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Women and positons of power in TOS

i heard NBC wanted Number One chucked because she didn't play well with test audiences including (the critical part) THE WOMEN!!!!!

srsly. apparently, even women thought she was a cold aloof bitch...

so, Gene should've given Spock the cold, aloof mystique and made Number One a regular woman...

biggity-bam.
 
But if there was some law or regulation that barred women from starship command, she wouldn't have been qualified. It seems clear on that basis that sex is not a qualification for starship command.

That, also, was never in dispute.

I'm with you on the starship thing.

Which has been my main point all along.

All I'm saying is that there was no official prohibition on women commanding starships.

We're in total agreement on this point. An Old Boys' Club would do it subtly or even unconsciously. There's no way such a stricture could be official. It's blatant discrimination.
 
It seems to me, one can't very well equate what happens in the Mirror Universe with "our" universe....

Equating it and making a speculative extrapolation, which is what I did, are two entirely different things. ["Can assume" does not mean "must assume."] Citing the Mirror universe in this instance is certainly as applicable as an alternate reality being used to augment the number of women we've seen in permanent command of a Starfleet vessel (which in that reality was by definition never a Federation starship). [To be frank, that whole scenario never made sense anyway. A Vulcan would never have been given (or allowed to retain) command of Earth's best ship after the fleet had dwindled to almost nothing.] As I said before, it's largely if not entirely a non-sequitur.

I wasn't using the Mirror universe as a definitive declaration. That's clear from context.

Ah, the regular fal[l]acy of "if someone is insane, that someone must also be stupid and incapable of using any sophistication." Insane does not stupid or incompetent make. The two have nothing to do with each other.

We're in complete agreement here.

The fact that she thinks Kirk wants to kill her, wanted to kill her, and only fear kept him from doing so, should pretty much tell anyone her idea of reality is quite a bit different from actual reality. It automatically brings any other claim she makes in question.

Agreed ... but considering Kirk's responses throughout the episode, the other evidence presented, and the fact that we saw no female starship captains during this period, her statement is well-substantiated.

[3DMaster explains why prejudice would not have been in play during this period.]

Prejudice and discrimination never makes sense in the light of reason. That doesn't mean it isn't there, perpetuated in some cases openly, in others surreptitiously and in still others unconsciously.

One can always say, "Well, this is what would have happened, and the discrimination would have been wiped out." But until it happens, it's there ... and there's plenty of canonical evidence to show that it hadn't happened yet in TOS as relates to one final barrier—the command of a Federation starship.

In addition, your point about what a Vulcan female would do to make certain she received a command is wildly off-topic, as I've explained time and again.

Uh, no, that myth really should go out the window. The network was okay with Number One, what they were not okay with was that the actress playing Number One was Gene's girlfriend/mistress.

Chapter and verse, please. Do you have any substantiation for calling that a "myth"? I'm certainly willing to stand corrected if so, but I've often read and heard that network shirts found the idea of a woman commanding a starship absurd. If it were as you assert, why would the network then have no problem with Gene's girlfriend having a recurring role as Nurse Chapel and the voice of the main computer?

Considering that Gene stepped forward to say that Lester's comment was sexist (and thus entirely valid as an explication of the status quo in that period), one would think he'd have dispelled the "network shirts didn't want a woman so close to the seat of power" myth, if myth it was. His silence seems condemnatory.

captcalhoun said:
Well, as far as I'm concerned, Erika Hernandez commanded the NX-02 and Madge Sinclair's character commanded the Saratoga, so I see no reason why women can't command ships.

Those two points do not bear sufficiently to justify your conclusion.

The fact that you don't see it doesn't mean it's not there. I see it ... T'Bonz sees it ... JTB and Vonstadt see it. The 1960's reflect the 2260's on this point. No revisionist historian can change that ... but see below.

And, once again, it's not a matter of "can't," but didn't. Stop obdurately trying steer this towards your already-discredited thesis that I'm a misogynist or even a chauvinist. I'm employing the on screen canon to explain what I saw and heard. I've never said you have to agree ... but you've done nothing substantive to dispel my take on it.

In fact, I hope we see a woman commanding a ship or a female admiral in Star Trek next May so we can end this once and for all.

That would be a retcon, and in a way a childish one that denies a part of Trek history ... but one we'd all be at least willing to accept.

If that does indeed happen, 3DMaster, the weight of canon would immediately shift to your position, and mine would have very little validity, if any.

Until then, though ....
 
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And, once again, it's not a matter of "can't," but didn't. Stop obdurately trying steer this towards your already-discredited thesis that I'm a misogynist or even a chauvinist. I'm employing the on screen canon to explain what I saw and heard. I've never said you have to agree ... but you've done nothing substantive to dispel my take on it.

EXCUSE ME! I WAS MERELY EXPRESSING MY GODDAMN OPINION!

as far as I am concerned a woman was seen commanding a ship in 2154 and in 2286 so there's no reason why a woman could not command one in 2260-something.

and it was hardly a thesis it was just a fucking opinion that your obstinate objection to the idea of a woman commanding a ship comes off as being rather mysoganistic.

THAT was really leaping to conclusions. i'm not out to get you. i never even seen you post before this thread. i don't know you and the way you've criticised me in that post, i don't care to either. i am merely expressing my opinion based on canon facts, Number One was first officer on a ship. Hernandez and Sinclair commanded ships. QE F'in D a woman can command a starship. anything else is a denial of reality akin to flat Earth, leprechauns and Santa Claus.
 
who mourns for adonis


SPOCK: Cut power, Mister Sulu. Lieutenant, we must restore communications with the landing party.
UHURA: I'm working, sir, but I can't do anything with this.
SPOCK: Oh?
UHURA: I might be able to rig up a subspace bypass circuit.

Thanks for the correction. Uhura finally got to give a decent suggestion in ST 6, when she helps them think through rigging up a plasma seeking torpedo. I though that was a decent touch. But they needed more of this. The women characters needed to be seen as inventive, productive, creative and brilliant -- like their male counterparts but they don't have to have a macho type personality

I like Uhura's personality. She was sweet, pleasant, sensitive and feminine. It seems to me that whenever they show a woman in a position of power in the media, they always make her so tough, assertive and emotionless. No reason a sweet, sensitive feminine personality cannot command a Star Ship. If she is sensitive it does not mean she won't fire the torpedo's when necessary.
 
EXCUSE ME! I WAS MERELY EXPRESSING MY GODDAMN OPINION!

If it's "God damned," you may want to think about another opinion.

...as far as I am concerned a woman was seen commanding a ship in 2154 and in 2286 so there's no reason why a woman could not command one in 2260-something.

And I accept that such is your take.

And it was hardly a thesis it was just a fucking opinion that your obstinate objection to the idea of a woman commanding a ship comes off as being rather mysoganistic.

But I don't object "to the idea of a woman commanding a ship." [See below.]

For the second time, in addition, it's "misogynistic" ... and since your, as you say it, "fucking opinion" on that matter was supported by no one else, and refuted comprehensively by yours truly, let it go.

You've mistaken "obstinate" for unshaken, by the way. I don't need to concede my position when it's by no means been refuted or even substantively challenged.

I don't know you and the way you've criticised me in that post, don't care to either.

Allow me to spend an appropriate amount of time regretting this unfortunate turn of events, captcalhoun.

[One nanosecond passes.]

There, that should do it.

Your first line in an above post:

JM[1776], I've got to ask, which woman pissed in your [Wheaties?] that you've got such a down on the entire gender?

That was inflammatory. You know it, and were called on it. Whether or not you choose to acknowledge that you were in the wrong is not my concern. It's patently obvious.

If you're too ignorant or obstinate—in this case an appropriate use of that word—to realize that you started with me, then you're hardly worth the effort.

I am merely expressing my opinion based on canon facts.

And I have done the same—amazingly enough, though, without implying that anyone who doesn't share my opinon is daft ... or in your case with me, a misogynist.

QE F'in D a woman can command a starship. Anything else is a denial of reality akin to flat Earth, leprechauns and Santa Claus.

Note that in rephrasing my argument with a fatal flaw so as to refute it that you're committing The Straw Man Fallacy.

You go back and find a passage in which I assert that women are incapable of commanding a starship and you'll have proven your point.

Good luck with that, by the way.

[Oh, and I believe in Santa Claus, if by that name you're referring to St. Nicholas.]
 
i know i mentioned her before but we saw at least one female commissioner in the series.
remember the commissioners had greater authority then starship captains and could order a captain around if the need was great enough.
 
It was the sixties, they were making tremendous strides just having #1, Uhura, Sulu, and even Spock on the bridge. Diversity was a brand new idea back then. Hell, they almost got rid of Spock just because he looked too much like the devil.Just having so many women as senior officers was quite a crazy concept back then.
 
Uh, no, that myth really should go out the window. The network was okay with Number One, what they were not okay with was that the actress playing Number One was Gene's girlfriend/mistress.
Oh really? Wow this I did not know. I can seriously see their reservations but wow I had not heard GR tanked the Female XO simply because Majel couldnt play the part.

That would've been a landmark role for Women then if he had simple recast it. Not to mention added a nice new depth for Trek and for Kirk had they been friends like Kirk was with Gary Mitchell.

Aww well missed opportunities again.

Unfortunately Roddenberry was thinking with his dick at the time.
 
i heard NBC wanted Number One chucked because she didn't play well with test audiences including (the critical part) THE WOMEN!!!!!

srsly. apparently, even women thought she was a cold aloof bitch...

No, they're comment was "Who does she think she is!?" In short, they so couldn't grasp women in equal roles of men, that they looked upon her as a woman with a superiority complex and a chip on her shoulder toward men. They also felt intimidated, and possibly jealous.

The thing is, NBC didn't care all that much. In fact, they figured that the controversy might bring them more ratings than they would lose.

It was a factor, but ultimately they told Gene Majel couldn't play the part. Nothing stood in the way of him recasting the role.

It seems to me, one can't very well equate what happens in the Mirror Universe with "our" universe....

Equating it and making a speculative extrapolation, which is what I did, are two entirely different things. ["Can assume" does not mean "must assume."] Citing the Mirror universe in this instance is certainly as applicable as an alternate reality being used to augment the number of women we've seen in permanent command of a Starfleet vessel (which in that reality was by definition never a Federation starship). [To be frank, that whole scenario never made sense anyway. A Vulcan would never have been given (or allowed to retain) command of Earth's best ship after the fleet had dwindled to almost nothing.] As I said before, it's largely if not entirely a non-sequitur.

I wasn't using the Mirror universe as a definitive declaration. That's clear from context.

And it shouldn't even be used as that. Mirror Kirk happily uses a crew woman for his own personal pleasure - that place is so utterly different from "our" Star Trek universe there's nothing there that can be used to say anything about "our" Star Trek universe, least of all the status of women.

Prejudice and discrimination never makes sense in the light of reason. That doesn't mean it isn't there, perpetuated in some cases openly, in others surreptitiously and in still others unconsciously.
I wasn't talking about the prejudice itself, I'm talking about how it doesn't make any sense for the Star Trek universe as we've seen it.

One can always say, "Well, this is what would have happened, and the discrimination would have been wiped out." But until it happens, it's there ... and there's plenty of canonical evidence to show that it hadn't happened yet in TOS as relates to one final barrier—the command of a Federation starship.
But it did happen, or the Vulcans would never have been part of the Federation. They would never have joined a place where women weren't allowed to captain a ship.

In addition, your point about what a Vulcan female would do to make certain she received a command is wildly off-topic, as I've explained time and again.
No, it's not, it's directly on topic. It shows how inconceivable and impossible it is for such an "Old Boys' Club" to survive more than a century after the Federation was formed, if someway it even managed to exist to begin with.

Chapter and verse, please. Do you have any substantiation for calling that a "myth"? I'm certainly willing to stand corrected if so,
"Inside Star Trek". The little book that opened up the behind the scenes.

but I've often read and heard that network shirts found the idea of a woman commanding a starship absurd. If it were as you assert, why would the network then have no problem with Gene's girlfriend having a recurring role as Nurse Chapel and the voice of the main computer?
A voice and a barely there recurring role versus the female lead of the show that stands practically as much in the limelight as the captain? You can't see how that is a massive difference that might reflect badly on the show, the very creator behind it, and thus ratings should it come out?

Considering that Gene stepped forward to say that Lester's comment was sexist (and thus entirely valid as an explication of the status quo in that period),
Actually, I never listen to what a writer or creator says about a subject. It's not important, and doesn't really matter. Just like a painter's ideas don't matter, what matters is what someone feels when looking at his/her painting. With a tv show and movies this is even more so, as there isn't just one artist, but many. What one of the artists may think, may be completely contrary to what another thngs. And as each puts their own vision and ideas in the project, it's an amalgam of many. What matters is what's on screen, nothing else.

To illustrate, do you think the writer who wrote Kirk and McCoy be reverent and in awe of T'Pau of Vulcan would think Kirk and McCoy are misogynists who will happily go, "She could have been as happy as any other woman."?

one would think he'd have dispelled the "network shirts didn't want a woman so close to the seat of power" myth, if myth it was. His silence seems condemnatory.
Dispelled? Who do you think STARTED the myth to begin with? How good would the "Great Bird of the Galaxy", Mr. "Progressive Reform", Mr. "Equal Visionary" look if he said, "Well, there were some women who didn't like Number One in test screenings, but really the suits liked a powerful woman on the bridge. But you see, I was thinking with my dick at the time and put my hot girlfriend in the lead role. The Network's didn't like that. And really, if I couldn't put any of my sex buddies in the role, I saw no point in recasting Number One."

Well, there goes that image, his status as a near saint and probably most of his income, which he got from selling Star Trek collectibles which people happily bought from Mr. Saint. Buying from Mr. "I think with my dick" though - not so much.
 
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Of course, just because someone is able to do a job, doesn't mean that they Want to. Even without Sexual Discrimination, maybe most women wouldnt be seen dead commanding a Star Ship! Very Infra Dig dontcha know ;)
 
Face it, folks. TOS was a product of misogynistic times. But we know better now, eh?

I just think they don't script the female regular stars very well. There are very few of them that have likable personalities - unlike their male counterparts who are often very likable. It may not be a female in the position of power that is the turn off rather it may be that they don't know how to give us likable female regular stars. Many of the female guest stars were likable, and sometimes in a position of power (T'Pau, Elaan, Carol Marcus, Romulan commander, Arial Shaw). TOS's regular females were more likable (Uhura & Rand) than most of the female regulars in the spin-offs though they had lower power positions. Wish the writers could get it together and give us a likable female in a powerful position. I bet that this movie does just that with the character of Uhura.
 
And it shouldn't even be used as that ... that place is so utterly different from "our" Star Trek universe there's nothing there that can be used to say anything about "our" Star Trek universe, least of all the status of women.

I disagree, strongly.

It is supposed to be a twisted reflection of the 'main' universe, and since Kirk succeeds Pike there directly via assassination, one reasonably assumes he succeeds Pike here directly via assignment, because those are the methods employed in each respective universe.

Thus, in neither universe did Number One succeed to permanent command of Enterprise. It is a valid interpolation based on the available information.

Again, I'm not saying Number One didn't go on to command a frigate, destroyer or other ship, or that she didn't fully merit a starship command—only that she didn’t get one during this period.

I wasn't talking about the prejudice itself, I'm talking about how it doesn't make any sense for the Star Trek universe as we've seen it.

Obviously we don't and won't agree on that. As I've said, I'm trying to reconcile disparate and perhaps even contradictory canonical information, as opposed to ignoring that which I find distasteful and emphasizing what we with our ‘enlightened’ 21st century mentality consider proper behavior.

But it did happen, or the Vulcans would never have been part of the Federation. They would never have joined a place where women weren't allowed to captain a ship.

No, it's not, it's directly on topic. It shows how inconceivable and impossible it is for such an "Old Boys' Club" to survive more than a century after the Federation was formed, if someway it even managed to exist to begin with.

So it’s your assertion that the Vulcans show no sexual discrimination, and further would have no tolerance of it? Not so.

In "Amok Time," it's established that a Vulcan woman becomes the property of the man after the marriage is confirmed. This is no blessed union of equals, but rather a subservient/superior relationship between bride and groom. Isn't it “inconceivable and impossible” to think that a modern, strong, dynamic 23rd-century Vulcan woman would tolerate such a relationship—a legally-binding relationship, one sanctioned by Vulcan's strongest female … who was, by the way, there to perform and thus de facto support and sanction the ceremony?

And yet there it is—undeniable canon from this very era.

In "Journey to Babel," the below exchange occurs, and confirms the above interpretation:

Amanda: Shall we continue, Captain? My husband did request it.
Kirk: It sounded more like a command.
Amanda: Of course. He's a Vulcan. I'm his wife.

She even goes on to say that the Vulcan way is "a better way than ours." While she's at that point speaking more about the father-son relationship, it still bears in large measure on the fact that she's not considered Sarek's equal, by either Sarek or herself. This is another piece of evidence that insofar as equality of the sexes is concerned, humans may well be ahead of Vulcans in the 22nd and 23rd centuries, which explains both Hernandez and T'Pol. It is the human-administered pre-Federation Starfleet in which both make their mark.

Those two canonical occurrences (unlike T'Pol in permanent command of Enterprise in a future that never unfolded) decisively cast the idea that TOS’ Vulcans had established complete equality of the sexes to the four winds. Clearly more than just the vestiges of 'traditional' gender roles existed on Vulcan during this time ... and just as clearly they existed within Starfleet, at least (and, hopefully, at most) at the very highest level. It's also just as clear that these roles exist alongside other, more progressive (and in my opinion proper) attitudes—attitudes that allow for T'Pau to turn down a seat on the Federation Council and bully a powerful admiral into forgiving Kirk's transgression ... that allow for a female ambassador to earn great honor ... etc.

Sexism, like most forms of discrimination, has to be challenged aggressively and weeded out. Sometimes you don't get all of it, and it takes root once more. This is obviously the case in the Star Trek of the 23rd century, at least insofar as TOS is concerned, where absolute equality for women has taken something of a hit—not a shattering one, but a noticeable one. It infuriated Lester, and her already twisted mind fixated on that as an excuse for her own shortcomings and problems. Kirk also noticed the disparity. His comments in "Turnabout Intruder" confirm this for anyone not looking to explain it away as opposed to simply explaining it.

Inside Star Trek, the little book that opened up the behind the scenes.

That seems to me a strong indication that you may be right on this point. See below.

A voice and a barely there recurring role versus the female lead of the show that stands practically as much in the limelight as the captain? You can't see how that is a massive difference that might reflect badly on the show, the very creator behind it, and thus ratings should it come out?

In the 1960's? Even numerous women in that period might have scoffed—wrongly, granted, with the hindsight we have today—at women in command of a starship.

You're looking on such shenanigans as being the exception rather than the rule or a common occurrence in this period. The phrase "casting couch" wasn't invented on a lark.

I think it's a difference between reflecting very poorly and reflecting extremely poorly, to be frank. It's a difference, not a massive difference.

Actually, I never listen to what a writer or creator says about a subject. It's not important, and doesn't really matter. Just like a painter's ideas don't matter, what matters is what someone feels when looking at his/her painting.

Your analogy is flawed: If a painter was using the written word to convey his ideas, the spoken word would bear more on it. You can't necessarily explain colors on canvas with words. You can, however, often explain words with more words.

With a tv show and movies this is even more so, as there isn't just one artist, but many.

Not in a situation where the story creator is speaking, and simply confirming what is apparent to those not looking to whitewash an unpleasant reality.

What one of the artists may think, may be completely contrary to what another thinks. And as each puts their own vision and ideas in the project, it's an amalgam of many. What matters is what's on screen, nothing else.

To illustrate, do you think the writer who wrote Kirk and McCoy be reverent and in awe of T'Pau of Vulcan would think Kirk and McCoy are misogynists who will happily go, "She could have been as happy as any other woman."?

Like you said ... it's an amalgam. Contradictions and paradoxes exist in any person's thinking—in any society's moral infrastructure. They're obviously there on Vulcan and in the Federation Starfleet during this period.

I think this point started the entire discussion: Early on in "Turnabout Intruder," Lester makes the comment about Kirk's world of starship command not permitting women, and how it's not fair. Kirk agrees. It's not a placating tone; it's not an attempt to defuse Lester. It's wholehearted agreement with her that such is bullshit. The conclusion one must draw is that he's not a misogynist or even a staunch chauvinist, but instead can see that such an obvious injustice still exists in this period, and disapproves of it.

As a matter of fact, we could lionize Kirk even further by speculating that during his stint as Chief of Starfleet Operations between TOS and The Motion Picture, he put the final nail in that particular coffin by making certain women were given starships. Maybe, just maybe, Madge Sinclair's character owes her command to the notorious James T. Kirk? Certainly this would reconcile all the canonical facts we've seen (as opposed to simply ignoring the ones we find unseemly), reflect on Kirk well, and put the issue to bed once and for all.

Who do you think started the myth to begin with?

That's another good point.
 
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In "Amok Time," it's established that a Vulcan woman becomes the property of the man after the marriage is confirmed

no, it is a consequence of putting forth the challenge.

if this was true in all cases i dont see the most powerful vulcan being a woman.

and i notice that the power of the commissioners and that one was a female isnt being addrssed.

as for mirror universe number one since she isnt mentioned we dont know for sure.
but if mu kirk was willing to kill pike to gain enterprise logically he would have taken out next in line also.
 
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No, it is a consequence of putting forth the challenge.

:vulcan:

So you become the property of a man only in the case of a challenge, but not otherwise? That, too, would represent the vestiges of a barbaric, chauvinistic and very arguably misogynistic method for settling the dispute. Your dilution, even were I to grant it (which I don't), doesn't much support your case.

You could argue, instead, that T'Pol's marriage in Enterprise doesn't mention becoming property, but ... we don't hear the whole thing, do we? Don't they fade to black/cut away/cue music during the latter stages of the ceremony? I don't recall.

if this was true in all cases i dont see the most powerful vulcan being a woman.

The fact that you don't see it is irrelevant. It's right there.

Considering that T'Pau also says, "This is the Vulcan heart, this is the Vulcan soul," both marriage ceremony and challenge are considered sacred. It's ingrained sexism justified as tradition.

and i notice that the power of the commissioners and that one was a female isnt being addrssed.

Why should it be? Being a commissioner wouldn't entail being an intrepid explorer, a master of high adventure that being a commander of a starship does.

as for mirror universe number one since she isnt mentioned we dont know for sure.

Agreed.

but if mu kirk was willing to kill pike to gain enterprise logically he would have taken out next in line also.

Would they not have mentioned, then, instead, "Assassination of Captain Christopher Pike and others," or some such?
 
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So you become the property of a man only in the case of a challenge, but not otherwise? That, too, would represent the vestiges of a barbaric, chauvinistic and very arguably misogynistic method for settling the dispute. Your dilution, even were I to grant it (which I don't), doesn't much support your case.
I think you are applying the human terms of chauvanism and mysogyny to a different culture where their reproduction biology is very different than a human's. For a race that enters a heat period and the males must mate or die, the idea of a female becoming the property of the victor may not be chauvanistic but a matter of survival. Often laws exist to protect the more vulnerable of society. In the case of Pon-Farr the males seem more vulnerable than the females. What would be the purpose of a challenge if she could refuse the winner afterward? What if she feigned a headache after the marriage for the next week and he died because she wouldn't give him any? We aren't sure what "becoming the property of" entails on Vulcan nor do we know what is required of the males to obtain a female. The males likewise might become the property of the female too.

Considering that T'Pau also says, "This is the Vulcan heart, this is the Vulcan soul," both marriage ceremony and challenge are considered sacred. It's ingrained sexism justified as tradition.
It sounds to me like ingrained survival of the species. They probably started out raping when they went into heat. But society benefited from monogamy so marriage and mind links evolved for the benefit of society as a whole. The laws more likely uphold marriage and survival of the species in a society where mating becomes a matter of life or death.
 
T'PAU: He will have to fight for her. It is her right. T'Pring, thee has chosen the kal-if-fee, the challenge. Thee are prepared to become the property of the victor?

looking at tpaus word it very seems that becoming property is a result of the challenge.

for all we know if both spock and tpring had not let this get to the point of spock actually being in pon farr things could have gone differently.

but the stakes pretty high of life and death for the male once they are in pon farr
so i could see why things with a high price to pay are placed on the female who issues a challenge at that point.

i always wondered why neither set of parents were present for something they put into motion to go a little off topic.
could have been a sign of protest of how spock and trping were both dealing with it.

instead of perhaps approaching the parents to let them deal with it or releasing her himself spock runs off and just ignores what could happen.
he is just lucky enterprise was close enough for once to get him home in time.

and maybe tpring after a fashion was really counting on that.
consideriing she seems to have already taken up with stonn.

and frankly from what tpring says at the end there isnt a lot of teeth to the property thing..

If your Captain were victor, he would not want me, and so I would have Stonn. If you were victor you would free me because I had dared to challenge, and again I would have Stonn. But if you did not free me, it would be the same. For you would be gone, and I would have your name and your property, and Stonn would still be there.

and i have wondered about you would be gone line..
that spock would go back to enterprise..
that the federation would prosecute and vulcan would stand aside

or would vulcan authorities themselves prosecute because of the illogical way spock dealt with the situation.
 
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