cdrood wrote: ↑Tue Nov 19, 2019 9:23 pm
Another thing this episode, as does the TNG era as a whole, glosses over the whole structure of the Klingon Empire. We never see any of their subject races or learn how they even feel about being part of the empire. From all we see, the central government and military are entirely Klingon. When on Kronos, we don't even see members of other races passing by the way we would in a scene set on Earth.
That sure fits with what Martok once told Worf: "We don't embrace other cultures, we conquer them!" And that's coming from probably the most open-minded, reasonable Klingon you'll ever meet.
I don't know about any official word on the Empire, but I imagine that subjugated populations are heavily restricted to their worlds and made to do the bulk of the farming, mining, manufacturing, and scientific research (strictly compartmentalized, so they can't join their efforts and threaten their overlords). At least it could explain how they maintain infrastructure and top-of-the-line tech despite their loathing of menial labor and intellectual pursuits.
cdrood wrote: ↑Tue Nov 19, 2019 9:23 pm
Another thing this episode, as does the TNG era as a whole, glosses over the whole structure of the Klingon Empire. We never see any of their subject races or learn how they even feel about being part of the empire. From all we see, the central government and military are entirely Klingon. When on Kronos, we don't even see members of other races passing by the way we would in a scene set on Earth.
That sure fits with what Martok once told Worf: "We don't embrace other cultures, we conquer them!" And that's coming from probably the most open-minded, reasonable Klingon you'll ever meet.
I don't know about any official word on the Empire, but I imagine that subjugated populations are heavily restricted to their worlds and made to do the bulk of the farming, mining, manufacturing, and scientific research (strictly compartmentalized, so they can't join their efforts and threaten their overlords). At least it could explain how they maintain infrastructure and top-of-the-line tech despite their loathing of menial labor and intellectual pursuits.
We saw far more of the Klingon subjugated worlds in TOS than we did anywhere else, and in those cases the Klingons prefer puppet governments to ruling directly. We saw in this best in the episode where they invade Organia.
"A culture's teachings - and more importantly, the nature of its people - achieve definition in conflict. They find themselves, or find themselves lacking."
— Kreia, Knights of the Old Republic 2: The Sith Lords
So when Geordi goes to bed he takes his VISOR off and puts it on the nightstand. Then he goes to sleep in the dark. What difference does having the lights off make to a blind man? Reminds me of Tuvok in “Year of Hell” being blind and shaving with the lights on.
And as others have said, the “juice thing” was a test by the Romulans to make sure they had control over Geordi once he was back on the Enterprise before they tried to have him do something important. Obviously they wouldn’t have him shoot O’Brien, as I would hope the crew would react differently than they did on the Romulan holodeck...
Wolf359 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2019 7:47 pm
So when Geordi goes to bed he takes his VISOR off and puts it on the nightstand. Then he goes to sleep in the dark. What difference does having the lights off make to a blind man? Reminds me of Tuvok in “Year of Hell” being blind and shaving with the lights on.
I don't know if BCM is actually blind, but I've heard that blind people can still have really limited perception of light, so I guess Geordi could be bothered by lights.
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