#the first duty

I had not notice Sito Jaxa’s brow before. I guess they hadn’tquite settle on the Bajoran makeup yet. I don’t think it looks like this when she shows up in Lower Decks a couple of years later (although by then DS9 is in its second season and the...

I had not notice Sito Jaxa’s brow before. I guess they hadn’tquite settle on the Bajoran makeup yet. I don’t think it looks like this when she shows up in Lower Decks a couple of years later (although by then DS9 is in its second season and the brow/nose ridges been standardized)

TNG RewatchThe First DutySito Jaxa
futureworlds
redonyellow

These two scenes remind me of each other because they boldly illustrate how disparate TNG and DS9 were when it came to morality. In TNG, there was often a right answer, and the lines separating what was good and bad were often clear.  While in DS9, the best thing to do was not always the “right” thing to do. DS9 gave you scenarios where you could not judge whether decisions were moral or immoral, leaving you conflicted because they did not fit in those boxes.

Also, I find these scenes are remarkable because they showed how the principles that Starfleet claimed it was built on went out the window when it itself was threatened.

TNGDS9The First DutyIn the Pale MoonlightI love my DS9