Conor Defends the Colony’s Design
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Troi and Conor share a significant, intimate moment of connection, hinting at the deepening personal bond between them and further complicating the ethical considerations involved in the Enterprise's mission.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Initially defensive but quickly shifting to confident defiance, using humor to disarm Benbeck's elitism while reinforcing his own worth and the Federation's inclusive principles.
Geordi responds to Benbeck's dismissive comment about his blindness with a sharp, witty retort, challenging the colony's arrogance and indirectly supporting Riker's critique of their ideology. His personal experience with disability serves as a counterpoint to the colony's claim of 'perfection,' reinforcing the Federation's values of inclusivity and adaptability.
- • To defend his dignity and challenge the colony's flawed notion of perfection by highlighting his own capabilities.
- • To undermine Benbeck's authority and expose the hypocrisy in the colony's engineered superiority.
- • Disability does not equate to flaw or inferiority; it is a difference that contributes to diversity and strength.
- • The Federation's values of inclusivity and adaptability are morally superior to the colony's rigid perfectionism.
Passionately convinced of the colony's ideals but slightly embarrassed by Benbeck's offense to Geordi, using humor to defuse tension while maintaining his diplomatic charm. His warmth toward Troi reveals a personal vulnerability beneath his leadership persona.
Conor passionately defends the genetically engineered society, explaining its origins, purpose, and his own role as a bred leader. He mediates tensions between Benbeck and the away team, apologizes for Benbeck's bluntness, and establishes a personal connection with Troi through shared glances and smiles. His eloquence and charm mask the dehumanizing control beneath the colony's 'ideal existence,' while his firm stance on preserving their way of life foreshadows the ideological conflict to come.
- • To defend the colony's genetically engineered society and justify its 'perfect harmony' to the away team.
- • To establish a personal connection with Troi, subtly aligning her with his vision of preserving their way of life.
- • The colony's engineered society represents the pinnacle of human achievement and must be preserved at all costs.
- • Personal connections and diplomacy are essential tools for navigating ideological conflicts.
Righteously indignant but measured, balancing moral outrage with professional restraint to avoid escalating tensions.
Riker actively challenges the colony's ideology, questioning the ethical implications of predetermined lives and contrasting the colony's 'perfect' society with the Federation's values of free will and individual potential. He engages in a verbal sparring match with Conor, highlighting the potential for unfulfilled potential in his own society, while subtly supporting Geordi's rebuttal of Benbeck's elitism.
- • To expose the ethical flaws in the colony's genetically engineered society by contrasting it with Federation values.
- • To subtly reinforce Geordi's dignity and challenge Benbeck's dismissive attitude toward disability.
- • Individual autonomy and free will are fundamental to a just society.
- • Predetermined roles stifle human potential and create systemic inequality.
Stern and unyielding, masking deep-seated fear of external influence and the erosion of the colony's 'perfected' stability. His bluntness stems from a sense of urgency to protect their way of life, but his offense to Geordi reveals a crack in his ideological armor.
Benbeck represents the rigid, isolationist ideology of the Genome Colony, vehemently opposing evacuation and dismissing Federation values, including Geordi's blindness as a 'flaw.' His bluntness creates tension, leading Conor to apologize for his behavior. Benbeck's fear of external contamination and cultural erosion drives his defiance, positioning him as the colony's traditionalist guardian.
- • To defend the colony's isolationist dogma and genetic purity against external interference.
- • To undermine the away team's credibility by dismissing their values and capabilities.
- • The colony's genetically engineered society is superior to all others and must be preserved at any cost.
- • External influence, no matter how well-intentioned, will corrupt and destroy their 'perfect' way of life.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Genome Courtyard Seating Areas serve as the physical and symbolic stage for the ideological clash between the colony and the away team. Their inviting design—lush greenery, comfortable seating, and sculptures—clashes with the tension of the debate, highlighting the colony's fragile perfection amid a toxic wasteland. The seating areas facilitate the group's movement and interaction, while their aesthetic contrast underscores the narrative tension between harmony and conflict.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Genome Colony Courtyard functions as both a literal and symbolic battleground for the ideological clash between the colony's genetically engineered society and the Federation's values. Its lush vegetation, blooming flowers, and sculptures create an oasis of 'perfect' harmony, while the transparent walls revealing the toxic wasteland outside serve as a stark reminder of the colony's fragile existence. The courtyard's inviting yet tense atmosphere mirrors the characters' emotional states—Conor's passion, Benbeck's defensiveness, and the away team's skepticism—while the space itself becomes a metaphor for the colony's internal divisions and external threats.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Starfleet is represented through the away team's challenge to the colony's ideology, emphasizing Federation values of free will, individual autonomy, and inclusivity. Riker, Troi, and Geordi collectively critique the colony's genetically engineered society, exposing its ethical flaws and contrasting it with the Federation's principles. Their presence serves as a catalyst for the colony's internal divisions, while their diplomatic engagement foreshadows the broader conflict between intervention and non-interference.
The Human Colony (Moab IV) is represented through Benbeck's rigid isolationism and Conor's diplomatic charm, both of whom defend the colony's genetically engineered society against the away team's challenges. The colony's ideological rigidity and fear of external contamination drive its resistance to evacuation, while its emphasis on 'perfect' harmony contrasts sharply with the Federation's values. The organization's internal divisions—between traditionalists like Benbeck and more adaptable leaders like Conor—become evident, foreshadowing the conflict over whether to preserve their way of life or adapt to external threats.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The away team's arrival directly leads to a conversation between Troi, Conor, and Benbeck about the colony's nature and their reluctance to leave and the absolute necessity of remaining to protect their engineered society."
"The away team's arrival directly leads to a conversation between Troi, Conor, and Benbeck about the colony's nature and their reluctance to leave and the absolute necessity of remaining to protect their engineered society."
"The conversation regarding the colony's nature leads to Conor specifically revealing the colony's genetic engineering, explaining their ancestors' vision of a perfect, selectively bred society. Their expression of surprise and asking about the implications of the practice triggers the next beat."
"The conversation regarding the colony's nature leads to Conor specifically revealing the colony's genetic engineering, explaining their ancestors' vision of a perfect, selectively bred society. Their expression of surprise and asking about the implications of the practice triggers the next beat."
"The conversation regarding the colony's nature leads to Conor specifically revealing the colony's genetic engineering, explaining their ancestors' vision of a perfect, selectively bred society. Their expression of surprise and asking about the implications of the practice triggers the next beat."
"The conversation regarding the colony's nature leads to Conor specifically revealing the colony's genetic engineering, explaining their ancestors' vision of a perfect, selectively bred society. Their expression of surprise and asking about the implications of the practice triggers the next beat."
"Troi and Conor share an intimate moment of connection, foreshadowing later where Troi attempts to comfort Conor and their connection deepens beyond a professional relationship."
"The conversation regarding the colony's nature leads to Conor specifically revealing the colony's genetic engineering, explaining their ancestors' vision of a perfect, selectively bred society. Their expression of surprise and asking about the implications of the practice triggers the next beat."
"The conversation regarding the colony's nature leads to Conor specifically revealing the colony's genetic engineering, explaining their ancestors' vision of a perfect, selectively bred society. Their expression of surprise and asking about the implications of the practice triggers the next beat."
"The conversation regarding the colony's nature leads to Conor specifically revealing the colony's genetic engineering, explaining their ancestors' vision of a perfect, selectively bred society. Their expression of surprise and asking about the implications of the practice triggers the next beat."
"The conversation regarding the colony's nature leads to Conor specifically revealing the colony's genetic engineering, explaining their ancestors' vision of a perfect, selectively bred society. Their expression of surprise and asking about the implications of the practice triggers the next beat."
"Benbeck's offensive remarks comparing Geordi to the 'beyond' humans leads to Geordi's confrontation with Hannah about how he would have been terminated as a fetus in Hannah's society, confronting her with the ethical implications of her colony's practices."
"Benbeck's offensive remarks comparing Geordi to the 'beyond' humans leads to Geordi's confrontation with Hannah about how he would have been terminated as a fetus in Hannah's society, confronting her with the ethical implications of her colony's practices."
"Benbeck's offensive remarks comparing Geordi to the 'beyond' humans leads to Geordi's confrontation with Hannah about how he would have been terminated as a fetus in Hannah's society, confronting her with the ethical implications of her colony's practices."
"Riker's question of elimination of choice in the colony parallels questions from Picard to Troi expressing his disapproval of genetic engineering and its impact on human qualities."
"Riker's question of elimination of choice in the colony parallels questions from Picard to Troi expressing his disapproval of genetic engineering and its impact on human qualities."
"The revelation about the colony's nature leads to a conversation between Troi and Conor about how her arrival and the encounters with new people and fresh perspectives have been exhilarating (3e428b392c9c451a), in contrast with their predetermined lives."
"The revelation about the colony's nature leads to a conversation between Troi and Conor about how her arrival and the encounters with new people and fresh perspectives have been exhilarating (3e428b392c9c451a), in contrast with their predetermined lives."
Key Dialogue
"CONOR: Our ancestors came from Earth to develop the perfect society. They believed that through controlled procreation, they could create people without flaws... and those people would build a paradise."
"RIKER: Engineered... ? CONOR: Genetically engineered... Eight generations of us."
"CONOR: I have been bred to fill this specific role... we grow up knowing exactly what our society needs from us... what we are expected to do. My entire psychological makeup tells me that I was born to lead... I am exactly what I would choose to be."
"TROI: We will do whatever we can to help you preserve it."
"BENBECK: Frankly, yes. No one in this society would be blind, for example, no offense intended..."
"GEORDI: I can see you just fine, sir."