Ds9 let he who is without sin trailer
Furthermore, "figuring" Dax out was what made her so intriguing to him when he first came to Deep Space 9. However, the amount of work it took to get close to her was why he stopped.
Dax shrugs this off and expresses why she likes Worf, despite the fact that he is a lot of work. Just then, Arandis enters to say she hasn't found Worf. Soon, they hear lightning and thunder , which should never happen in that part of Risa. As several of the visitors group under shelter, along with Quark, Bashir, and Arandis, they wonder about what happened when Fullerton, and Worf, and his group enter.
Fullerton makes his speech and leaves, but Worf is confronted. Worf stands his ground, saying, as Fullerton did, that Federation citizens must be prepared to resist a Dominion invasion and cannot afford to let themselves go with the illusion of Risa.
He doesn't want to argue anymore and leaves. The rain creates an unpleasant ambiance on Risa because everybody expected sunny weather. Even the Risians are depressed, but Arandis tries to organize an indoor game of hoverball instead. Only Dax will join, and Arandis admits that the guests have been complaining about everything and is dismayed herself. She wonders whether Fullerton was right in that they've forgotten how to deal with adversity. Fullerton explains his satisfaction to Worf, since guest population is declining and the message is spreading.
But when Worf leaves, the fundamentalist confers with his assistant that all the attention will be forgotten when the weather control system restarts. He wants to take things one step further. Dax confronts Worf about the situation, saying his actions aren't about the Essentialists or the Federation but about them as a couple. Angry that he didn't trust her with Arandis, she asks him why he is so obsessed with controlling everything in his life.
Saying there must be something going on, she states Worf sets a great example of Klingon honor, but has none of the Klingon zest for life. Worf tells her that when he was a child he grew up on the sparsely populated farmworld of Gault , and as the biggest, strongest and most fearless boy around he did whatever he wanted with no worries.
At the age of thirteen, he captained his school's soccer team and was determined to win, so when he and a boy named Mikel made a play for the mid-air ball he threw himself at his opponent in order to score. He succeeded, but had failed to realize in his excitement that he had accidentally broken his opponent's neck when their heads collided, and the boy died the next day.
Worf realized that Humans are extremely fragile and he decided to restrain himself so that no one else suffered; over time his restraint became part of who he is. Worf promises that he will never hurt Dax, a promise she returns but she tells him that he can't control her and asks instead for his trust. Suddenly the conversation is interrupted by an earthquake. It doesn't take them long to realize that Fullerton has something to do with it. This time he has lost the support of Worf who tells Fullerton that the Federation will persevere against the likes of the Klingons, the Dominion and, most importantly, people like him.
Fullerton hits Worf in the face, who responds by sending Fullerton flying over a table. Weather is finally back to normal although only for their last day of vacation. As Worf and Dax are left alone, Worf allows himself to loosen up a little and try and make the most of the few hours remaining by swimming with Dax — with no bathing suit. That's part of the fun. It was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen — until now. If you want amusement, you go to a holosuite. And if you need protection, you call for Starfleet.
But someday, someday soon, you're going to have to learn to take care of yourselves. Because if I see you as helpless children, then how do you think the Borg see you?
Or the Romulans, or the Cardassians, or the Klingons, or the Dominion? These empires look at the Federation, and they see a prize, a prize that we have forgotten how to protect. And if we don't change our ways, they're going to take it from us. We can either turn our backs on childish things and re-embrace the hard work that built the Federation in the first place, or we can lie here napping in the sun, until we wake up with Jem'Hadar guns to our heads. The choice is ours. Heaven help us if we make the wrong one.
You'd be dead now. Even you Starfleet officers were lulled into a false sense of security. If you could be taken unaware, what chance do the rest of us have? The sad truth is the galaxy is a hostile place. Forget that, even for a moment, and you risk losing everything. Just something for you to think about while you wait for your desserts.
And we have a hundred seventy-eight different words for rain. Right now it's glebben ing out there. And that's bad. Trust me…there's no word for 'crisp' on Ferenginar. Why don't we go swimming together? Memory Alpha Explore. Christopher Pike Number One. James T. Generations First Contact Insurrection Nemesis. Memory Alpha. Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? View source. History Talk Do you like this video? Play Sound. Real World article written from a Production point of view.
Categories DS9 episodes. Universal Conquest Wiki. Previous episode: " Trials and Tribble-ations ". Next episode: " Things Past ". Available on Netflix and Amazon. But either way, that meant more parties. I never quite got the hang of parties, but I liked the idea of them, and most passed in a sort of general, mildly intoxicated, moderately belligerent blur. Once, someone might have talked me into starting a fight club.
It was a weird time. Sarah was a little crazy she joined a cult for a while after she graduated , and she had this habit of stripping down in public when she got drunk. She was a big believer in being free and the beauty of the human body and what not. Sarah notices me leave, and she follows me, shouting cheerfully at me about the aforementioned beauty of the naked whatnot. Sarah was just super cheerful and kind of messed up and convinced everybody should see her naked.
And it made me incredibly uncomfortable. Seeing a cute young woman completely naked should, theoretically, be a pleasant thing for a straight guy like myself. It was not. All of which is just to say: I get where Worf is coming from here.
At least, I should get it. Also, the clothes. Sweet zombie Jeebus, the clothes. Show the supply chain who's boss Get a head start on your holiday shopping at Amazon, Target, Best Buy, and more. Which says something horrible about my brain, I guess. The clothes are definitely a factor. Plus, the more he and Dax struggle to work through their problems, the more it seems like those problems are unsolvable, driving Worf to take action that, in a different context, he might not have.
Yes, there are cartoonishly simplistic protest movements in the real world, but great storytelling exists to increase our empathy, not decrease it; these guys are just hanging out waiting for Captain Planet to show up and lecture them. What really makes this hour hard to watch is how it hard it works to destroy the Dax and Worf relationship under the guise of developing it.
Dax is easy-going, mischievous, and open to new experiences. Worf is none of those things. His attempts to dictate her behavior would be unbearable if they were aimed at someone with less of a will to resist, and even as it is, he comes across as a domineering prick.
Dax and Worf share a love of Klingon ritual, and a clear physical attraction, but this episode underlines again and again that they want very different things out of life. If Dax really understood Worf and cared about him, why the hell would she take him to the one planet in the universe least suited to his personality?
See, when Worf was younger, he got overzealous during a game of soccer, and accidentally killed another kid. This is the guy who blew up a ship last season before bothering to check if it was the ship he was aiming for, after all.
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