your conscience."
Data (and LaForge) constructed the invasive program, and Data was fully aware of what it would do. Data, who has been shown to disobey orders when he thought they to be wrong/illegal, had no problem constructing the program.
I (personally) feel that Picard later came to realize that what he did was foolish and wrong. His "we fall back" speech indicated that the Federation suffered defeats at the hands of the Borg prior to the invasion of First Contact.
In the first scene of FC, we're told of the destruction of the Ivor Prime colony. Later, starships are destroyed and people killed, before the Cube itself is destroyed.
But which one of them reflects the standards of the majority of Starfleet officers?Looks like he learned what to do differently from what Picard did.
Aside from Garak murdering Vreenak, it is important to remember that Sisko did have proper authorization from Starfleet to do everything else seen in In the Pale Moonlight.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.