Yeah, remember when Sisko lectured Worf? "We don't put civilians at risk to save ourselves... blah blah blah"
There are no Maquis civilians.
Yeah, remember when Sisko lectured Worf? "We don't put civilians at risk to save ourselves... blah blah blah"
There are no Maquis civilians.
Not everyone living on planets in the neutral zone actually took up arms. There WERE civilians on those planets: children, elderly, other noncombatants. Sisko's actions did indeed drive those people off as well as actual Maquis.
I always though the problem with "For The Uniform" was just how convoluted the metaphor is. Poisoning a planet... for 50 years... in a way that only affects one type of person but not another -- there is no real-world situation like that. I can't think of any ability humans currently have which is THAT destructive, but also THAT targeted.
So we can never really make sense of it, because this overworked plotting fundamentally does not relate to real life, unlike Trek's more successfully executed moral-dilemma episodes.
The Maquis aren't like amoral organizations like the Viet Cong, which regularly enlisted children. They might not think much of able bodied people who sit out the fighting... but they'll keep the elderly, kids, and necessary colony workers safe.
...
But Eddington? Not so much. Look at what his faction did to informants like Cing'ta - stranding them alone on an inhospitable planet, left to die. Any group who would stoop that low, probably WOULD try to recruit kids.
Chakotay and Eddington were the same faction, at least according to the novels.Some Maquis cells just might have. Chakotay, for example. I don't see his group committing atrocities or recruiting children or anything like that. He and his group were a fairly decent sort.
But Eddington? Not so much. Look at what his faction did to informants like Cing'ta - stranding them alone on an inhospitable planet, left to die. Any group who would stoop that low, probably WOULD try to recruit kids.
There are no Maquis civilians.
I don't see Eddington as a kid recruiter either. Ruthless as he could be, he clearly saw himself as a reasonable man, as a hero even.
Yeah, that's a typical Star Trek thing. Things that don't cause any lingering damage until they kill you. I like it when they that about radiations, radiations are basically highly powered missiles going through your body destroying the molecules they run into... Their effect is cumulative and irreversible. We've never encountered radiations that were inoffensive until they were deadly, that's Sci. Fi. bullshit.That episode made it very clear that it was a slow enough poison for everyone to evacuate safely.
Poison an entire planet just to get one man!!! If that's not character assassination, nothing is.
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