hth2k wrote:More like a "A Team" meets "The Cisco Kid" or "Roy ROgers" . Lots of noise and explosions, and no one ever gets hit. Ok the two grunts got wacked good with a stick but they have no idea of why. Noone has any motivation not to want to persue them further. So the old guy lives and has his superiors send out reenforcements and alerts them to a high value target. Fenner wants them even more as well. Five days on the way and this is the best plan he comes up with? Has he thought at all of the long term implications and effects of his actions> Obviously not. Just gotta get T'Pol, NOW! Superficially interesting but laargely unsatisfying in the long run. But that is just me and I'm not Vulcanized, just an old school savage.
So what is your suggestion about how he should have acted? That he goes around murdering people just to cover his tracks? I'm sorry, but that sure as hell wouldn't discourage them from following him either and, if anything, would only fire them up and make them want revenge against the murderous aliens who killed their buddies. If Trip had been trained as a pure soldier (a MACO, or a security officer), then yeah, I could see him going all commando-like and killing anything that gets in his way, but even with T'Pol's super training, doing something like that doesn't
remotely track with his character IMO. He
isn't a killer. Do you not recall much earlier in the story when he accidentally killed some people and how he didn't exactly just shrug it off? Take it from someone who
has killed in combat - it isn't something you just shrug and get over (unless you're wired differently than most human beings.) They aren't just blips on a screen, but living, breathing people. Talking about killing someone is easy - actually doing it? Not so much.
Would I have done things differently if I were in his position? Probably, but I was trained as an infantryman and they established pretty early on that Trip has had a comparatively sheltered career in Starfleet so, IMNSHO, it would have been
wildly out-of-character for Tucker to start killing people just because they happened to be in his way. Not to mention, he technically shouldn't even be able to walk right now and is only functioning at perhaps 20% capacity (thanks to exhaustion, pain, and injuries not yet healed.) I thought that was clear as well, but apparently not. Yeah, he's had five days, but it's five days of nonstop pain, confusion, and something going on with his head that he doesn't begin to understand. He can barely think straight as indicated by his decision to undertake a very stupid rescue mission, but he's being driven by the primal emotions at the heart of the Bond. Without it, he'd be passed out somewhere as his body tried to recover from the still recent bear attack.
Remember "Saving Private Ryan" and what qas the result of the "good deed" of releasing the German soldier? Obviously you and I have different opinions of what is required for survival and what can come back and bite you hard.
And why in the world would you presume that I share Trip's opinion here? When I'm writing something, I generally try to suspend my own personal beliefs and stay in the POV character's head unless its appropriate for the character's thoughts to mirror mine. Like I said, I was trained differently and yeah, I probably
would have killed those two sentries that he just knocked out but that's how I was taught. Trip is an engineer who has been taught how to fight by a Vulcan ... and one of their primary tenets is to
not kill whenever possible. Do you think T'Pol wouldn't teach him that as well?
Enthusiasm dampened
Right back atcha. You're the second person (both men, I notice) who have commented on Trip not
murdering a person being the wrong decision and for the life of me, I cannot comprehend why either of you would think that the pre-Xindi Trip was even capable of something like that.
So yeah. I'm a little confused at this reaction, a little frustrated, and a bit defensive. Apparently, your view of the character could not possibly be more different than what I saw on the show.