- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
I’m reposting this because the list is now complete.
Edit: Except Garrett? Maybe she won’t get one?
Fuzz (The Maniac)
Fuzz can switch from hysterical laughter to filter-free anger at the drop of a dime.
He’s a fun-loving guy until he isn’t. Just don’t suggest anger management sessions to this Section 31 operative.
Melle (The Lover)
While most Deltans take an oath of celibacy upon joining Starfleet, Melle uses her irresistible magnetism for Section 31’s benefit. After all, she’s in a league of her own.
Zeph (The Machine)
Mech life ain’t just about brute force. The human Zeph lives, works, and everything in between, inside his mechanical exoskeleton, drawing out the right tools in his work as a Section 31 operative.
Quasi (The Enigma)
No one’s ever met a Chameloid’s true form before, perpetuating their myth-like status as they never show their real appearance, which suits Quasi perfectly as a member of Section 31. He’s disinterested in the delusion of “utopia” and most other things, especially you.
Alok Sahar (Mastermind)
Alok Sahar is a strategic mastermind who leads a special team of Section 31 operatives. Sahar is driven to make amends for actions in his past by serving the greater good, which involves tracking down and recruiting Emperor Philippa Georgiou for a covert mission.
Philippa Georgiou (The Emperor)
Unable to return to the Terran Empire, Emperor Philippa Georgiou lives under a new alias as owner of The Baraam, a nightclub operating outside of Federation space.
That is, until Section 31 enlists her to help protect the Federation while also facing the sins of her past.
The idea that a person can do horrible things but still try to reject their old ways and do things differently is against everything that Star Trek stands for?
Yes. Killing billions of people is nothing you just regret and go on with your life.
Yeah, I guess I forgot that the central tenet of Star Trek is that people are either Good or Bad, and there’s no room for change or improvement.
Go ahead and show me where in Discovery Space Hitler asks for forgiveness or mourns about the billions of people she had killed. A redemption arc needs to ask for redemption as a first step.
In “Terra Firma” she literally goes back and tries to do things differently.
Needing to “ask for redemption” suggests there’s a higher power administering cosmic judgment, which is another tenet of the ethos I was unaware of.