Saturday, November 26, 2022

JAMES T. KIRK, A CAPTAIN WHO OBEYS THE PRIME DIRECTIVE

 


Introduction

There are many myths about Captain Kirk, which is an odd thing considering he is a fictional character.  Nevertheless, there are a number of common misconceptions with the character’s popular image that don’t exist as part of the source material.  One example is what is typically dubbed “Shatner speak.”  This is explained as the act of talking as if there is a period after the end of every word.  This is most famous satirized by Jim Carrey during his time with Saturday Night Live.  Another myth is that he is frequent rule breaker, who does whatever he feels is right regardless of orders.  This is even popularized by the show itself most recently in the series Lower Decks where frequent rule-breaker Beckett Mariner calls herself a “Kirk-type” to justify her actions.  Then there of course the classical claim that he is a crazy womanizer as popularized most recently by the pregnant “Kirk was here” cosplayers.

  One of interesting things about the Star Trek franchise is it is so large that many fans, if not most, come into it sideways.  They don’t start at the beginning they start at whatever series was on when they begin watching.  When they come across the original series it is basically history for them.  It is not at all unusual to see on Star Trek fan forums this question posted, “So I just started watching the original series, pretty good so far, when does the whole Shatner-speak start?  I am almost through the first season and I haven’t seen it yet.” There are a few scenes where Kirk does talk slowly however these are normally in situations where the Captain has to be careful with his words.  He is in diplomatic situation or something similar.  The best example I think of is Kirk’s first scene with Khan in “The Wrath of Khan.”  

Over the years there have been many articles debunking these many myths.  Larry Womack of the Huffington Post wrote a great article in 2013 titled, In Defense of (the Original) James T. Kirk, where he tackles Kirk’s reputation of being a rule breaker and womanizer in the aftermath of the Kelvin Universe Star Trek films’ version of Captain Kirk, and John E Price of Medium wrote a similar piece called You Either Believe in Yourself or You Don’t: Star Trek Discovery, James T. Kirk, and the Power of Traditional Memory. Internet essayist and Star Trek enthusiast Steve Shives created a great video in 2018 titled Is Captain Kirk Actually a Womanizer to which he takes down that myth flat.

The myth that I want to tackle is the one that states Captain Kirk is not only a rule breaker but that he repeatedly violates Starfleet’s General Order Number One: The Prime Directive.  (As if you couldn’t tell that by the title.) As all fans know, the Prime Directive states that Starfleet will not interfere in the internal development of a foreign society, and if said society has not yet developed warp drive Starfleet is not even allowed to let that society know that Starfleet and the Federation exist.  The reason the Prime Directive exists is the Federation does not want the exploration of the universe to have the same devastating effect on alien societies that European exploration and colonization did to the many aboriginal societies of Earth.  However, it has it has its drawbacks and some would argue that Prime Directive itself is immoral.  For if a Starfleet vessel were to discover a world that was like 1930s Earth where fascist regimes were engaged in genocide of persecuted peoples.  Then that vessel would not do a thing to stop it.

"No identification of self or mission. No interference with the social development of said planet. No references to space, or the fact that there are other worlds, or more advanced civilizations." Dr. McCoy in "Bread and Circuses"

Kirk’s reputation of ignoring the Prime Directive is a recognized trait of his character and is mentioned both within Star Trek (Remember Janeway’s quote about 23rd century officers being quick to draw their phasers and slow to invoke the Prime Directive?) and without.  There was an episode of JAG where the character Bud Roberts was able to get information from a terrorist by going over Star Trek trivia.  The incident is initiated by an argument over Kirk’s violation of the Prime Directive to which Bud says Kirk did “all the time.”

This is a myth.  Kirk only violated the Prime Directive once.  Yes, that is right I said it.  He only did it once, and it was under an extreme situation.  Now I know what you are thinking: “I have seen Star Trek X-number of times and I saw him violate the Prime Directive X-number of times much higher than 1.”  I know but you’re wrong and with that let’s go over Kirk’s relationship with the Prime Directive.             

When the Captain is Clearly Obeying

People are so caught up calling out Kirk for allegedly violating the Prime Directive that they forget how much he is a defender of it.  A good example of Kirk obeying is the episode “Bread and Circuses.”  In this episode the Enterprise travels to one of the many fake Earths that they encounter during Star Trek’s classical run.  On this fake Earth they find that the Roman Empire has survived until the 20th century and they now have their gladiator games on TV.  A Federation merchant ship was stranded on the planet and Kirk is looking to retrieve them.  While they are there, they find some underground rebels.  After hanging out with the rebels they are captured by Roman authorities and taken to the Proconsul.  It turns out the Merchant Captain told the Proconsul everything about Starfleet and the Federation, including the Prime Directive.  In this episode Kirk has the means and the motive to overwhelm the Romans of Fake Earth with fire power and take the Federation citizens there by force.  However, Captain Kirk is restrained the by the Prime Directive, understanding that he and his crew will have to come up with a less direct way of getting the actions that they desire accomplished.  Which they do, they manage to remove the Federation elements from the Fake Earth with no one from the general population being the wiser.

Kirk is trying to find a way out of this mess without violating the Prime Directive

Another example is the episode “The Paradise Syndrome.” In this episode Kirk loses his memory and for a while is living with a Native American tribe whose ancestors were placed on this planet by the ancient Preservers.  There Kirk falls in love with a local woman named Miramanee and marries her.  When Kirk fails the tribe in a major way, they turn on him and stone him as a fraud, Miramanee tries to save him and is killed as a result.  Once Kirk’s memory is restored, he does not go back to the tribe and explain to them why they were wrong and blame them for killing Miramanee.  He recognizes the Prime Directive and ceases all contact with those people. He doesn’t even bother to explain to them how to turn on the Preserver device.

He interferes here but stops when his memory returns

Someone Else Already Interfered

The first batch of Captain Kirk’s so-called “violations” are actually already covered in an established portion of Starfleet law.  That if interference on an alien culture has already happened then a Starfleet crew is allowed to correct the imbalance, try to expunge the interference, or cut the losses and make the best out of a bad situation. The first of these can be seen in the episode “A Private Little War” here Captain Kirk returns to a planet named Neural that he once visited as a young lieutenant, I am assuming before he ran into the vampire cloud, only to discover that the Klingons have shown up and armed the villagers with advanced weaponry and sent them to attack the hill people. Upon confirming the Klingons involvement Kirk arms and trains the hill people with the same weapons that Klingons provided the villagers.  Kirk isn’t breaking the Prime Directive here; he is giving the planet a course correction due to Klingon interference.

Looks like we already have interference

  The next example of this is “A Piece of the Action.”  In this episode the Enterprise travels to the planet Sigma Iotia II.  The planet was last visited by the Horizon over a century ago. At the time the Prime Directive had yet to be established and the crew thought nothing about leaving behind a book called The Chicago Mobs of the Twenties, along with some manuals about early twentieth century technology.  Now the entire population of the planet is living a world based of the gang culture of Prohibition-era Chicago.  Instead of leaving Kirk decides to undo some of the damage done by the accidental interference.  He gathers all the gangs, impresses them with his technology and fire power of his ship, and informs them that the Federation is “taking over” as “the prime operator.”  All the gangs will now have to get in line, Kirk then reorganizes their entire government for them.  

Not good!

The third case of this is one not caused by a slight error but one caused by extreme stupidity.  In the episode “Patterns of Force” a historian named John Gill travels the planet Ekos and finds it divided by war and chaos.  Amid this chaos the award-winning historian decided what this planet truly needs is some Nazism.  Nope, not kidding that is what he did.  Naturally, when the Enterprise arrives, they are shocked to say the least.  So, as such Captain Kirk and Spock go to the planet and after some great difficulty find Gill, who was no a prisoner and puppet figurehead by his deputy, they have him give a public confession and turn on his party.  The leave the planet in the hands of two allies they feel they can trust and leave.    

Exposing the Nazis

Finally, we have the episode “Omega Glory” where Captain Ronald Tracey of the Exter goes to Omega IV.  Omega IV is another one of those Fake Earth, this one where the Cold War got hot the world was destroyed and the survivors are still fighting each other even though they don’t remember why.  Tracey becomes convinced he can become immortal on this planet so he tried to aid one side by helping them fight their war by using phasers.  Kirk having discovered this moves to stop him and then helps the people of Omega IV correctly interpret their own “holy words.” With Tracey now their prisoner, Kirk and crew leave.

Its the captain with the phaser who is breaking the rules.

That Depends What Your Definition of “Developing” is

In other cases where Kirk appears to violate the Prime Directive, he doesn’t due to some creative reading of the text.  The Prime Directive states that they shall not interfere with the internal development of another culture.  Kirk reasons if the culture isn’t doing any developing then all bets are off.  I am also convinced that by the TNG era this interpretation has been eliminated via legislation.  Kind of like how Kirk led his own away missions but by the TNG era the regulations forbade a captain from doing that.

First example of this is in the episode “Miri.”  This episode is also famous for giving us our first-of-many Fake Earths.  The Enterprise arrives at this fake Earth only to discover that they took a dramatic turn from the real Earth in their version of the 1960s.  Trying to extend their natural lives into the centuries, they failed miserably and caused every adult on the planet to turn into a rabid monster that would tear things apart then quickly die.  The children did get the life extension but when they reached a point where their biological age leads them into puberty and they turn into monsters too.  Captain Kirk not only has McCoy discover away to save the landing party from the virus but he gives it to the kids and Starfleet sends teams to help the children rebuild their society.  Fake Earth culture was a frozen corpse so Kirk decided to interfere. 

This culture clearly stopped working

The second of example of this is the classic episode “The Return of the Archons.”  Here Captain Kirk and his crew travel to the planet Beta III and encounter a society that is ruled and managed by a computer.  Most people are kept in an altered mental state where they came to be part of “the body.” Those who are not are quickly made that way upon discovery.  There is evidence that this society was more advanced until a ruler named Landru created the “the body” to prevent war and bloodshed.  Kirk decides that this society is stagnant under the rule of a machine and decided to break the people free. He leaves behind some advisors to help that now free Betans to take control once again.

Weird state!

This is repeated in the second season episode “The Apple.” One on hand the episode is a clone of the pervious one discussed a society has come under the rule of computer who keeps the people in a primitive state.  There are some key differences however. Where Landru kept his people trapped in a 19th century type society where Vaal keeps them in a Garden of Eden state.  Like before Kirk determines that this society is stagnant and not developing.  Kirk ends up destroying Vaal freeing the people to control their own destiny.

Explaining orders from Vaal!

When Starfleet Command Decides to Ignore the Prime Directive

Then there are times where Starfleet Command and the Federation decide to override the Prime Directive in certain situations.  The first example of this is the episode “Errand of Mercy.”  This is the episode that was the first appearance of the Klingons.  War has been declared between the two powers.  Starfleet recognizes the strategic location of Organian system.  As such we no longer care if they are a bunch of pre-warp primitives.  It’s not our fault the Klingons are coming anyway so Organians aren’t going to be allowed to develop naturally so this is a primitive planet is going to get a sudden upgrade.  Call it a preemptive.  It turns out the reverse happened far from the Federation and Klingon Empire dictating to the Organians, the Organians revel themselves to be gods and dictate to the two space powers.  Treaty is forced upon them and peace is saved.

When you realize they are the ones doing the telling!

The second time we see this is in the episode “Friday’s Child.”  In this case contact has been made with the natives of Capella IV in a mission that did not involve the Enterprise but one that Dr. McCoy participated in.  The reason Starfleet authorized such contact is the planet is bursting with dilithium crystals.  When the Federation sees a planet that produces dilithium crystals like this they get the same feeling that the United States does when they find an oil rich nation: that is a nation that can use some “freedom.”  Starfleet looks at Capella IV as one that can use some “advancement.” To be fair Starfleet wants this to be a voluntary transaction and they are not conquering them.  In the end with the new leader, Leonard James Akaar, enthroned Starfleet will probably have an easier time. 

Yes, we have your crystals

Speaking of involuntary we have the episode “Spretre of the Gun.”  Starfleet wants contact with the Melkotians so bad that they won’t let Kirk take “no” for an answer.  The Enterprise heads to Melkos and when the Melkotians demand they leave, Kirk’s orders tell him he must proceed anyway.  This ends up with the landing party stuck in a Western.  It’s a strange episode. 

Go Away!

The One Time Kirk Did Violate the Prime Directive

There was this one time that Captain Kirk did out right violate the Prime Directive.  That was in the episode “A Taste of Armageddon.” In this episode the Enterprise is on a diplomatic mission to the planets Eminiar VII and Vendikar.  The two worlds claim to have been at war over centuries although there is no evidence of any such thing on the surface.  It turns out they fight their war in a computer simulation.  This gives them all the casualties with none of the destruction of infrastructure.  This also means that the war where people die not only doesn’t stop it never slows down.  When the simulation is made all of those reported “killed” must report to disintegration chamber to have their vaporized and recorded as such.  They also tell the Captain that his ship was one of the casualties and therefore his entire crew must submit to be killed.  Now at this point Kirk could just escape, return to the Enterprise, and get the hell out of there.  However, he has another plan in mind.  He decides to destroy their machines and force them to fight their war for real.  Panicking at the thought of all the coming destruction the leaders of Eminiar VII agree to have Ambassador Fox agree to open negotiations with Vendikar. 

"I'm going to teach you to fight your war for real"

Now let’s be clear, there was no outside interference from either aliens, such as Klingons, or stupid humans who messed up something that Kirk had to correct.  The society was not failing to develop, in fact the whole purpose for this set-up was to allow for the society to continue to grow despite the war.  There was no command from Starfleet to ignore the Prime Directive.  Kirk just decided that he didn’t like what these people were doing so he was going to end it.  Why did Starfleet get away with it?  A novel I once read—that I can’t recall the name of—stated that the Federation was so horrified at what was being described that they chose to look the other way on the matter.

"Planning their break out!"

Conclusion

                In conclusion I hope I have convinced you that far from being a rebel, Captain Kirk was in fact a defender of Starfleet highest command. The exceptions are just that, exceptions, the reason there happens be so much is because writers need drama to have characters go through in order to give us a story.


 

Classic Star Trek Films

Star Trek: The Motion Picture 

[103]


Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan 

[104]


Star Trek III: The Search for Spock

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home 

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier 

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country 


Saturday, November 12, 2022

A MUCH BETTER FINAL EPISODE THAN TURNABOUT INTRUDER!

 


Episode Title:  The Counter-Clock Incident

Air Date: 10/12/1974

Written by John Culver

Directed by Bill Reed

Cast: William Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk    Leonard Nimoy as Commander Spock        DeForest Kelley as Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA “Bones”              James Doohan  as Lieutenant Commander Montgomery Scott AKA “Scotty”, Lieutenant Arex, Commodore Robert T. April, and Karl Four                           George Takei as Lieutenant Hikaru Sulu                    Nichelle Nichols as Lieutenant Nyota Uhura, Dr. Sarah April, and Karla Five                  

Ships: USS Enterprise NCC-1701, Karla’s unnamed ship

Planets: Arret

My Spoiler filled summary and review: The Enterprise has a very special guest aboard.  Commodore Robert T. April who was the Enterprise’s first captain, commanding until he was relieved by his successor Captain Christopher Pike, who we first saw in “The Cage.” The Enterprise’s original captain and her current bond over their love of the ship and April talks about how he first remembered the Enterprise being put together in the San Francisco Bay yards. The Commodore isn’t the only special guest aboard or only April.  Sarah April, the Commodore’s wife, was the Enterprise’s first Chief Medical Officer was not only began a line that led to McCoy but also a revolutionary in her field.  While Kirk is bonding with the Commodore, McCoy is star struck with his guest.  They are on route to Babel, a planet they have been to before, where April will finish his last assignment as Federation Ambassador-At-Large before retiring. 

Captains bonding

At this point, as it so often does, a strange vessel popped out of nowhere, it was moving at speeds that his series would normally say was impossible and its heading toward a supernova. The Enterprise tries to communicate with them but they can not understand the person.  Running it through the universal translator, Lt. Uhura, discovers that the woman on the other ship is just speaking English backwards.  Kirk orders the use of the tractor beam to stop the ship but instead of slowing that vessel down it instead pulls the Enterprise with toward the supernova.  They try to shut it down however the tractor beam remains on.  They go through the supernova and surprised to find that they aren’t dead.  They are now in a strange alternate universe where black stars shine in a white void, time follows backwards, and ships fly nacelles and shuttle bays first.  Dr. April’s flower that only had a one-day life cycle has suddenly been rejuvenated as it is aging backwards.



Sitting around the conference table, Commodore April jokes with his fellow officers that if we are now aging backwards, soon he won’t be at retirement age anymore.  They are able to establish contact with the ship that dragged them in here.  The pilot is named Karla Five she was researching a supernova in her universe when she was pulled into ours.  Since the Enterprise crew has adjusted to the new universe, they have an easy time understanding her. 

Doctors bonding

  Karla invites the Enterprise to her home planet where her lab is located. Her home planet, Arret, happens to occupy the same point in space in their universe that Earth does in ours. (In fact, “Arret” is just Terra—Latin for Earth—spelled backwards.)  In her lab they see a child in a crib who she explains is her father, Karl Six, and an old man who is her son, Karl Four. 

in reverse space

The research indicates they must find a dual supernova (where a dead star comes to life in their universe while a star dies in ours).  Then fly though it at the same speed for which they came and they will return there just as Karla did.  The problem is the Enterprise can’t fly that fast.  The problem is resolved because Karla can just put her ship on autopilot and have it tow it back.  They thank her for giving up her ship but she lets them know it’s not that big of a sacrifice as she can always build another. They quickly locate a dual supernova and head off to return to their own galaxy. 

The other ship

However, on their way to the supernova there is a problem.  The entire ship’s crew is aging backwards and losing their adult memories. All, save Spock, become incapable of performing basic starship tasks.  In addition, the Aprils have also reversed and are now young again.  Refusing his commodore title, he dubs himself “Captain April” and takes command of the ship leading them back to our universe.  Problem is when they get back to our universe, they are all still children, except the Aprils.  As we learned in “The Lorelei Signal” the transporter can fix everything and it does.  Even the Aprils decided to return to their right age.  Because of Robert April’s performance Starfleet will review the retirement age for its officers. 

Karla Five

Additional thoughts: In 1969 the greatest science fiction series ever ended its legendary run on a sore note.  The episode “Turnabout Intruder,” although it has an interesting premise forgot a lot about the series values in particular when it comes to women.  It was so unfortunate that for years was the last of what people saw of Star Trek.  Fortunately, the successor series although much shorter gave a far greater end.  Now this episode does have its flaws and will get into those.  However, the overall adventure was great.  The new universe was fun to explore and I wish we could have spent a little more time there.

Teenage Kirk

How awesome is it to get to meet the first Captain of the Enterprise?  A name pulled from the early Roddenberry drafts and brought to life for one episode.  Not only that but we got to meet the ship’s first chief medical officer, Dr. Sarah April.  This is however where things get a little weird. Dr. April claims that she was the first CMO to serve on a warp drive vessel.  This is absurd because we learned in “Metamorphosis” that the founder of warp drive, Zefram Cochrane, was from the 21st century.  She could have claimed she was the first doctor on any other type of ship and she was the first CMO of the Enterprise so why just stick with that.   

Young Sarah April with toddler Uhura

That wasn’t the worst part.  The worst part was the author’s total misunderstanding of warp drive.  Not only were they traveling at speeds that are not only impossible according to Star Trek regardless of which warp chart you use.  In all canon warp 36 is impossible.  Even if it were possible, or more likely the ship was probably traveling at warp 9.999999 conventual, considering how fast it was going there is no way you could catch it with a tractor beam.  They’re moving so fast that by the time Kirk just thought of what to do they would have been gone already.

I really did like the white universe/black stars reality, I thought it was a very cool concept.  The image of the Enterprise flying backwards is hilarious.  When we get to Arret and we meet Karla’s family we see the reverse aging process that is similar from aliens from Ork in a TV show four years away from this. The son is an old man while her father lives as a child in a crib.  She is Karla Five, her father is Karl Six, and her son is Karl Four.  So, what happens when they reach One?  Do they go to zero then start over?  Do they use negative numbers?  What number did they start with?

Another weak point in this episode is the de-aging crew.  I am sorry but they were not in this universe long enough for that to become an issue.  The people in this universe age backwards not faster.  The crew should have been mostly unaffected.  The only reason they were was a plot device to return Captain April to the captain’s chair again. 

Captain April in command

Once more the transporter is used as a cure all. They are able to quickly restore people to their pervious selves based on their recorded patterns in the buffer.  Somewhere along the line I think they forget this trick.  The Aprils were very philosophical about going back to their real age.  Saying such a second chance would be wonderful if they needed it, but since their lives were awesome, they don’t.

Normally all these flaws would knock my review score down a point, but I enjoyed this so much that for today it won’t.

Thus, another chapter in Star Trek history comes to an end.  This is another milestone for my blog as a now can say I have written reviews for very episode of classic Star Trek and Star Trek: The Animated Series.  Time to move on.  This is the last appearance of the famous starship before her famous movie refit.  Bring on the classic Star Trek films.

FINAL GRADE 5 of 5