This is why Sisko is the most badass captain

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2013
  • Sisko doesn't play. Sisko doesn't bluff. Sisko will own your ass. This is from For the Uniform
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Komentáře • 14K

  • @PhantomSavage
    @PhantomSavage Před 3 lety +7174

    Worf over there goin' like "... damn... Picard never did this shit.."

  • @ajr993
    @ajr993 Před 2 lety +4099

    Picard: "You have just committed an act of utter barbarity!"
    Sisko: "I'm about to fire two more acts of utter barbarity"

    • @Yossarian921
      @Yossarian921 Před 2 lety +465

      Picard: "You have just committed an act of utter barbarity! "
      Sisko: mumbling "Locutus of Borg says what? "

    • @burstcity3832
      @burstcity3832 Před 2 lety +62

      @@Yossarian921 Even in tv series I detest war crimes.

    • @LionlordEbonfire
      @LionlordEbonfire Před 2 lety +111

      @@burstcity3832 Technically not a war crime. What he did was make it so HUMANS can’t use the planet. The humans had to leave and the Cardassians could live there. In the end, the two species traded planets, star Fleet lost a ship to the biological attack, and the guy that used biological warfare on the one planet and a ship of his on species as captured.
      And this was not plan A or B. This was plan epsilon after this terrorists group and supporters ratcheted up the fight from shooting warships to biological warfare on another planet of civilians.

    • @trirycheman
      @trirycheman Před 2 lety +47

      There is no possible way I can not hear that in Picard's voice. in my head.

    • @burstcity3832
      @burstcity3832 Před 2 lety +29

      @@LionlordEbonfire War crimes can be commited against your own species too though.

  • @Ansible1000
    @Ansible1000 Před rokem +2224

    For those who haven’t seen the episode, Sisko here is playing a bit of a role. He’s realized that Eddington sees himself as the hero and Sisko as a tragic villain, too obsessed with law and order to see what he’s become.
    Sisko decided that Eddington is too much of a threat to leave walking free, so he plays into Eddington’s beliefs, being the bad guy so Eddington will be the hero. A good hero always sacrifices himself to save innocents, so Sisko threatens innocents to prevent Eddington waging a protracted guerrilla campaign that would end with more death and destruction.

    • @AStrangeWindmill
      @AStrangeWindmill Před rokem +341

      This. You can see it in Eddingtons talk about Javert while there's a damn war crime taking place; dude thought he was in a game. Sisko said "fair enough, I'll play too".

    • @alcohol-freebeer3642
      @alcohol-freebeer3642 Před rokem +146

      @@AStrangeWindmill To be honest, Eddington always struck me as a little bit detached from reality ;p

    • @angelrivera2339
      @angelrivera2339 Před rokem +124

      @@alcohol-freebeer3642 I stopped feeling sympathy for the Maquis when Quark convinced that Vulcan to help Starfleet using logic. The problem with the Starfleet officers helping the Maquis is that they still thought like Starfleet officers. They were fighting a righteous cause and will carry on until victory. They would only settle with only victory.They ignored that they were a small band of rebels with a population less than a million people.
      You can't force a regional power to recognize you when you are just an annoyance at best.
      The Federation must have a population of close to a trillion people. I am willing to bet that even the Cardassians never attacked the Federation deep enough to convince the Federation to use the full might of Starfleet.

    • @benjaminodonnell258
      @benjaminodonnell258 Před rokem +62

      He also turned an entire colony into refugees and probably created at least a couple of future Edingtons - though they wouldn't have the benefit of the starfleet training the real Eddington had.

    • @PanzerMold
      @PanzerMold Před rokem +50

      Without this context, Sisko does come off as unreasonable and a little mad.

  • @SirJPat
    @SirJPat Před rokem +381

    “You bombed me. Picard would never have bombed me.”
    “I’m not Picard.”

    • @user-fs6gd1cp1c
      @user-fs6gd1cp1c Před 3 měsíci

      startrekczcams.com/video/b4XrdFdVb6Y/video.htmlsi=tz2hGEirzv_eEKrI

    • @ThePCguy17
      @ThePCguy17 Před měsícem +3

      Sometimes that's a good thing.
      This was not one of those times.

    • @el-kiote
      @el-kiote Před 25 dny +4

      But locutus would

  • @r.b.ratieta6111
    @r.b.ratieta6111 Před 2 lety +3424

    When Worf hesitates, you know the action is brutal, even by Klingon standards.

    • @glennwilliams2950
      @glennwilliams2950 Před 2 lety +390

      This is not brutal by Klingon standards. Worf is a starfleet officer and that was an illegal order that he should have disobeyed.

    • @darylwilson7451
      @darylwilson7451 Před 2 lety +15

      Facts!

    • @wolfsokaya
      @wolfsokaya Před 2 lety +98

      If it were tribbles,he would tapdance on that button. :]

    • @hokutoulrik7345
      @hokutoulrik7345 Před 2 lety +120

      Klingons have their honor. There was no honor in what Sisko did.

    • @kenk5269
      @kenk5269 Před 2 lety +15

      @@hokutoulrik7345 honor? Its horror. ;)

  • @user-do2ev2hr7h
    @user-do2ev2hr7h Před 2 lety +3482

    Considering Worf spent the entire run of TNG getting shot down when he suggested saturation bombing, ramming speed etc, it says a lot when even he is taken aback.

    • @Terlin1466
      @Terlin1466 Před rokem

      Well you can understand NO Klingon has ever seen true human aggression in person and by people they know. To finally actually see it he was like.. even a Klingon would not do such a think so recklessly. ITs a war crime basically. True sisko made them the least deadly mass weapon of destruction every used. But such total destruction. Is a dark action. Actions that is unhonorable dark twisted and at the same time VERY effective at winning in a battle or war. This is why Klingon's respect humans to some degree. Humans are weak and fragile for the most part compared to many other species and because of this they commit the worst acts of cruelty. Yet they also have honor codes and fight with passion. All things klingon's respect. majority of the badness of klingon's really is misplaced emotion. ANd is what i would expect any Space fairing Empire to embrace to keep a Effective and strong military.

    • @samsoofi9588
      @samsoofi9588 Před rokem +158

      Just think of all the millions of dead bodies that would’ve happened if they took worfs advice 🤣

    • @theduke7539
      @theduke7539 Před rokem +170

      @@samsoofi9588 think about how many problems would have been solved

    • @dingodango3725
      @dingodango3725 Před rokem +276

      I think it was also the fact that by this point he was very used to how things are done in star fleet. So an order like that, which goes against the ideals of the federation was a surprise to him. Although you can see that he gave no objections, he was just waiting to see if it was a bluff, as soon as he saw sisko was serious he was like "well damn, looks like we're finally doing things properly!" and just got on with it :P

    • @ashheilborn
      @ashheilborn Před rokem +27

      That's the Worf Effect in full force.

  • @brianstephens8337
    @brianstephens8337 Před rokem +966

    "YOU BETRAYED YOUR UNIFORM!" is one of the all-time line reads, Trek or not. Brooks is such a tremendous talent.

    • @joshuatimbol696
      @joshuatimbol696 Před rokem +55

      “And you’re betraying yours, right now! The sad part is you don’t even realize it. I feel sorry for you, captain….this obsession with me….look what it’s cost you.”
      Eddington is such a hypocrite.

    • @edbishard164
      @edbishard164 Před rokem +8

      I remember in Spencer For Hire
      " I am working for you, Spencer may act real dumb, but he's got a mean right hand"

    • @PrinceAsbel
      @PrinceAsbel Před rokem +30

      His delivery was spot-on. Makes me hate Eddington's character even more. He was an egotist and a traitor with federation blood on his hands. He deserved all the hate he got.

    • @GnomesRox
      @GnomesRox Před rokem +9

      @@PrinceAsbel He deserved the hate, that innocent colony and planet didn't.

    • @willdavis3802
      @willdavis3802 Před rokem +9

      He says as he commits genocide. Sisko should have been stripped from command and sentenced to life in a penal colony.

  • @lamster70
    @lamster70 Před rokem +506

    When Sisko punches Q in season 1 and said "I'm not Picard", you just know somewhere down the line in the series he would do badass shit like this.

    • @frankdeleon4209
      @frankdeleon4209 Před 5 měsíci +2

      What episode is that😅can u provide a link

    • @FeministCatwoman
      @FeministCatwoman Před 5 měsíci

      @@frankdeleon4209 czcams.com/video/wxN45AZtTEo/video.html

    • @Direwolf1166
      @Direwolf1166 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Q said he was going to have fun with sisko but never bothers him again. He didn’t like that getting punched was the only reaction he v was ever going to get out of sisko.

    • @aurorafauna4195
      @aurorafauna4195 Před 4 měsíci

      First episode​@@frankdeleon4209

    • @PrzybyszzMatplanety
      @PrzybyszzMatplanety Před 4 měsíci +12

      ​@@Direwolf1166Or Q understood instantly that Sisko had right amount of savagery and barbarism in himself to led humanity into survival in inhospitable deep space. Picard was too soft ant too naive to be left alone, he needed guidance in order to not kill himself and the crew. Sisko did not.

  • @bon7029
    @bon7029 Před 3 lety +3639

    Eddington: You're bluffing.
    Sisko: Oh yeah? Do it.
    Entire Crew: Holy shit he's not bluffing.

    • @CafeLiquerstreams
      @CafeLiquerstreams Před 3 lety +161

      They already knew it.
      Sisko doesn't bluff

    • @EllRiver
      @EllRiver Před 3 lety +104

      You never bluff. You always back up your claims.

    • @brianlindee1285
      @brianlindee1285 Před 3 lety +25

      Why did you think they sent that other starships to hunt Eddington Sisco had major problems letting go

    • @ponderoustomes9005
      @ponderoustomes9005 Před 3 lety +46

      Seems like he was committing war crimes.

    • @ODeltan
      @ODeltan Před 3 lety +76

      Yep, that's his name, Captain Benjamin "War Crimes" Sisko

  • @Pizza793
    @Pizza793 Před 2 lety +2143

    He was so badass that when he yelled “shut that thing off!" no one dared turn it back on again after this episode 😄

    • @gamerone7390
      @gamerone7390 Před 2 lety +49

      Lol

    • @codelong1592
      @codelong1592 Před 2 lety +42

      I had a good laugh at this lol

    • @Tim3.14
      @Tim3.14 Před 2 lety +110

      Haha, good point.😊 I think I read somewhere the real reason was they decided the holographic communication looked too much like someone beaming onto the bridge, and didn't want to have to explain it in every episode.

    • @ArthurRex131
      @ArthurRex131 Před 2 lety +35

      @@Tim3.14 It was too clunky to explain, yeah. there was no real reason for having a holocommunicator in the first place, come tot hink of it.

    • @jacklandaupresents
      @jacklandaupresents Před 2 lety +32

      Rumor has it that it is still turned off to this day.

  • @altowatts1325
    @altowatts1325 Před rokem +592

    During The Dominion War, Sisko was so respected by his superiors that they rallied around him. Starfleet valued his leadership so greatly that they allowed Sisko to quietly orchestrate many tactical aspects of The Dominion War. The Federation was sustaining HEAVY losses of personnel and equipment. It was Sisko who successfully fought off The Klingons at DS-9 and then convinced The Klingons to rejoin The Federation. It was Sisko who had a hand in crafting the scheme that caused The Romulans to break their non aggression treaty with The Dominion and fight alongside The Federation. It was Sisko who urged the Federation forces ahead during the battle above Cardassia Prime that eventually brought an end to Dominion War. It could be argued that without Benjamin Sisko, The Federation does not win The Dominion War. Kirk and Picard were good at winning battles. Sisko turned the tide of a war The Federation was losing badly and brought victory to The Federation. When a war must be won, give me Sisko and Janeway. Janeway defeated The Borg and all other combatants on her own with a ship that hadn't been properly upgraded or serviced since it departed from DS-9.

    • @SkinPeeleR
      @SkinPeeleR Před 11 měsíci +9

      And i thought it was in the script.

    • @altowatts1325
      @altowatts1325 Před 11 měsíci +37

      @@SkinPeeleR As a writer ✍🏼 I can tell you it's always about the script. But the script is only part of the magic. In truth the fine words on the pages of the script would die an unrealized death 💀☠️ without the highly skilled actors who breathe life and personality into them. Sisko's words, demeanor and delivery made the viewing audience forget that his words were scripted. The script called for Sisko to be at his best under adverse conditions and Avery Brooks' performance delivered beautifully.

    • @SkinPeeleR
      @SkinPeeleR Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@altowatts1325 You're right. I was being an ass.

    • @Yamsthenills
      @Yamsthenills Před 10 měsíci +7

      ​@@SkinPeeleR*ALTHOUGH as much of a hardass as Janeway is and will always be, that ending has never felt really earned or built up to. It feels like we're entering the Voyager redemption era, to an extent, but a whole lot of the fandom at time of release felt that Dark Renegade Future Janeway giving them Future Hax so they could blow away the franchise bigbad on a genocidal scale like they were tying up a loose plot thread felt pretty flimsy and rushed, especially considering how hard they'd been leaning into the "I, Borg" angle for the last few seasons.

    • @ered203
      @ered203 Před 9 měsíci +12

      It makes sense considering he wasn't really completely Ben Sisko, but rather a prophet taken down into a corporeal and linear state of being. He was literally sent by creatures that exist outside of time to do those exact things. Or more precisely, he was sent by himself to do all of those things.
      Even after all of it was over, think of how many things he had to go in time to arrange so it would all fit into this particular point in time. The regular prophets had no concept of cause and effect. He had to physically go back in time and make sure every mention of the Prophets in Bajoran history was there for him to find later and use to win that specific war.
      Masterful storytelling.
      It was a giant game of Bill and Ted's excellent adventure in space.
      "Remember to go back in time and put the keys right behind this...!"
      "Here they are Ted."
      "Excellent!"

  • @bobbyjones3351
    @bobbyjones3351 Před rokem +354

    Worf and Kira are horrified but Dax just gets on with it, subtle but effective show of how loyal Dax is to Sisko

    • @MrBrock314
      @MrBrock314 Před rokem +23

      And a warning to how dangerous loyalty can be.

    • @Fermion.
      @Fermion. Před 11 měsíci +19

      @@MrBrock314 In a time of war, hesitating on an order can mean the difference between victory and defeat.
      It's not so much about loyalty, rather it demonstrates that although easy-going at times, Dax is truly a cold-blooded killer (perhaps due to its unique perspective of living so many lives. Perhaps Dax doesn't view "death" with the same finality as singular lifetime beings do).
      Whereas, Worf has been softened to be more human-like, and not so quick to kill everyone in order to solve every problem.

    • @tomsmith3045
      @tomsmith3045 Před 11 měsíci +35

      It wasn't loyalty. It was that as the most experienced member of the crew, and the one with the most life experience, she realized it was the correct thing to do.

    • @dragonstormstudios8871
      @dragonstormstudios8871 Před 10 měsíci +13

      After two lifetimes of friendship, first as a mentor, then best friend, Dax trusts Sisko and vice versa. Dax understands the complexity of command and that choices have to be made when you wear that uniform because that's what she taught him as Curzon. She also knows not to subvert a commanding officer's orders and despite their informality with one another Sisko is her superior. She wouldn't countermand or criticize him even if she disagreed with his decision, (though she'd likely dress him down privately afterwards if it warranted that).
      I'd argue it's less loyalty to Sisko, though she *is*, rather a loyalty to the chain of command and a mutual understanding that the choices the commander makes are theirs to live with.

    • @KelsonArwhi
      @KelsonArwhi Před 7 měsíci +4

      Nog also.

  • @thefifth1105
    @thefifth1105 Před 4 lety +3082

    Mr. Worf, do you see those Maquis?
    -Yes, sir
    I don't want to.
    -Aye sir.

  • @phantasmo9998
    @phantasmo9998 Před 3 lety +1395

    When a Klingon thinks it's too much you know shit is getting dark.

    • @JakeBritton94
      @JakeBritton94 Před 3 lety +43

      Though tbf worf was no normal Klingon. I’m sure martok or gowron wouldnt have an issue with it.

    • @Stephen__White
      @Stephen__White Před 3 lety +43

      @@JakeBritton94 They likely would have had an issue with it actually. It was made very clear the Klingons don't look kindly on attacking civilians, they also wouldn't be attacking civilian targets, as the Klingons would likely be able to just crush the Maquis with little effort. What's a Maquis Raider but a weak Bird of Prey.
      Make no mistake the Klingons are fully willing to destroy the home world of a creature to get rid of it, like the Tribbles, but they don't burn down random civilian planets for fun. Where is the Honor in it?
      Sisko became a monster with the order he gave and the entire Bridge crew along with him, because none of them stopped him. Sisko had clearly gone insane and needed to be removed from command, and is likely why he isn't captaining the Defiant when it goes to battle the Borg in First Contact. He was likely temporarily stripped of command of the Defiant because of his actions.

    • @flyhouseoftruth470
      @flyhouseoftruth470 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Stephen__White . Martok or Gowron would have done the same thing only much sooner. The episode would only be half as long.

    • @alienlife7754
      @alienlife7754 Před 2 lety +3

      A Klingon tempered by human values. Kurn might have approved. Lol

    • @CobraRedstone
      @CobraRedstone Před 2 lety +25

      @@Stephen__White I don't think you've seen the full context of the episode. Sisko purposely played a moral villains story to draw Eddington out, because Eddington was playing a self-believing martyrs role in the defense of his cause.
      In order to prevent the conflict from getting even more bloody and drawn-out Sisko baited Eddington into the path which saved the most conflict in the long term.
      Sisko *gave* Eddington the opportunity to be a martyr for his cause, and Eddington took it.

  • @bbb8182
    @bbb8182 Před rokem +234

    “shut that thing off!" My favorite Sisko moment period.

    • @tkx7
      @tkx7 Před rokem +1

      the crew didn't follow his orders on this they actually waited after the hologram/display told them to wait

    • @Blodhelm
      @Blodhelm Před rokem +3

      Another favorite of mine is when he says to Gowron "My shields are holding, your boarding parties are contained and my reinforcements are a lot closer than yours. Now what should I tell them, to stand down or come in firing?"

    • @CaptainM792
      @CaptainM792 Před 10 měsíci +1

      4:02

    • @Tigerman1138
      @Tigerman1138 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@tkx7They were briefed of his plan.

    • @kb9oak749
      @kb9oak749 Před 5 měsíci

      Better than "Shut up Wesley!"? Picard still wins with his Captain Ahab-esqe rant about the Borg.

  • @ICasinI
    @ICasinI Před rokem +161

    The real excellence of this move comes out towards the end of the episode when it is revealed that the biogenic weapons that the maquis used against cardassian settlers and the trilithium used by Sisko are not actually harmful to the other species and so the 2 groups were able to simply swap planets.

  • @sageinit
    @sageinit Před 4 lety +5141

    "Let me tell you something about Hew-mans, Nephew. They're a wonderful, friendly people, as long as their bellies are full and their holosuites are working. But take away their creature comforts, deprive them of food, sleep, sonic showers, put their lives in jeopardy over an extended period of time and those same friendly, intelligent, wonderful people... will become as nasty and as violent as the most bloodthirsty Klingon. You don't believe me? Look at those faces. Look in their eyes."
    -Quark

    • @antlife1930
      @antlife1930 Před 4 lety +191

      Who wouldn't tho

    • @crabLT
      @crabLT Před 4 lety +159

      @@antlife1930 My comment was deleted for some reason, but I said the same. In survival mode we will do anything to survive.

    • @victorpabon7551
      @victorpabon7551 Před 4 lety +70

      This comment needs more upvotes. Sadly I can only offer one of my own,

    • @zym6687
      @zym6687 Před 4 lety +136

      Well the behaviors of every Trek species is some aspect of humanity amplified.

    • @Elandil5
      @Elandil5 Před 4 lety +429

      "Do you know what the trouble is? The trouble is Earth, on Earth there is no poverty, no crime, no war. You look out the window of Starfleet Headquarters and you see paradise. It's easy to be a saint in paradise..." --- Sisko

  • @DanielTsosie
    @DanielTsosie Před 4 lety +3432

    When a Klingon and a Bajoran are confused about your order, you know things are getting real.

  • @ODUBlue
    @ODUBlue Před rokem +198

    "For the Uniform" and "In the Pale Moonlight" are the best Star Trek I've ever seen. Nothing will ever top DS9 for me.

    • @Blodhelm
      @Blodhelm Před rokem +4

      Aye!

    • @underwaterlevelz1947
      @underwaterlevelz1947 Před rokem +4

      agree. After DS9 I prefer Voyager to TNG

    • @idontwannaidontwanna7307
      @idontwannaidontwanna7307 Před 7 měsíci +8

      It's Avery Brooks performance against phenomenal writing, unmatched to this day.

    • @lyrimetacurl0
      @lyrimetacurl0 Před 6 měsíci +6

      In the Pale Moonlight is the highest rated star trek episode on IMDB (in any season except for some Star Trek: Picard finale ones but those haven't stood the test of time yet).

    • @gsniroshan
      @gsniroshan Před 6 měsíci +8

      In the Pale Moonlight is probably the best Star Trek episode of all

  • @kjamison5951
    @kjamison5951 Před 11 měsíci +299

    DS9 remains greatly misunderstood and hugely underrated by the mainstream. Kirk and Picard represented aspects of Starfleet and the Federation.
    Sisko took it all to a different level which has not been seen properly since.
    Hats off to Avery Brooks, for his highly complex and deeply spiritual portrayal of Benjamin Sisko.

    • @BijouBakson
      @BijouBakson Před 9 měsíci +2

      The best for me, by far!

    • @SuperAKJR
      @SuperAKJR Před 9 měsíci +12

      Kirk and Picard win, lose, or draw, success or failure got to move onto another system and another planet. Sisko's decisions and action had lasting effects, the characters in that show had relationships not just interactions.

    • @contrafax
      @contrafax Před 8 měsíci

      I believe Strange New Worlds is Comparable.

    • @captainstarcat
      @captainstarcat Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@contrafax not even close. SNW is great, and is my favorite show as of late, but it doesn't tell a captivating story like DS9 does.

    • @contrafax
      @contrafax Před 8 měsíci

      @@captainstarcat We will see, I don't recall the first two Seasons of DS9 being that good. In the case of both shows the story telling was excellent and why I hung around till season 3. Damn fat fingers. I meant season 3.

  • @ismike1982
    @ismike1982 Před 2 lety +4755

    Avery Brooks is incredible. He was doing autographs at a convention I went to in 2013. I asked him to sign my script of the final episode, and I had wanted him to sign it in a specific spot next to the "to the finest crew..." dialogue . He took it from me and I pointed to the line. In his absolute pissed off Sisko voice, he goes "WAIT A MINUTE"! He wanted to read the entire page first so he could choose where he wanted to sign it. He signed it where I originally asked, but I will never forget the Sisko tone he used with me. This clip reminds me of that day, and I still get chills that I too, got yelled at by Captain Sisko.

  • @MarkiusFox
    @MarkiusFox Před 4 lety +2871

    "Would you prefer another target, a _military_ target? Then name the system!"
    - Grand Moff Tarkin
    Literally the same energy as Captain Sisko in this scene.

    • @omiorahman6283
      @omiorahman6283 Před 4 lety +162

      the empire were the good guys all along

    • @thegreatbamboozler4837
      @thegreatbamboozler4837 Před 4 lety +99

      Nobody hassles the hoff…. I mean, the "moff".

    • @thegreatbamboozler4837
      @thegreatbamboozler4837 Před 4 lety +88

      @@omiorahman6283 You are correct... funny how 30 years after ROTJ the rebels were still.... rebelling.

    • @omiorahman6283
      @omiorahman6283 Před 4 lety +39

      @@thegreatbamboozler4837 empire means order.
      Jedi means corruption nepotism,familycide and chaos .

    • @thegreatbamboozler4837
      @thegreatbamboozler4837 Před 4 lety +17

      @@omiorahman6283 soooo....Trump is a Jedi and we should have heard "I did not...use...the Dark Side...of the force...on that woman!" Back in '96??? WOOOWWWW. ALL IS BEING REVEALED!!!!😱🤪

  • @joelww2501
    @joelww2501 Před rokem +143

    Avery Brooks' delivery is just fantastic. You BELIEVE everything he says. When he speaks, you're not watching an actor play a part, you're watching Captain Benjamin Sisko.

  • @GhostAnimatesStuff
    @GhostAnimatesStuff Před 8 měsíci +71

    What I love about Sisko is that you could straight up imagine him being a villain in a TNG episode. He is exactly the sort of captain that could clash with Picard, as he has a completely different mindset from him, and willing to compromise on his own ethics if he believes it will lead to the greater good in the future.

    • @NATIK001
      @NATIK001 Před 5 měsíci +12

      It was fitting that DS9's pilot began with thinly veiled hostility between Sisko and Picard, even if it was for different reasons than their personalities. It was also why many TNG fans had a hard time giving DS9 a chance at first. Hell some of them still haven't come around and still dislike it.

    • @thestormofwar
      @thestormofwar Před 4 měsíci +2

      Two sides of the same coin: the Explorer and the Soldier 🪖.

    • @kreigguardsman3355
      @kreigguardsman3355 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I wished we got more with Picard and Sisko. I get why they didn’t but I feel like it would be intresting. Especially during the war the clash of how peace needs to be maintained with Sisko pointing out that it doesn’t always work like that

  • @flappy7373
    @flappy7373 Před 4 lety +2119

    I laughed when worf was like, "bruh don't you think you're being a little too violent here?
    When even a Klingon is shocked by your bloodlust and is trying to calm you down, you're on a whole nother level of gratuitous violence.

    • @DazzlinFlame
      @DazzlinFlame Před 4 lety +186

      To be fair. Worf is far from a proper example of Klingon bloodlust.

    • @fix0the0spade
      @fix0the0spade Před 3 lety +156

      @@DazzlinFlame I suspect even Martok would balk at the prospect of poisoning an entire planet. Gowron on the other hand...

    • @caladanrude6395
      @caladanrude6395 Před 3 lety +83

      @@fix0the0spade 100! gowron wouldnt hesitate. No one is more dangerous than a Klingon politician.

    • @dwaynebreeden4560
      @dwaynebreeden4560 Před 3 lety +20

      Rofl my azz off!!!!!! Worf, bruh calm down

    • @stevengreen9536
      @stevengreen9536 Před 3 lety +61

      @Kyle Mouttet For most Klingons killing an opponent in a fair fight is one thing.But to potentially wipe out civilians.That is crossing a line.

  • @blackm4niac
    @blackm4niac Před 2 lety +1687

    In times of peace you'd want Picard.
    In times of war you'd want Sisko.

    • @psgary6622
      @psgary6622 Před 2 lety +193

      "Nobody loves a warrior until the enemy is at the gates."-African Proverb

    • @spicyfoodchaser9406
      @spicyfoodchaser9406 Před rokem +51

      Archer was quite good in time of war. Kirk was respected as a warrior and famous for his bluffs and being a ladies man

    • @Efferheim
      @Efferheim Před rokem +63

      In times of either, you would want TNG Picard.

    • @kevindonahue2251
      @kevindonahue2251 Před rokem +38

      No, I'd still prefer Picard.

    • @darthjump
      @darthjump Před rokem +14

      What happenend to "I will make them pay for what they´ve done"

  • @alcohol-freebeer3642
    @alcohol-freebeer3642 Před rokem +337

    Sisko's decision to publicly announce a campaign of war crimes was the moment he showed he had what it took to be a Starfleet admiral one day. All while sitting in his chair and spinning around like a bored Bond villain; definitely my favourite captain, though Janeway also had a crazed ruthless streak in her that could be unintentionally hilarious.
    Also love the stares Sisko gets here from Worf and Kira, the two most hardened members of the DS9 crew IMO. Having it be one of the more young/inexperienced/naive characters would have cheapened the impact of that part of the scene.

    • @REB4444
      @REB4444 Před rokem +13

      No, he just transformed EVERY officer under his command into war criminals. A commanding officer is not just charged with the welfare and safety of his crew, but also molding these young men & women into responsible officers that will someday have others they will mold also. He could have created a chain of unethical officers that think the ends justifies the means. Just look how this type of behavior filters down throughout the Russian ranks where there are so many atrocities being committed.

    • @jsullivan2112
      @jsullivan2112 Před rokem +18

      @@REB4444 Is it a war crime if you give them every opportunity to evacuate? And then allow them to finally flee when they didn't get the message the first time?

    • @thomasschulz2167
      @thomasschulz2167 Před rokem +38

      @@REB4444 No he didn't. In Starfleet ship captains are given considerable leeway when operating significantly far away from the more established portions of the Federation. At this point in time the Maquis had basically declared their independence from the Federation even though the Federation had not and would not accepted it. Attacking a Starfleet flagged ship and making the biological equivalent of dirty bombs, the Maquis placed themselves on a platform that the Federation (who were working hard to not ignite an new war with Cardassian Empire) could not and would not tolerate. So operating under the rather broad directions of "Do not allow this grass roots separatist group to reignite a war between the Federation and Cardassian Empire." Sisko set about eliminating a group of domestic terrorists, who had made themselves an untenable threat to the Federation. I mean seriously, the Maquis basically attacked the real world equivalent of a Nuclear Weapons train, stole enough Nuclear Material to make dirty bombs, retreated to Guam, and started broad casting their intent to go nuke Russia to the world at large. If that didn't cause the US armed forces to employ scorched earth tactics to prevent WW3 I don't know what would!

    • @SlitherWhisp
      @SlitherWhisp Před rokem +3

      Yes! When a former freedom fighter questions your actions….

    • @gikari3703
      @gikari3703 Před rokem +2

      Whatever you do in life, do not threaten Janeway or her starship family. You will pay a price, and you won't like it.

  • @Futuretense101
    @Futuretense101 Před rokem +29

    Garek - "Captain, I feel I owe you an apology. I thought Starfleet was against using such tactics against an enemy bent on destroying to get what they want. Clearly, I was mistaken. Starfleet does have a set of fangs dripping with venom...and he's called Captain Benjamin Sisko."

  • @sekh765
    @sekh765 Před 3 lety +1660

    "I've only just begun. I'm going to eliminate every Maquis colony in the DMZ" - Arguably the most stone cold delivery in DS9.

    • @ryngobrody1627
      @ryngobrody1627 Před 2 lety +101

      Possibly contested by the last line in In the Pale Moonlight, where Sisko says "I can live with it."

    • @sekh765
      @sekh765 Před 2 lety +60

      @@AnIdiotAboard_ Duet is probably the best episode of DS9 (this is my hill, I will die on it), but his best line was by far
      "Don't you see; it doesn't change anything! Kill me. Torture me… it doesn't matter. You've already lost, Major. You can never undo what I've accomplished. The dead will still be dead!"
      the dude was absolutely laser like precise with his barbs to get her to execute him. Dismissing everything her resistance cell had done and reminding her of all the people they failed all at once.

    • @seventyfive7597
      @seventyfive7597 Před 2 lety +3

      You mistake a stoned cold delivery with talentless acting.

    • @sekh765
      @sekh765 Před 2 lety +23

      @@seventyfive7597 SLEVENTY GET OUT OF MY COMMENTS YOU HACK

    • @dhinton1
      @dhinton1 Před 2 lety +16

      cuz Benjamin was NOT remotely bluffing. lol

  • @booqueefious2230
    @booqueefious2230 Před 2 lety +682

    Picard: Can we get some peaceful yet effective diplomacy?
    Sisko: No, we have diplomacy at home

    • @kinagrill
      @kinagrill Před rokem +36

      Hey Sisko was willing to stay the velvet-glove approach... right up until Eddington started with the Biological Warfare. Then he had enough.

    • @americancaesar6065
      @americancaesar6065 Před rokem +21

      Sisko: I call this, 'Gun Boat' diplomacy

    • @THESILVERNARUTO
      @THESILVERNARUTO Před rokem +2

      I needed this. Ty

    • @TheArmyduck23
      @TheArmyduck23 Před rokem +6

      Aggressive negotiations

    • @user-tv9bp2dh4c
      @user-tv9bp2dh4c Před 11 měsíci +2

      Sisko said in one episode, earth is the paradise, the utopian but here we are at front line.

  • @BlueMonk25
    @BlueMonk25 Před rokem +132

    Man... I miss this era of Trek. Sisko was a force of nature... What a scene this was.

  • @Bertanis
    @Bertanis Před rokem +121

    Something to keep in mind is that Eddington obviously didn't really understand the huge consequences of what he had done since he had such a hero complex. So Sisko was just as much making it clear to Eddington that, "What you do has real consequences." as he was acting out of a grudge. Was it a brutal, heavy-handed response? Yes. Was it necessary to stop Eddington? Possibly. That's what made DS9 interesting was that there many situations where there were no perfect, moral answers.

    • @Ceece20
      @Ceece20 Před rokem +30

      Don’t forget that Eddington also fired on a civilian ship that was just trying to evacuate the 2nd poisoned planet.
      Like that’s a level of genocide right there: poisoning a place where civilians live and then shooting at the people trying to flee.
      Like Sisko *had* to stop Eddington right there and then. Otherwise you literally are enabling continuing killing of civilians trying to flee.

    • @Jake-cm9jj
      @Jake-cm9jj Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@Ceece20 Eddington doing wrong does not absolve Sisko here...he is supposed to be better, Star Fleet Captains are supposed to be the example in the darkness. He often walked the line, but crossed it here.

    • @Ceece20
      @Ceece20 Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@Jake-cm9jj as Sisko said, Eddington and the Maquee had become an intolerable threat to the safety and security of the Federation and the Peace. You don’t get to complain about not being a saint when you are trying to stop genocide of civilians. By firing on a civilian escape craft and disabling (two) federation ships, not to mention poisoning 2 planets, Eddington had to be taken down.
      If he had to be taken down hard and as a result the Maquee had to move to a new planet, that’s their fault and the consequences of their actions, not Sisko’s or the Federation.

    • @Jake-cm9jj
      @Jake-cm9jj Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Ceece20 But that's the whole point of the Federation and Star Fleet...they don't stoop to the enemy's level. They are the ideal form of what we can be. We've seen many episodes of trek where a rogue star fleet captain did something not even this bad and the main story of the episode was to take them down.
      I'm not arguing that his solution wasn't viable, sure it seemed to work....I'm just saying that he should have been court marshalled for it if he was held to the same standards they held other star fleet captains throughout the shows.

    • @Ceece20
      @Ceece20 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@Jake-cm9jjI'm saying that even Starfleet cannot let a genocidal maniac go killing civilians and attacking their ships just because "it isn't a nice method". That would be compliant with genocide to let it occur. Sisko did what Starfleet is expected to do if not fulfilling the ideal form.
      Marquee got what was coming to them and they deserved losing the planet. That was the consequence of their action for being genocidal terrorists who openly shoot down civilians trying to escape.

  • @bodhitree33
    @bodhitree33 Před 3 lety +1034

    Cardassians be like "oh I love this show."

  • @Jgt612
    @Jgt612 Před 2 lety +262

    "Mr Worf, you see those Maquis down there?"
    "Yes sir..."
    "I no longer want to."

    • @DeadPool-XF
      @DeadPool-XF Před rokem +7

      Lol thats badass

    • @jamesr8473
      @jamesr8473 Před rokem +7

      Like one of the Ship commanders on SG-1 'Weapons officer make that cruiser go away'

    • @DarkMeyer777
      @DarkMeyer777 Před rokem +2

      cover your eyes sir

    • @CaptainM792
      @CaptainM792 Před 2 měsíci

      “You didn’t see those Maquis.”
      “I did”
      “You didn’t… you didn’t! Because they’re not there!”

  • @graveeking
    @graveeking Před rokem +88

    This is one of the best moments of Sisko - he stands apart, willing to push morals past their limits for the greater good - he's not just a 'good guy' who'll always find the best solution - he's a realist who breaks down the problem and deals with it - working out what would make his opponent stop and doing it to stop potentially uncountable more casuality's if he hadn't - few Star-fleet captins would dare to make such a decision and it's honestly really impressive.

    • @kev3d
      @kev3d Před 10 měsíci +4

      "The greater good". Would it be right to snatch random people off the street to harvest organs that could save the lives of 5, maybe more people?

  • @antenant9294
    @antenant9294 Před rokem +93

    DS9 didn't start off too well, but once it got darker it produced on a regular basis some of the finest moments of Star Trek- this being one of them. As such, it became my favourite series by a long way.
    Once Avery got the beard, DS9 was awesome.

  • @OriginalRAB
    @OriginalRAB Před 7 lety +4177

    I heard the "Defiant" got it's name because "Siskos Righteous Bitch Slap" wouldn't fit on the side of the ship.

  • @MrSourceMan
    @MrSourceMan Před 4 lety +2199

    Kirk - The Pioneer
    Picard - The Paragon
    Janeway - The Compassionate
    Sisko - The Necessary

  • @agentcooper6361
    @agentcooper6361 Před rokem +15

    The most dangerous man isn't the man who makes threats. It's the man who keeps promises.

  • @homeonegreen9
    @homeonegreen9 Před 10 měsíci +65

    A weird thing to notice but the most impressive thing with this scene is the accuracy to bridge operations. Nog is the bridge talker and when Sisko calls a speed Nog says "engine-room bridge; warp six". I do not believe any other Star Trek ship bothered with having a bridge talker and instead made the captain have to call the engine room himself or had the speed set by the bridge consoles. The captain has other things to worry about than calling the engine room for speed changes and on a ship with as complicated of propulsion systems as Defiant or Enterprise direct control throttles would not be likely.

    • @roybokelman4215
      @roybokelman4215 Před 7 měsíci +10

      The helm usually has seamless control of propulsion. Nog was the relay due to damage sustained earlier in the episode. Captains do not need to communicate with engineering for propulsion unless there is some form of disruption with the computer systems, like the battle damage received from the Maquis

    • @___Mal
      @___Mal Před 7 měsíci +7

      The reason they did this was because the Comm system went down

    • @Tigerman1138
      @Tigerman1138 Před 5 měsíci +3

      I also love that Worf called for disengagement of the safety devices on the next set of torpedos.

  • @victorkong82
    @victorkong82 Před 4 lety +4430

    Sisko went from being Commander of a neglected outpost to being the center of an intergalactic war. This is like Ulysses S. Grant going from shopkeeper to Commanding General of the Union.

    • @ConsiderTheCrows
      @ConsiderTheCrows Před 3 lety +158

      And commanding the first Starfleet warship.

    • @MasteIsIllmatic
      @MasteIsIllmatic Před 3 lety +144

      Hahah basically. Bruh was a badass for sure. Ironically he is the most spiritual of all the main Captains!

    • @muttproductions2536
      @muttproductions2536 Před 3 lety +216

      He has the stubbornness of Janeway, the defiance of Kirk, the indomitable will of Picard, and the heart of gold like Pike. Captain Benjamin Sisko is without a doubt worthy of his place in the pantheon of legendary Starfleet Captains, who would even go against Starfleet's rigid regulations and general orders for the greater good.

    • @MasteIsIllmatic
      @MasteIsIllmatic Před 3 lety +19

      @Alex But the dominion fleet of jem'hadar being so obedient ruined the show. A group of soldiers not rebelling against the weak vorta is something they should have played on more.

    • @ImpendingRiot83
      @ImpendingRiot83 Před 3 lety +98

      Might be Grant-esque in that way, but he wages war like Sherman. Scorched. Fuckin’. Earth.

  • @akiramasashi9317
    @akiramasashi9317 Před 3 lety +1281

    Sisko: "Major, shut that thing off! Commander Worf prepare to launch torpedoes!"
    Worf: "Aye sir, but we're still 45 minutes away from the planet"

    • @themocaw
      @themocaw Před 3 lety +324

      "WELL, THEN, YOU'LL HAVE PLENTY OF TIME TO PREPARE, WONT YOU, MISTER WORF!?"

    • @jazzboneplaya
      @jazzboneplaya Před 3 lety +25

      Hilarious

    • @djdoc3377
      @djdoc3377 Před 3 lety +51

      Sisko: "Did I stutter?"

    • @davidbarber3821
      @davidbarber3821 Před 3 lety +3

      😆😆😆😆😆😆

    • @Rhamsody
      @Rhamsody Před 3 lety +4

      YOU'RE OVERTHINKING IT!! 😂😂😂

  • @ivanscottw
    @ivanscottw Před rokem +62

    The writing was spot on and the delivery was superb ! The ethical implications left the viewers wondering and guessing their own judgement.. Isn't that what a show like this is all about - the proof is, that even to this day - it is being discussed !

    • @theequalizer9154
      @theequalizer9154 Před rokem +5

      Outstanding post you have there! And, how very true!

  • @XHobbiesPrime
    @XHobbiesPrime Před 8 měsíci +18

    Sisko played him like a fiddle. Incredible actor, incredible writing. DS9 was MY Trek.

    • @user-fs6gd1cp1c
      @user-fs6gd1cp1c Před 3 měsíci

      startrekczcams.com/video/b4XrdFdVb6Y/video.htmlsi=tz2hGEirzv_eEKrI

  • @macrebel8068
    @macrebel8068 Před 4 lety +902

    I cant imagine how lethal sisko would be in the terran empire

    • @Dorian-_-Gray
      @Dorian-_-Gray Před 3 lety +155

      In that alternate universe, Sisko's a leering, opportunist psychopath who may or may not have grown a conscience. To the credit of the TV episode that depicts him, it's not altogether clear whether that Sisko rebels against authority because he's a better man than he seems to be, or because he's a prideful, impulsive egotist who's sick of playing house-pet to a preening dictator.

    • @krioni86sa
      @krioni86sa Před 3 lety +18

      Zerg OP. Please nerf.

    • @ChazDragoon
      @ChazDragoon Před 3 lety +22

      i mean... The Sisko can handle his own against a klingon warrior or two...and it's not even his final form. :3

    • @jamiemiller1482
      @jamiemiller1482 Před 3 lety +4

      I shudder at that thought

    • @Guy-zf5of
      @Guy-zf5of Před 3 lety +7

      @Who Cares was. He dead now

  • @Tom_Het
    @Tom_Het Před 4 lety +1348

    You'd think Worf would be happy to finally have a captain who will order an attack

    • @benjaminklaassen4722
      @benjaminklaassen4722 Před 4 lety +112

      Against civilians?

    • @justincooper1884
      @justincooper1884 Před 4 lety +138

      Worf evolved beyond a mere savage during his time on The Enterprise.

    • @TheRusty
      @TheRusty Před 4 lety +62

      Except that Worf always loses every fight he's in.
      "Are... are we the red shirts?"

    • @samieltheinfamous
      @samieltheinfamous Před 4 lety +33

      @@TheRusty He beat Duras.

    • @Krushak8888
      @Krushak8888 Před 4 lety +105

      Klingons are about honor. They don't tend to slay civilians or unarmed people. And before you say it, even starfleet doctors are trained to fight and use a phaser, it's why Bashir even states it when they invade the station. There is no honor in posioning a planet.

  • @CB66941
    @CB66941 Před rokem +31

    When Sisko says torpedoes, it makes me laugh every time

  • @insaniam_convertunt_scientiam
    @insaniam_convertunt_scientiam Před 9 měsíci +3

    I watched this on tv as a kid. When Sisko said “SHUT THAT THING OFF,” I jumped up to turn the television off.

  • @thegeneral4943
    @thegeneral4943 Před 2 lety +260

    Eddington: "You're bluffing."
    Captain Sisko: "Do I LOOK like Picard to you?!"

    • @danieldickson8591
      @danieldickson8591 Před 2 lety +5

      To be fair, Picard doesn't bluff, either.

    • @valoredramack9117
      @valoredramack9117 Před 2 lety +11

      @@danieldickson8591 Picard most definitely bluffs. Matter of fact, he threatened to resign from Starfleet and they called his bluff, that's how he ended up in retirement. He also bluffed when he commanded the USS Stargazer, the tactic was called the Picard Maneuver which was used to fool a attacking ship just long enough to gain a critical advantage. You would already know these basic facts if you stayed a virgin.

    • @lazchurchyard1229
      @lazchurchyard1229 Před 2 lety +5

      I mean, they * are * both bald.

    • @dovemilhon7035
      @dovemilhon7035 Před 2 lety +7

      Picard was a master tactician. He lacked the sheer willing brutality that Sisko displayed on several occasions. I found that Picard, at times, was hamstringed by his morals while Sisko decided that if human morals couldn't serve the greater good, then they were beneath him and went his own path. Two totally different men. I love the variety in command! It's just fantastic.

    • @thegeneral4943
      @thegeneral4943 Před 2 lety

      @@dovemilhon7035 That's why I hate Picard. You watched The Wounded? The one where Picard threatens to murder hundreds of his fellow Starfleet officers to save the vile, cunning and deceptive Cardassians? That was when I decided that Picard was a terrible character. Such a holier-than-thou complex.

  • @arthurbrandonnielsen
    @arthurbrandonnielsen Před 3 lety +1448

    People forget that Eddington claimed that the Maquis wanted the Federation to "Leave [them] alone". The problems with that: the Maquis didn't leave the Federation alone, and Eddington wanted a war and had a hero/martyr complex.
    Sisko gave him exactly what he wanted. Turns out, it wasn't what he wanted after all.
    Be careful what you wish for. You just might get it.

    • @Dorian-_-Gray
      @Dorian-_-Gray Před 3 lety +99

      This episode also makes it clear that Sisko is committing a war crime over a personal vendetta. It's neither a count against the character _as a fictional character_ nor a count against _Deep Space Nine._ The show was ahead of its time in genre TV because it allowed its characters to make big mistakes while keeping the audience's overall sympathy.

    • @matt_1984_
      @matt_1984_ Před 3 lety +40

      No, they Maquis only messed with the Federation when the federation came after them. They wanted to be left alone, the Cardassians and the Federation kept coming after them. They formed to defend themselves against the Cardassians who kept coming after them, then when the Cardassians whined to the Federation about the Federation Citizens in the DMZ daring to defend themselves, the Federation "had" to go after them because politics. The Federation should have said "LOL, too bad, you agreed to this when you agreed to let them stay in the DMZ. Have fun" Remember the Cardassians said "Leave us alone, we'll leave you alone" when the Federation and Cardassians renegotiated the treaty that put all those Federation Wolds inside Cardassian space. Turns out that was a lie. The Cardassians began to attack the colonists, and then complained to the Federation when the colonists defended themselves.

    • @stevengreen9536
      @stevengreen9536 Před 3 lety +26

      @@matt_1984_ It was more than attacking.They wanted to forcibly evict them so they would not have to share those former Federation colonies between cardassian settlers and people who were now officially federation expatriates.Today we would call that forced expulsion under international law.Frankly i think the Maquis are the baby of both the Federation and Cardassia.Any way you look at it it was a bad deal.The Maquis did not want to leave.The cardassians did not want them to stay.Conflict was inevitable.

    • @mouserr
      @mouserr Před 3 lety +10

      sisko proved he was no better. genocide weapons verses genocide weapons in the hands of people willing too use them. sisko should be imprisoned for his actions but murderers supporter their kind as heros i guess

    • @stevengreen9536
      @stevengreen9536 Před 3 lety +28

      @@mouserr I doubt anyone in Star Fleet felt Sisko was a hero for his actions.But at the same time back at Star Fleet Head Quarters.I think it is safe to say they were of a divided opinion as to what exactly should be done about the Maquis.Also no one actually died even though Sisko only gave them a small window of warning.Under today's laws the most he could be charged with is forced displacement.

  • @itsmeme8287
    @itsmeme8287 Před rokem +11

    That is how its done. Do not start a war, but do not back down from a fight and go to any length to win a fight that the other guy started.

  • @TheBigExclusive
    @TheBigExclusive Před 5 měsíci +13

    Gul Dukat approves of this video. 👍

  • @DinoJake
    @DinoJake Před 3 lety +1249

    One thing to keep in mind about this scene is the context - the reason Eddington keeps calling Sisko "Javert" is because he sees himself as Jean Van Jean - the hero of the story, that is. And he sees Sisko as the antagonistic villain that he must continuously outwit in order to win. So what does Sisko do?
    Simple - he plays the role that Eddington gives him. He deliberately makes himself APPEAR to be a bloodthirsty madman hellbent on capturing Eddington, no matter the cost, because that would in turn give Eddington the opportunity to play the role of martyr - the man who heroically, selflessly, turned himself in in order to spare his people the madman's rage.
    Sisko basically tricked Eddington into turning himself over. He knew that what Eddington wanted most was a Federation villain, so he endeavored to give him exactly what he wanted.

    • @green49285
      @green49285 Před 2 lety +154

      Wonderfully said. Also, I believe this was a "this isn't the time man," timing issue. The dominion, cardassians, & klingons are all posing separate threats. Sisqo literally has no time for this shit.

    • @MissMillsonxx
      @MissMillsonxx Před 2 lety +89

      I honestly don't think Sisko was playing chess here. I think he became legitimately unhinged in his need to stop Eddington because he duped Sisko personally multiple times. It became an obsession.
      If he'd turned himself over BEFORE Sisko fired at the planet and Sisko revealed he never had any intention of firing them then I could see it.

    • @ElJorro
      @ElJorro Před 2 lety +19

      He basically declared his strategy beforehand.

    • @brettc001
      @brettc001 Před 2 lety +79

      Mmmm. He didn’t PRETEND to poison an entire planet.

    • @ilyesistvan8331
      @ilyesistvan8331 Před 2 lety +47

      I think he showed why did this. The Macquis broke the rules and the UFP showed what happens when they play without rules

  • @zegermanscientist2667
    @zegermanscientist2667 Před 2 lety +805

    I imagine Garek standing on the side with wide open eyes full of admiration.

    • @Eidenhoek
      @Eidenhoek Před 2 lety +194

      Why would a simple tailor admire this?

    • @near--zero
      @near--zero Před 2 lety +67

      @@Eidenhoek lol I can picture a grin on his face

    • @lordbaethan
      @lordbaethan Před rokem +70

      Don't forget Garek was exactly the same person in the Mirror Universe

    • @beauxr.benoit1374
      @beauxr.benoit1374 Před rokem +6

      @@Eidenhoek Have you actually watched this show?

    • @Eidenhoek
      @Eidenhoek Před rokem +57

      @@beauxr.benoit1374 Yeah. Dude's just a tailor.
      >_>

  • @jakecopeland8068
    @jakecopeland8068 Před rokem +9

    „I’ve only just begun“ best quote ever

  • @666chapelofblood
    @666chapelofblood Před rokem +9

    I never knew war crimes were so badass, I'm going to take over creative control of Star Trek and make a show where the captain does this on a regular basis.

    • @Ragitsu
      @Ragitsu Před 11 měsíci +2

      Modern _Star Trek_ .

    • @IronheartvsMiles
      @IronheartvsMiles Před 9 měsíci

      Cry about it.

    • @666chapelofblood
      @666chapelofblood Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@IronheartvsMiles I'm sorry you're right, I also liked it when Janeway and Archer tortured Starfleet officers. It's the Starfleet way.

  • @leonardoluiss02
    @leonardoluiss02 Před 4 lety +1427

    "It's easy being a saint when you live in paradise"

    • @guywithdacap4713
      @guywithdacap4713 Před 4 lety +29

      But not as easy as not acting like a Nazi and following federation and star fleet rules when facing opposition.

    • @mattjones6578
      @mattjones6578 Před 4 lety +30

      @@guywithdacap4713 where do you get natzi u idiot

    • @blablubb4553
      @blablubb4553 Před 4 lety +45

      @@mattjones6578 Probably from the attempted mass murder and displacement of hundreds of thousands of innocent people just to prove a point.

    • @nicolasg7601
      @nicolasg7601 Před 4 lety +19

      It’s never “easy” to maintain your principles, because they are by nature inconvenient. It’s just that sometimes it’s harder than others. And those times are when you see who really believed in them and who did not.

    • @mattjones6578
      @mattjones6578 Před 4 lety +9

      @@nicolasg7601 a true hero puts there morels aside for the greater good

  • @fredsilvers1427
    @fredsilvers1427 Před 4 lety +810

    When you make a Klingon stop and stare, thinking "are you serious?!", you know you're not a push over.

    • @infinitecontent8001
      @infinitecontent8001 Před 4 lety +33

      Sisko's response: RESPECT MY GANGSTA! I'M FROM NEW ORLEANS, AND WE DON'T LET NO SHIT RIDE!!!

    • @dave929
      @dave929 Před 4 lety +28

      All three (Worf, Kira and Jadzia) each had a look. Worf for Sisko being aggressive, Kira as far as the Emissary killing and Dax for her former host’s loyal friend going against Starfleet’s ideals.

    • @AlPHArius-fs9gu
      @AlPHArius-fs9gu Před 4 lety +16

      And Dax, who knows him best just looks and thinks “shit, he’s serious.”

    • @TaliaIGhul
      @TaliaIGhul Před 4 lety +18

      Worf once told Jadzia that Sisko intimidates him. Ezri confirmed this in season 7.

    • @JoannaHammond
      @JoannaHammond Před 4 lety +3

      That's when you know you've gone to far.

  • @williamwinder5011
    @williamwinder5011 Před rokem +5

    General order 24 gives him the authority to glass a planet.

  • @fifteenbyfive
    @fifteenbyfive Před 9 měsíci +14

    Eddington: "You're going to wipe out 10 more planets?"
    Sisko: "Yes you attacked that Federation starship."
    Everyone: *falls in love*

    • @haddy106
      @haddy106 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Kronk: No no, he's got a point

  • @WolfPointStudios
    @WolfPointStudios Před 5 lety +1986

    Q: "You hit me...Picard never hit me!" Sisko: "I'm not Picard."

    • @MegaZeta
      @MegaZeta Před 5 lety +40

      That's such a bad episode, LOL

    • @stavinaircaeruleum2275
      @stavinaircaeruleum2275 Před 5 lety +20

      They need to bring Q back smh

    • @digitool5944
      @digitool5944 Před 5 lety +95

      and then Q never returned to DS9

    • @sheilaolfieway1885
      @sheilaolfieway1885 Před 5 lety +120

      @@digitool5944 because unlike on the Enterprise D sisko didn't give him a reason to return Sisko would not play Q's game and that's why he never came back "it wasn't any fun" :P
      It was pretty much this
      Q:Hi
      Sisko: Get the *7%$ off my station!
      Q;make me
      Sikso: Punches Q
      Q: this isn't fun, i'm going back to the enterprise D their actually fun to toy with.

    • @digitool5944
      @digitool5944 Před 5 lety +23

      @@sheilaolfieway1885 and then start annoying Janeway

  • @DarkDestroyer98
    @DarkDestroyer98 Před 3 lety +748

    Worf and Kira are shocked, but Dax...while maybe disappointed, just accepts it and does her job.

    • @mindhead1
      @mindhead1 Před 3 lety +63

      She knew what he was going to do.

    • @vos6136
      @vos6136 Před 3 lety +47

      Adam Young, you are correct, but Dax is 300 years old...she has seen it all.

    • @NestorCaster
      @NestorCaster Před 3 lety +48

      But in the scene before and after it’s clearly shown that what he does makes peace, doesn’t kill anyone and allows for both the Maquis and the Cardassians to switch planets and settle on the planets that are on the right sides of the demilitarized zone

    • @scarfboy
      @scarfboy Před 3 lety +19

      Given Dax's age, I think it's a really neat and fairly subtle detail.

    • @Tleilaxu0
      @Tleilaxu0 Před 3 lety +36

      @@NestorCaster You're correct, but I don't think the people here are interested in hearing it.
      For every DS9 clip that deals with something morally ambiguous (this episode, In the Pale Moonlight, anything to do with Section 31, etc), the comments are full of people low-key getting off on having their cynical worldviews validated - even if the full context of the show doesn't actually support them.

  • @monkeyman767
    @monkeyman767 Před 7 měsíci +11

    Holy crap, I've watched this scene countless times but its only now i see the slight twitch on Sisko's face just after Eddington says "The sad part is you dont even realise it" at 3:50.
    He does realise it, and its killing him but he has to keep playing this part of the villain so Eddington as the "hero" can save the others by surrendering

    • @TheBigExclusive
      @TheBigExclusive Před 5 měsíci

      The best part is Sisko told Starfleet of his actions afterwards and they approved. 👍

    • @DrDoohickey
      @DrDoohickey Před 4 měsíci +3

      ​@@TheBigExclusiveOne of the very worst pieces of Star Trek writing. A chemical weapon attack on an innocent population wouldn't even fly in the late 20th century, nevermind the era of Starfleet.

    • @monkeyman767
      @monkeyman767 Před 16 dny

      ​@@DrDoohickey yeah gonna call bullshit on that, we've proven we will absolutely stand idly by while shit like that happens

    • @DrDoohickey
      @DrDoohickey Před 16 dny

      @@monkeyman767 We're talking about two different things. Turning a blind eye to atrocities is condemnable, but committing them is another matter.

    • @monkeyman767
      @monkeyman767 Před 16 dny +1

      @@DrDoohickey I don't really disagree with you there. But by this stage we've already seen the federation do some pretty awful things, they're desperate. And for better or worse, Sisko was selected to "do what needed to be done". I'm not saying I agree with his actions because I don't. But I disagree with it being the worst piece of Trek writing for sure.

  • @RaySingh87
    @RaySingh87 Před rokem +9

    Sisko is a captain that I’d follow to the heart of Hell and back again!

  • @TheWarzoneHackerIsBack
    @TheWarzoneHackerIsBack Před 2 lety +1228

    This is actually a good lesson. It showcases how people who set aside the rules of engagement are suddenly suprised when you also set aside yours. I, personally don't think this makes Sisko the bad-ass Captain of the year, but it does make him human.

    • @philip8498
      @philip8498 Před 2 lety +97

      It does make him human, but it also makes him a warcriminal and it demonstrates why there need to be "rules" in warfare. All sides were capable of blowing each other up using their conventional weapons. But once one side uses bioweapons and another starts to gas civilians and the third side is cardassia, you have a major shitshow were nobody really wins even if they are the last man standing

    • @Archedgar
      @Archedgar Před 2 lety

      True.
      The worst pieces of shit like the marquis always whine the most when they start being handled the way they deserve.

    • @hannahmadden3573
      @hannahmadden3573 Před 2 lety

      But Eddington was engaged in revolution to save his homeworld, so this is clearly an allegory for the Jews against the Palestinians... WRITTEN by Jews.

    • @philip8498
      @philip8498 Před 2 lety +4

      @@hannahmadden3573 what in the actual fck?

    • @highjumpstudios2384
      @highjumpstudios2384 Před 2 lety +40

      Once the genie is out of the bottle, it is very hard to put it back in. I'm guessing it's one of the reasons that even the Nazis never stooped to using poison gas in any military operations.

  • @steadfastpig
    @steadfastpig Před 3 lety +622

    The absolute power of Siskos' "you betrayed your uniform" is still stunning to this day

    • @richardhamblen5526
      @richardhamblen5526 Před 3 lety +14

      IT WAS' WIN OR SURRENDER'..I WOULD HAVE EXACTLY THE SAME THING TO A CORRUPT, DECEITFUL TRAITOR..

    • @craigward348
      @craigward348 Před 3 lety +26

      Sisko knows he's betraying his uniform by doing what he's doing, but as he has said once before, the most damning part of it is I think I can live with it, I can love with it because I CAN live with it. All he does is no less than what Picard would do, only difference is Picard finds diplomacy a more, tasteful way. Sisko will do whatever is needed. I'm surprised that Sisko at some point wasnt recruited into section 31 because of how far he's willing to go for the "Security and Protection of the Federation". He honestly could be its poster boy much in the way captain America is for the American dream

    • @seventyfive7597
      @seventyfive7597 Před 2 lety +1

      And just think how'd it be if he could act!

    • @steadfastpig
      @steadfastpig Před 2 lety +10

      @@seventyfive7597 No hate for him. Better of an actor than all of us XD

    • @Thy_Boss
      @Thy_Boss Před 2 lety +7

      Yup, that's when the episode lets you know Sisko's gone too far for the wrong reasons-that this is a morally complex show that will let its hero make an egregious error over a personal vendetta.

  • @KelsonArwhi
    @KelsonArwhi Před 7 měsíci +3

    Ben motherf****in Sisko. Best Star Trek captain past, present...and future.

  • @darkgrandjedimaster
    @darkgrandjedimaster Před 7 měsíci +4

    Benjamin “I don’t f*****g bluff” Sisko…. Legend. Savage. Hero.

  • @OptionalOG
    @OptionalOG Před 2 lety +680

    Worf's moment of hesitation, then just being like "ya, alright." is so great.
    I love Worf's respect of Picard and Sisko. Everyone deserves someone like that in their life.

    • @MAWUSIFITNESSTRAININGINC
      @MAWUSIFITNESSTRAININGINC Před rokem +19

      Worf respected Picard and Sisco, but both Feared and Respected Sisco.

    • @kevindonahue2251
      @kevindonahue2251 Před rokem +8

      @@MAWUSIFITNESSTRAININGINC One of the reasons I dislike this episode. Warf clearly did not like this action and probably considered it dishonorable (which it really really is), but was cowed into doing it anyway. It ruins the character and makes him kind of a coward.

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 Před rokem +22

      @@kevindonahue2251 As a Starfleet officer he must carry out legal orders.

    • @AWMJoeyjoejoe
      @AWMJoeyjoejoe Před rokem +21

      ​​​@@kevindonahue2251Worf once said that "In war nothing is more honourable than victory." Besides it's not like any of the Maquis on the planet died. They had time to evacuate and we're given fair warning by Sisko. Nothing dishonourable about that. If Sisko gave the order to directly bombard the Maquis settlements with Quantum torpedoes I expect Worf would not have obeyed.

    • @omicroneridani7456
      @omicroneridani7456 Před 9 měsíci

      @@kevindonahue2251 Definitely the end of his integrity. Sisko, on the other hand, ended its own way earlier.

  • @ajtaylor8016
    @ajtaylor8016 Před 4 lety +1637

    DS9 is my favorite show ever, but man I feel like this decision warranted an entire season of fallout and it's basically never mentioned again.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh Před 4 lety +194

      The Maquis were not popular with the Federation either, with Ethrington being even worse as he did not at least resign his post, even using it to steal replicators.
      Also, the biggest war ever in the galaxy going on kind of swept that under the carpet.

    • @AstralMarmot
      @AstralMarmot Před 4 lety +204

      Honestly the low-light of that episode was Dax's offhand comment at the end absolving Sisko of the crime he committed. In the Pale Moonlight explores Sisko's moral compass so beautifully and intelligently. This had the same potential, but they instead chose to just... forget about it, I guess. It's a shame.

    • @dawolf856
      @dawolf856 Před 4 lety +58

      Or the episode where Sisko "tricked" or "lied" (whatever your preference) the Romulans into an alliance with the Federation against the Founders ?

    • @AstralMarmot
      @AstralMarmot Před 4 lety +106

      That IS "In The Pale Moonlight". You should give it a rewatch, and compare how they handle the ethical dilemma/resulting consequences to this one. ITPM is masterful. This one feels like a great jazz show that ends with a flat trumpet blast.

    • @dawolf856
      @dawolf856 Před 4 lety +18

      @@AstralMarmot You're absolutely correct! I was actually commenting on@AJ comment. Didn't see yours... I was told they actually continued story in book form (which book I don't know) with Sisko coming clean to Starfleet. Was told it wasn't that good. But then, novels aren't considered canon, soooo...
      I kinda liked that only Sisko and Garak were the only ones in the know. Added something to Sisko, and the show, I liked more so than others.

  • @Hotshots2890
    @Hotshots2890 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Sisko pulled a Tony Montana... You wanna war? you wanna play rough? OKAY say hello to my little friend

  • @blacktronpavel
    @blacktronpavel Před 6 měsíci +10

    This is one of those defining moments that really pushed storytelling and character development to its limits. This is why Deep Space Nine is the best Star Trek for me. It’s the Ying to the Yang that is Gene Roddenberry’s bright utopian vision and gave it some needed grounded realism. This, Paradise Lost, Sacrifice of Angels and In The Pale Moonlight is storytelling at its best.

  • @tzford
    @tzford Před 4 lety +745

    I would’ve loved to see the end of this scene when Dax says to Sisko “I’m surprised Star Fleet Authorizes this” Sisko “I knew there was something I forgot to do”

    • @campbelldowler1396
      @campbelldowler1396 Před 4 lety +46

      Oh my god I actually fell over laughing when I read this. Thank you for not ranting about having "the moral high ground"!

    • @carmensavu5122
      @carmensavu5122 Před 4 lety +102

      @@campbelldowler1396 That's what I loved about Sisko. Picard was so stuffy, always making some haughty speech from his moral high ground. Sisko is more like "I don't have time for that. I need to get shit done."

    • @campbelldowler1396
      @campbelldowler1396 Před 4 lety +22

      @@carmensavu5122 True. That's why he's my favourite Captain!

    • @b-chroniumproductions3177
      @b-chroniumproductions3177 Před 4 lety +22

      @@carmensavu5122 Or in this case, screaming "COMMANDER, LAUNCH TORPEDOES!"

    • @biancabeluga1597
      @biancabeluga1597 Před 3 lety +4

      @@campbelldowler1396 Mine too!😊

  • @swordarmstudios6052
    @swordarmstudios6052 Před 2 lety +1796

    This is an awesome scene.
    Deep Space Nine pierced the bubble of starfleets perfect morality without destroying the good it actually stands for.

    • @allenmaa7064
      @allenmaa7064 Před 2 lety +14

      perfect.

    • @Quagthistle
      @Quagthistle Před 2 lety +73

      Sadly, I can only admit that DS9 absolutely destroyed Starfleet's image of morality. This is why I didn't like it as a teenager in the 90s. Once TNG hit "Chains of Command" in Season 6 and DS9 continued that thread with things like Section 31 and leaking the information that the Romulans and Cardassians used to try to destroy the Founders' home planet (while Starfleet sat on their butts and watched) and the despicable way the Federation betrayed the Maquis for their own selfish interests (hence why I nicknamed Admiral Nakamura "Admiral Scumbag"), I felt Starfleet was an abomination I would have wanted nothing to do with if I lived in their universe. A society without a moral compass, one that they adhere to even when things are tough or the enemy is not bound by such morality, is a society doomed to rot and fall. You can see the results of this society in Star Trek Picard. Even Star Trek Renegades (which came before it) could do no better with what they were left to work with at the end of DS9. Avery Brooks played the part VERY well, but the act of surrendering your morality and attacking innocent people to "get your man" is not service to a uniform. It is betraying all that it stands far even more than Eddington ever could. Starfleet was simply too far gone at that point for it to matter, though.
      If there's one super-power our people have, it's the ability to make any paradise into a dystopia, and we always do so in the same very predictable ways. How does it start? One group lifts themselves over another group of people. Then, the "lesser" people strike back, and "greater" people 'punish' them for it. The "lesser" people raise their martyrs on a flag and the attacks crescendo into ever-greater viciousness until one side is basically destroyed. Then, the winning side starts oppressing someone else, and the whole cycle starts all over again like hamsters running on a hamster wheel. Welcome to human history... and fiction. -.-

    • @ebannaw
      @ebannaw Před 2 lety +128

      @@Quagthistle 1) Section 31 was a rogue element of the Federation, and often at odds with members of Starfleet.
      2) The Federation was on the verge of collapse, genocide, and enslavement at the hands of the Dominion and Borg - two extremely, uh, not so good people to want to live with. The fact that any of the members of Starfleet even considered morality at that point, and tried to avoid getting their hands dirty, is a testament to their character and the Federation's values.
      If you fight a war where your people and way of life are on the brink of destruction, your hands will get dirty.
      Sisko and Bashir argue a lot about these topics actually, especially in Statistical Probabilities where Bashir was advocating complete surrender to save lives.

    • @shahidulkhan9566
      @shahidulkhan9566 Před 2 lety +13

      @@ebannaw it didn't matter if it was rogue group of starfleet it didn't matter. The federation thought itself better than societies that still valued individual morality and principles. They saw themselves as a society on a pedestal. When they did that they became conflicted because they could never understand why some societies were still fighting over different principles and values. They also never understood the maquis for what they really where. Freedom fighters that finally took a stand against the constant political decisions to leave its people far out the way unnoticed and forgotten by those enjoying paradise.

    • @doihatd4595
      @doihatd4595 Před 2 lety +53

      @@shahidulkhan9566 you forget that the maquis did the exact same thing as Sisko to a Cardassian colony,
      Literally the same thing

  • @houseofno
    @houseofno Před rokem +10

    Don't forget how Sisko tested Nog's sincerity for joining Starfleet by initially rejecting his application to Starfleet Academy.

    • @jorymil
      @jorymil Před 3 měsíci

      Sisko did that a lot - with both Dax characters as well.

  • @chrisl8224
    @chrisl8224 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Well acted. However that doesn't make Sisko a bada$$. It makes him a psychopath.

    • @santiagomatamoros7885
      @santiagomatamoros7885 Před 6 měsíci

      Rubbish.
      Not taking the Sisko course of action, would likely have ended in a war between the Cardies and the Federation.

  • @Sisko03
    @Sisko03 Před 6 lety +1198

    It takes a special man to give Worf pause before firing weapons

    • @meris8486
      @meris8486 Před 5 lety +140

      It takes a special man to intimidate Worf

    • @djslapdash
      @djslapdash Před 5 lety +114

      on tng, worf was always asking if he could open fire on nearby ships only to be told no by picard. I could see him banging his console in frustration. This scene however even he is shocked as hoping sisko isnt serious.

    • @negascoot23
      @negascoot23 Před 5 lety +172

      That's the difference between Worf's relationship with Picard, and his relationship with Sisko:
      Worf honored and respected Picard (like everyone did).
      But while Worf respected Sisko as well, he was also a little afraid of him: Sisko crossed lines that Picard wouldn't and couldn't.
      I think Worf always knew where he stood with Picard...but he was less certain with Sisko.
      There was always a hard limit to what Picard would or would not do. Sisko had to be more "flexible".
      Hell, he engineered a plot to trick the Romulans into joining the war against the Dominion: He consorted with spies and criminals, sold dangerous and illegal technology, had official documents forged, and inadvertently murdered a Romulan senator...
      And he could live with it, because it had to be done.
      Who wouldn't be intimidated by a person who is capable of that?

    • @meris8486
      @meris8486 Před 5 lety +24

      James Daniels
      Well said

    • @lauranolastnamegiven3385
      @lauranolastnamegiven3385 Před 5 lety +13

      it also kind of made Sisko look bad, when Worf didn't immediately carry out the order to fire, he shouldn't have to give an order twice

  • @Tahydrahel
    @Tahydrahel Před 3 lety +233

    "You just can´t shoot a hole in the surface of Solosos III"
    Sisko: make it two

  • @SBaby
    @SBaby Před rokem +6

    You can tell by the tone of the scene that both Sisko AND the show know the line he's about to cross here and that there's no coming back from it.

  • @RagnarKorg3141
    @RagnarKorg3141 Před 9 měsíci +2

    "And you betrayed yours, right now!" You really are in no position to say that.

    • @user-fs6gd1cp1c
      @user-fs6gd1cp1c Před 3 měsíci

      startrekczcams.com/video/b4XrdFdVb6Y/video.htmlsi=tz2hGEirzv_eEKrI

  • @explorinjenkins349
    @explorinjenkins349 Před 3 lety +225

    "You've betrayed your uniform!" That gave me chills. I wouldn't want to be yelled at by Sisko.

    • @salamandastron90
      @salamandastron90 Před 2 lety +13

      Major Lennox answered with his *life*! As you should have done if you had any sense of honour! You lost the Colours of the King of England! You disgraced us, sir. You shamed us, sir.

    • @wanttocommentify
      @wanttocommentify Před 2 lety +3

      @@salamandastron90 sharpe

    • @christopherkelly4555
      @christopherkelly4555 Před 2 lety +7

      As Ezri pointed out, Sisko intimidates even Worf.

    • @kidjustice7945
      @kidjustice7945 Před 2 lety +1

      The federation are hypocrites

    • @psgary6622
      @psgary6622 Před 2 lety +1

      I want to study this just so I have a more commanding presence when I raise the volume.

  • @Madcat6204
    @Madcat6204 Před 2 lety +1182

    Don't forget that Eddington had just done EXACTLY THIS to a Cardassian colony, and brushed off any complaints by saying it was just part of war. Yet somehow Sisko doing the same thing to a Maquis colony is an unforgiveable act of evil. Dude can stuff his smug moral superiority right up the orifice he excreted it out of.

    • @uni4rm
      @uni4rm Před 2 lety +67

      Oh. So what you're saying is that two wrongs make a right. Yeah, that's not how it works.

    • @rdubayoo
      @rdubayoo Před 2 lety +119

      There seems to be a lot of people around here missing that point. Whatever Starfleet was doing to contain the Maquis wasn't working and the Maquis' tactics were getting worse.
      But Sisko got the job done, didn't he?

    • @nickmalachai2227
      @nickmalachai2227 Před 2 lety +88

      @@uni4rm obviously both of these acts are wrong (and I'd want both men tried for attempted genocide), but it does point out Eddington's Xenophobia and hypocrisy: he threatens the death of a civilian colony and he's a hero, someone else does the exact same thing for even less hostile reasons than him, and they're a monster.

    • @Darthquackius
      @Darthquackius Před 2 lety +13

      ... BOTH are unforgivable acts of evil.
      I'm glad I never watched DS9 if this is who sisko turns out to be.

    • @matcaballes
      @matcaballes Před 2 lety +29

      @@uni4rm he's not saying that. He's saying that the Maquis are being hypocritical.

  • @edwinmoy1402
    @edwinmoy1402 Před 8 měsíci +7

    This is one of my favorite scenes in DS9. I just love how after the first shot the crew followed Sisko's orders with perfect precision

  • @elderlich2090
    @elderlich2090 Před 9 měsíci +1

    You know it's fucked when even worf looks at you like "wait, we are actually doing this? I thought this was a bit!?!"

  • @MrMojo23100
    @MrMojo23100 Před 2 lety +696

    The way I see each captain, Kirk was the adventurer and explorer, Picard was the diplomat and anthropologist, Janeway the scientist and innovator, and Sisko is the Tactician and Warrior. Not only did he punch Q, I bet there would be many Klingons that have great respect for Sisko; that's something not easily earned when it comes to Klingons.

    • @mrtorllin
      @mrtorllin Před 2 lety +80

      Remember that Worf is intimidated by Sisko, that's probably more impressive

    • @Billchuck007
      @Billchuck007 Před 2 lety +22

      No love for Archer I see lol

    • @jameskyle4718
      @jameskyle4718 Před 2 lety +57

      @@Billchuck007 He's the captain who leaps during his free time... quantumly.

    • @diamondrel5190
      @diamondrel5190 Před 2 lety +9

      Tbf Picard also has the respect of Gowron (had), and could get essentially anything he wanted from him

    • @setialphasix
      @setialphasix Před 2 lety +23

      Just remember, the Klingons FEARED Kirk. That makes Kirk, in my estimation, even more of a badass than Sisko!

  • @doublep1980
    @doublep1980 Před 3 lety +342

    Remember kids, Sisko punched Q, an omnipotent space-god, in the face because he was tired of his BS.
    Note to yourself: *DO NOT PISS HIM OFF!*

    • @carlzerris6566
      @carlzerris6566 Před 2 lety +3

      I still maintain theres a good chance Sisko punched Q because he knew Q would get bored and go back to bothering someone else

    • @uni4rm
      @uni4rm Před 2 lety +5

      @Asmodeus04 lol Q let Sisko punch him. Do people not remember Q literally killed off several main characters in TNG just to teach them a lesson and brought Picard back to life? Maybe the real Sisko is actually the baseball and the one we see in all the episodes is the replacement Q made.

    • @ChaseFreedomMusician
      @ChaseFreedomMusician Před 2 lety

      Don't fuck with the space Jesus

    • @paulbrookfield4133
      @paulbrookfield4133 Před 2 lety

      @@uni4rm as Q was never explored in DS9 beyond that one appearance, we don't know why he was happy to sit out through all of what's going on - the writers didn't want to use the character, which is fair, but I always wondered if his last words on the show hinted that the writers had indeed thought about the implications of Q within the DS9 story - for example, what kind of interactions would the Prophets have with a Q? 'You're much easier to provoke [than Picard]... how fortunate for me.'
      I think they either figured that Q would have no or limited ability to go against the Prophets, and Sisko being where he is means that Q doesn't have to get involved anymore, as Sisko would be up for the fight that I'm sure Q knew was coming down the line... or it's a throwaway line that was meant to hint that Q might have found ways to cause real mischief with Sisko's short fuse, in just plain-old Q style. Who knows.

  • @miroslavtomic7038
    @miroslavtomic7038 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Michael Dorn appeared as Worf in 284 episodes and five movies. More then any other actor in Star Trek history. Thank god as he is an amazing actor playing an amazing character. And thanks to such high number of appearances he is the alien character which was explored the most. In second place is Star Trek legend Colm Meaney as Chief Miles O'Brien who appeared in a total of 225 episodes, but unlike Dorn was not always named, credited or given lines, also didn't appear in any of the movies.

  • @ZarosTemplar
    @ZarosTemplar Před měsícem +3

    "This is why Sisko is the most badass captain"
    *proceeds to commit war crimes*

  • @trentb3148
    @trentb3148 Před 9 lety +979

    People can talk shit all they want about Avery Brooks' acting. Dude oozes intensity, which was perfectly appropriate for his character. They made him the anti-Picard, which is exactly what the series needed.

    • @davidgreco7777
      @davidgreco7777 Před 8 lety +9

      Ehh he has intensity but as far as acting goes he was by far the worst actor of the main characters on ds9. There wasn't even a close second

    • @junyah1
      @junyah1 Před 8 lety +110

      +Chris Myer I disagree, my friend...Brooks as Sisko was my fav captain on my fav of the STs. Great actor. Hammed it up a lot (almost as much as Shatner), but still my fav

    • @Hudson316
      @Hudson316 Před 8 lety +24

      +Chris Myer Jake Sisko. Far worse.

    • @vanessak69
      @vanessak69 Před 8 lety +91

      Avery Brooks is perfect in this role.

    • @TheOnlyToblin
      @TheOnlyToblin Před 7 lety +75

      Jake Sisko grows immensly throughout the series. He definitely started off really bad though.
      Avery makes a great Sisko. He's intense and emotional and he really does put his own mark on the character. It's clear that the doesn't intend to play him as your general "run of the mill" starship captain, but instead went with a theatrical approach, which I actually appreciate.

  • @FreePlayMode
    @FreePlayMode Před 5 lety +1759

    When you get a Klingon to go "Damn....this dude is hardcore" in his mind, and his facial expression mirrors that, you know you're badass

    • @MegaZeta
      @MegaZeta Před 5 lety +112

      More accurately: we're shown Worf's reaction so that we understand that even _he_ thinks Sisko is about to do something that is seriously morally wrong.

    • @defiy2921
      @defiy2921 Před 5 lety +24

      You damn right ,I just watched this an said holyshit!!!
      I'm a ex- marine raider / ex-cage fighter and made me pause and rewind

    • @sheilaolfieway1885
      @sheilaolfieway1885 Před 5 lety +49

      To be honest Worf has been softened slightly by his federation experience, he may have learned a few things but they have definitly effected his Klingon spirit..

    • @defiy2921
      @defiy2921 Před 5 lety +6

      @@sheilaolfieway1885 agreed

    • @internetdumbass
      @internetdumbass Před 5 lety +38

      @@sheilaolfieway1885 I think even an unsoftened klingon wouldn't like this. This is a very dishonourable attack.

  • @Ministry_Of_Silly_Walks
    @Ministry_Of_Silly_Walks Před 10 měsíci +2

    That doesn’t make him a badass, it makes him a war criminal.

  • @frankdeleon4209
    @frankdeleon4209 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Sisko is kinda terrifying but absolutely valuable in terms of times of war

  • @irontarkus6031
    @irontarkus6031 Před 4 lety +538

    R.I.P Odo; May he find peace in the great link.

  • @brendonmatthews947
    @brendonmatthews947 Před 4 lety +420

    When Darksied said
    "They do not have the strength of character to destroy an entire planet to achieve success, but you? A human? You’d kill your own kind to win battles, an admirable quality"
    He was talking about Sisko

    • @samieltheinfamous
      @samieltheinfamous Před 4 lety +13

      Pretty sure it was Batman, lol.

    • @dlow52
      @dlow52 Před 3 lety +8

      @@samieltheinfamous kinda implied once he said Darksied. But yeah, I immediately thought of that too.

    • @Wertsir
      @Wertsir Před 3 lety +1

      Hentai Surprise Batman is just Siskos alter ego.

    • @metalore
      @metalore Před 3 lety +3

      @@Wertsir He's Sisko when it's useful.

    • @ColonelCampbellAI2024
      @ColonelCampbellAI2024 Před 3 lety

      Nope

  • @Patrick0900
    @Patrick0900 Před 7 měsíci +2

    The title is misleading
    Benjamin Sisko Is in a league of his own. Just as captain Picard and James Tiberius Kirk. They're all in a league of their own.

  • @brandono.brooks4872
    @brandono.brooks4872 Před 8 měsíci +8

    Not enough is said about that camera transition starting at 1:58...simply genius. Probably the best part of this whole scene. Kira's communication, the close-up of Sisko's face as he first cocks his neck then begins his spin, the cool calculated half-spin itself, and the eventual pan-out to Eddington standing there (via holo-communicator).

  • @RobMacKendrick
    @RobMacKendrick Před 2 lety +59

    When a Klingon gives you the "Christ, are you serious?" look, you are officially not to be effed with.

  • @BlueButtonMasher
    @BlueButtonMasher Před 3 lety +317

    everybody gangsta til sisko orders a war-crime.

    • @jwhippet8313
      @jwhippet8313 Před 2 lety +18

      Real fact: on present earth, using chemical weapons against your own citizens or un-uniformed insurgents isn't a war crime. No treaty forbids it. That's why you can CS your own people all day long, but launch a CS canister against enemy troops, and it's the Hague.

    • @dazelel
      @dazelel Před 2 lety +4

      @@jwhippet8313 The Maquis stopped being Federation citizens after the Federation-Cardassia treaty

    • @Doogie2K3
      @Doogie2K3 Před 2 lety +13

      @@jwhippet8313 To supplement your point, it should also be noted that the tear gas used by regular law enforcement around the world is a banned chemical weapon under the Geneva Conventions. And yet: perfectly fine for domestic use.

    • @BoliceOccifer
      @BoliceOccifer Před 2 lety +3

      @@Doogie2K3 Unlike tear gas, bullets aren't banned by any international convention. I'm glad that police don't use bullets to stop riots. You clearly seem to be against the use of tear gas on civilian rioters, but what would you want police to use in its place?

    • @izamanaick
      @izamanaick Před 2 lety +1

      @@BoliceOccifer yes but bullets *are* a sensible replacement for tear gas

  • @rydermccall3590
    @rydermccall3590 Před rokem +3

    “It’s easy to be a saint in paradise.”

  • @Creasy5678
    @Creasy5678 Před rokem +11

    Sisko did this because the Maquis used the same tactic against the Cardassians. They thought they could get away with making Cardassian planets uninhabitable for Cardassians and colonising them themselves-and that Federation values would stop Sisko from stopping them.
    The problem is? The Maquis failed to understand that Sisko was sent to what amounts to the frontier by Starfleet for more than one reason. He was sent to help the Bajoran's rebuild and make sure the Cardassian's never threatened the territory again, yes. But he was also sent out there to protect and defend any and all Federation interests by whatever means necessary.
    The Maquis leader was a former Starfleet officer who served under Sisko before abandoning his duty and responsibilities, betraying Sisko and all his people in the process, to fight alongside rebels who threatened to restart a War because they no longer trusted the Federation and saw Cardassian's as nothing but the enemy. He even left some ugly surprises aboard the Defiant and DS9 just to prove he had utterly abandoned Federation values and beliefs. He committed High Treason against the Federation to do it.
    Sisko took this both personally and professionally. He didn't like what the Maquis were doing, but for one of his to do what this man did? He'd have hunted him down right across the galaxy.
    Sisko understood people die in War better than the Maquis ever did. This is how he reminds them.

    • @Blodhelm
      @Blodhelm Před rokem +1

      Agreed. Eddington openly attacked the Malinche, stole industrial replicators meant as aid to the new Cardassian government during a time of war with the Klingons, who had pulled out of the Khitomer Accords and were thus hostile to the Federation, and used banned biological weapons without a second thought, thus proving that he was a continuing threat to the Federation and everyone around him.
      The Maquis were never going to last, making powerful enemies like that. The Dominion took the kid gloves off, and they were gone.