@JustinWhang I always wanted him to do a "Real master of the DDT" storyline with someone. Take them under his wing and teach them the dark arts of dropping people on their heads.
@yumtapwater Electricity in general and nuclear in particular should be the cash crop of the sun belt. Geologically stable, not prone to high winds or flooding, and vast distances to space things out. It's as close to an ideal scenario as it gets.
@lydiakauppi A large number of people simply do not understand irony at all. They therefore cannot be convinced that the Boss belting out "Born in the USA" is meant to be taken any other way than at face value.
@archaicf0ssil I will always appreciate DS9 not pulling their punches with the occupation. The only sugar coating you get is from the Cardassians. They lay out in no uncertain terms exactly how cruel, brutal, and genocidal they were. Duet, a top ten DS9 episode lays it all out in season 1.
@archaicf0ssil I find this version of their relationship very sweet. They've moved past the inevitable lingering feelings and now they're just earnestly looking out for one another. It's very funny of Worf to (more or less correctly) identify Julian as a total mess
@JakeLandauTO@malanorea@archaicf0ssil Maybe. One of the other paradoxes of the series is that linear beings appear to have free will, and won't necessarily do what the Prophets predict. Predestination isn't absolute for them. Their prophecies are intended to be self fulling so their preferred events happen.
@malanorea@archaicf0ssil Maybe. One of the big paradoxes of the series is that Sisko teaches the Prophets about linear time, how linear beings experience it, and how to experience it themselves to a limited extent. However, that means they've always understood linear time, letting them make The Sisko