Logline

Commander Una Chin-Riley faces court-martial along with possible imprisonment and dishonorable dismissal from Starfleet, and her defense is in the hands of a lawyer who’s also a childhood friend with whom she had a terrible falling out.


Written by Dana Horgan

Directed by Valerie Weiss

  • JackPicardWonderkind@startrek.website
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    16
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    2 years ago

    Ad Astra Per Aspera

    A beautiful title, I remember watching the anime Ad Astra a few years back. They had a ROUGH time.

    Through hardships, to the stars.

    You had your playtime, acting like one of them. Accept your dismissal, take your licks and go home.

    Una: No. (Why not?) Because I shouldn’t have to hide anymore. None of us should. I know I should have done better. I didn’t stand up when I should have. I’m standing up now.

    YES! GIVE ME THAT STRENGTH!

    So it was either dishonorable discharge OR Dishonorable discharge with 20 years in a penal colony.

    That’s a rough decision.

    GIVE EM HELL UNA!

    So La’An has an idea that the evidence against Una might have been illegally obtained. This is going to be a really in depth court drama from Star Trek!

    La’An: We need to find out who turned her in. It might well be the only way to save her.

    But Uhura strictly refuses La’An’s illegal order. :|

    Counselor: Admiral, it would seem that the rules of Starfleet only apply when a captain deems that they do. (Robert April: Is there a question Counsellor?)

    You have shown that you have been repeatedly willing to break the very first order of starfleet and you are hailed a hero. you can break the law if you so choose. So, hiding behind order and protocol to explain why you would not have admitted Una Chin-Riley to Starfleet is a sanctimonious falsehood, is it not?

    And of course the JAG gets pissed off at that type of reasoning, how convenient.

    Counsellor: My client did not ask to be genetically modified. It is an Illyrian cultural practice done to children before they are even born. It is done for survival and yet she has been arrested because of a violation of a law. But the Admiral has just shown us that Starfleet regulations are are flimsy and subjective at best.

    Spock’s line about what una was hiding OMG!!!

    Spock: Yes, I did get the feeling that she was hiding something.

    Neera: What was she hiding?

    Spock: An affanity for Gibert and Sullivan musicals.

    A BRITISH TAR IS A SOARING SOUL AS FREE AS A MOUNTAIN BIRD HIS ENERGETIC FIST SHOULD BE READY TO RESIST A DICTACTORIAL WORD

    Spock: Perhaps. Although I think it is illogical for Starfleet to punish itself.

    Neera: I’m afraid I don’t understand.

    Spock: The loss of Una would be destructive to Starfleet as an organization. She is an extraordinary officer.

    Una: She is a Mentor Spock: I have learned a great deal about leadership by serving under her.

    M’benga: She puts the lives of her crew above her own. Always.

    Spock: She is a friend.

    La’An: Family. Una is Family.

    And we get more into exactly That.

    Counselor: Could it be that you carry your family’s augmentations, and you believe that because of them you may become dangerous?

    Una: Yes, I do.

    OH MY GOOOOOOD…

    Counselor: There is nothing wrong with you Lieutenant, no hidden monster inside. But I do know how they make us feel. They look down at us for so long that we begin to look down at ourselves. Genetics is not our destiny despite what you may have been taught. The fear of yourself it’s not your own. It was drilled into you. You’re not born a monster. You were just born with a capacity for actions, good or ill. Just like the rest of us… i guarantee you are not the the person who leaked Una’s true identity to Starfleet.

    “Ad Astra per aspera”

    To the stars through hardship.

    Una: My family, we went to the non-illyrian city. You see, some of us could pass. We could blend in, so we did. We left everyone else behind. Our families. Our friends… We left them all. I regret it to this day.

    I wanted my crew to know who me for who I really was. I thought maybe if they did, I would finally be safe. And starfleet would finally understand Illyrian’s better.

    So it was four months in between Ghosts of Illyria and last season’s finale.

    Neera: She believed in the best of Starfleet, and that through it she could find salvation from the hardship and danger of her everyday life. Danger she faced just for being born an Illyrian. Dangers born on prejudice. Spurred on by laws against people like her. But through her hardhsips, Una saw the stars. Una joined Starfleet because she believed it was the only thing that could save her life. She fled persecution, and within Starfleet she sought safettu. She Asked for Asylum and Captain Pike granted it.

    What an amazing courtroom episode! Did a lot of work for equality in the current moment.

    I was recalling a lot of the classic courtroom episodes too, The Menagerie, Drumhead, Measure of a Man. This is top tier stuff.

    I also feel relevant to our current controversies.

    • Jon-H558@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      6
      ·
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      Spock’s line is perfect lying by omission when even omissions is not allowed.

      When asked is she hiding something…Spock must answer yes as he knew

      What is she hiding…gives a benign thing she is hiding so he has answered the question for one thing…there may be other things she is hiding …like being an Illyrian but spock does.not have to mention that as he has answered.and she does not push.

      Its like dungeons and dragons playing with zone of truth