Personally I would probably put “Devil’s Due” at number one, but I realized not everyone can have such a refined taste in Trek.

  • ryan
    link
    fedilink
    111 year ago

    I have to say I was absolutely blown away by Ad Astra Per Aspera because it so clearly showed, but didn’t explicitly hammer in, the complicity of the majority and their complete lack of understanding of how laws can be applied separately to a minority group.

    Pike said “put me on the stand and let me tell a story and we’ll get out of this mess” because it’s always worked for him to get out of rule-breaking. April became upset that it was so obviously pointed out how the law applies differently to him, and yet after his witness statement he was still stuck on “I didn’t get to tell a nice story about Una” as if that would have sorted everything out, because it’s always worked for him to get out of rule-breaking - even after it was shoved in his face how differently the law applied to him.

    Even Chin-Riley herself started with “put me on the stand and let me tell a story and explain myself” because it always worked for her previously, because she had always been seen by the Federation as a member of the acceptable majority class, and she hadn’t yet come to terms with how that would no longer work now that she had been deemed “unacceptable” by society.

    As far as sci-fi goes, this was an excellent sci-fi story. It parallels a current issue in society without explicitly calling it out, which allows people to reframe and re-consider their thinking without being subject to pre-existing biases. It also showed off so clearly how a “utopic society” is only utopic for those deemed acceptable. This is what I consider to be “excellent Star Trek”.

    • maegul (he/they)
      link
      fedilink
      2
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Absolutely this. Best part of the episode, for me, was the examination of April.

      A) It’s a not uncommon legal tactic for the defence, to just mess shit up and cast doubt over the whole trial.

      B) It, as you point out so well, laid out the morality of the issue and the cultural hurdles it was running into … the kicker being the judge’s statement at the end of the examination that it was all “stricken from the record”, which on the one hand made perfect legal sense, but on the other perfectly demonstrated how hard it is to even talk about the issue from an outsider’s perspective. All of which also gets back to A … Neera knew what she was doing and let it set the tone for what the trial was really about, even though it wouldn’t register legally, it would register in everyone’s guts, where she had the actual legal argument coming to stick the landing.