ME1 threw the universe out there. It created the wonder.
ME2 is what the universe feel like a universe. It got ever so bigger, less black and white, and we saw the seedy underbelly. Especially as we added plots for the supporting characters.
ME3 felt like a contraction, removing the aspects that...
Six of one, half-dozen of the other. We never got a clear picture of why Tracy stayed planetside, and if he was interfering prior to EXETER’s crew dying, or only after.
But, again, it’s the kind of situation which might make people put more teeth into the Prime Directive.
It’s human nature to...
Yes, but it was Merrick who let them know about the Federation.
Ron Tracy was in the same kind of situation with the Koms and the Yangs.
But both chose to interfere in the existing societies for their own benefit.
Kirk’s crew had as many examples of interfence being bad as good. John Gill on Ekos, Sigma Iota II, Ron Tracy, Merrick, etc. A technologically advanced civilization interfering in the development of a less-advanced one is frought with risk.
As a default course, it is absolutely a good idea. But...
Expedite.
Honestly, walking will leave you less gross than biking. But there is a reason Southerners are languid. The humidity is a killer, and exertion is like taking a shower in your clothes. Move slowly.
A brisk walk when it’s 105 and 30% humidity is a lot less miserable than one when it’s...
Unless you are extremely fit, you probably want to reconsider this.
Biking a mile in an Alabama summer will have you ridiculously sweaty and smelly wherever you go. When I say ridiculously sweaty, I mean it - worse than the most energetic gym session crossed with the most ardent fuck you’ve...
My experience is being a skinny-ass twink with a pixie cut in Kentucky and West Virginia, and a huskier guy in Tennessee. Southern guys can be hella cute.
As long as you’re not a dick about it, or engaging in ridiculous PDA, most people will not care. Dating pool will be more limited than...
If there was overt lesbian homosexuality in Voyager, it wasn’t Seven and Janeway. That was more mother-daughter rebellion.The overt lesbian themes were between Seven and the Borg Queen. The Borg Queen behaved more like psychotic ex to Seven than anything else. We explicitly saw those overtones...
Picard specifically called Q out in Q Who, asking if the lesson could have been taught without loss.
Q pretty much noped that. Picard paid for his arrogance. Q kept it from being fatal, though.
On the other hand, Tapestry was teaching Picard to embrace the virtues of his vices. The brash...
It’s not Picard’s morality that Q is looking for. It’s Picard’s ability to grow mentally and think non-linearly. That’s why Q breaks the rules and gives Picard the big hint, taking him back in time to show the anomaly works backwards in time, and is bigger in the past. In that moment, you see Q...