- Joined
- Jul 29, 2024
What happened with Reed in Section 31?
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Michelle Yeoh's insufferable excuse of a character could have halfway worked as some intentionally over the top and cheesy villain for a handful of designated Mirror Universe episodes, much like how Mirror Kira halfway worked as a recurring "silly" villain or how Mirror Kirk or even Mirror Archer were entertainingly evil and maliciousJust watched 31 this morning and I'm still recovering. First, Michelle Yeoh is a terrible actress, like porn-tier, but she looks good in skin-tight black leather. As for the movie, I can't believe how un-Star Trek it was, and I don't even really like Star Trek all that much. It was 90 minutes of quipping, swearing, torturing, and characters trying to out-weep each other over how bad their lives were. And everyone talked like they were from 2025; there was a character who said shit like "I love that for us" and "You're a bad bitch."
Wrong.the worst thing about Section 31 will always be Malcolm Reed.
I think that is selling picard a bit short. he was fully aware, even if he'd wildly disagree (but still willing to discuss it).If someone like Picard was the grand poobah of the Federation, Earth would be a giant Ketracel-white production facility by the end of the show. Or a Klingon mining camp. Or a Romulan owned pile of dust.
eh, she's fine when it matters and in the right role (which this one wasn't).Michelle Yeoh is a terrible actress, like porn-tier
It had Loki type potential but they already branded Georgiou as “pretty cannibal lady,” you want a redemption arc for her? You’d have to retcon the entire Terran holocaust like it never happened, so what’s the point of even dragging out this Asian GILF?Michelle Yeoh's insufferable excuse of a character could have halfway worked as some intentionally over the top and cheesy villain for a handful of designated Mirror Universe episodes

Mirror Ezri is still hot as fuck.“The Emperor’s New Cloak”
Fixed that for ya, bud.MirrorEzri is still hot as fuck.
up until STD ruined the mirror universe by dickriding it, it was more of a fun "what if" where star trek was allowed to have some bizarro fun, kinda like halloween.That’s the goddamn problem with every mirror universe show, they’re caught in this schizophrenia of trying to tell you “this is serious drama!” while flinging pies at your face.
Fucking kek.
Everyone regardless of profession knows a guy like that.
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>tfw asked what the fuck happened
This is the reason why I come here, lol.
Season 4 of Enterprise started having Section 31 show up for whatever reason and Reed was supposedly part of it or whatever.What happened with Reed in Section 31?
I think there’s an episode of ENT where they’re like, “Actually S31 is named after the Starfleet charter, not the Federation charter."Season 4 of Enterprise started having Section 31 show up for whatever reason and Reed was supposedly part of it or whatever.
I think that is selling picard a bit short. he was fully aware, even if he'd wildly disagree (but still willing to discuss it).
for all his positions he never struck me as someone unrealistic and leftarded. like meeting the dude who genocided a whole race out of revenge, and instead of going full retard accepted the situation and that he was beyond his judgement. same reason Q worked in TNG because how the writers let picard engage with him. didn't work with sisko and janeway was hit or miss.
How the fuck does that make sense for a species with no concept of linear time?It was a plot device in STO, with the Prophets could only temporarily shift the fleet for X amount of time and the time was up. Player character had to retrieve that female founder from the Federation holding facility 4028 to get the fleet to stand down.
The whole Rodenberry Box concept where early TNG was aggressively kept within Gene's exasperatingly if hilariously puritanical view of how humanity "should be" as a whole and with regards to individual characters and groups (i.e. everybody is morally upright and honest, there is no conflict between characters or emotional hangups, authority figures are always benevolent and enlightened, selflessness is always rewarded, society is perfect and free of all want and misery) was something the OG writers of TNG and their immidiate successors who ran DS9, VOY, and ENT chafed under for years and yet they still tried to keep true to even when Gene no longer had control.Section 31’s very existence is one of the most dangerous concepts Star Trek has ever introduced— but not in the way the brain-dead Kurtzman thinks. It’s because it undermines the core ideals of the franchise.
It’s not that they operate in the shadows or engage in morally questionable acts that makes them dangerous. Their very existence implies that all the shining, morally upright heroes like Picard are merely children playing games in a glorified playground, while the grown ups do the real work. That Star Trek’s ideals falter when confronted with the universe’s darkest realities—that the Federation’s ideas don’t really work.
Picard was a deeply moral man, which is why fans admire him. But he would never have made the choices Sisko did in “In the Pale Moonlight.” Covering up the assassination of a senator, asking help from a Tal-Shiar agent to do something morally questionable, forging evidence,and never revealing the deception? That’s not Picard.
There’s a reason the Enterprise never showed up, beyond budget constraints: they wouldn’t have sacrificed their morals to win. And the dominion war wasn’t a war that could be won by moral grandstanding.
DS9’s answer was complex. Sisko sacrificed his soul to save billions, but even then, it was their so called naive ideals like compassion—curing the Founders instead of Section 31’s genocide—that ultimately saved the day.
I think DS9’s answer is that you can’t always quote Shakespeare, brag about humanity, and lecture alien species to win. Sometimes hard choices must be made, but that doesn’t mean you have to become a monster. That’s what made Sisko and his crew the right people to save the Federation from the Dominion over Picard and the Enterprise crew,
...all of which were given a currentyear corporate woke paintjob just to be extra fucking insufferablestories based around big splosions and gunfights and seething soap opera tier melodrama between the characters along with predictable "evil government conspiracy" or "edgy dystopia" plotlines
Ya know now that I think about it, a perfect way to show how genuinely fucking sickening the manner she was presented by the writers and expected to be received by the audience based on how much the protagonist decides to like her is to contrast with Sisko's relationship with DukatIt had Loki type potential but they already branded Georgiou as “pretty cannibal lady,” you want a redemption arc for her? You’d have to retcon the entire Terran holocaust like it never happened, so what’s the point of even dragging out this Asian GILF?
Faggot Doctor: To Philippa Georgiou, the most stubborn patient I've ever had. Considering what some of you have put me through, that's saying a lot. I wish I could have done more. And she knew that, even if she bit your head off every chance she got.
Tilly the Space Whale: To Philippa Georgiou. She was tough. She was a force to be reckoned with. And she pretty much redefined the word "badass."
Sideshave Cyborg dyke: Oh, and can I just add that she had the best walk. With that coat and those boots?
Shaniqua helm officer: And nothing intimidated her, not in any universe.
Middle aged dyke who looks like a guy: She had no tact, and, God, I loved that about her.
Alien played by Doug Jones whose species she used to literally fucking eat: She was always honest. Punishingly so. Her barbs, however piercing, were utterly glorious.
Shaniqua Protagonist: She was a pain in the ass. And she meant more to me than I could ever put in words. Georgiou was the wall I crashed into over and over and over again. She was a tormentor, but a truth-teller. She was a mirror I never knew I needed. Like a mother almost. Like a sister, almost. I loved her… and hated her. Sometimes both at the same time. More than anything, she was my friend. She was the most unexpected of gifts, and I will miss the hell out of her.
After rewatching the scene, I got no clue. Best I can do is quoting the scene with the PC meeting the Prophets and asking about the Dominion fleet. So maybe someone reading this might have an explainable answer.How the fuck does that make sense for a species with no concept of linear time?
Prophet One: You are not grateful. We saved Bajor at the Sisko's insistence. It cost him dearly.
Prophet Two: We moved the fleet. But we needed to put it back.
Prophet Three: A hand that remains closed.
Prophet Four: Ceases to be a hand.
Prophet Four: The fleet needs to exist. As you must return.