Consent Denied — Repairs Promised
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
When Picard asks how to help, Granger requests crew tissue to clone fresh DNA. Riker draws a hard boundary—no consent, identity at stake—while Pulaski and Picard back him, rejecting the ask despite Granger’s appeal to self-preservation.
Granger pivots to a lesser ask—repair their failing systems—and Picard agrees, dispatching away teams as Riker acknowledges the order. Cooperation steadies the room, briefly.
Pulaski punctures the stopgap, warning repairs won’t touch genetic collapse. Granger, cornered, invokes their five-progenitor limit, leaving the air charged with unresolved desperation.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Pragmatic concern—direct and unsentimental, worried about the colony's prognosis but firm on ethical limits.
Pulaski sits with her tricorder, explains 'replicative fading' clinically, shakes her head at the DNA request, and warns bluntly that repairs alone will not stop genetic degradation.
- • Diagnose and communicate the medical reality of replicative fading clearly.
- • Protect Enterprise crew from being treated as biological resources.
- • Medical facts must guide policy; repair of equipment cannot fix genetic decay.
- • Donating crew DNA without consent or justification violates medical ethics.
Represented as an anxious, weakening collective; desperation is conveyed through Granger's plea rather than direct speech.
The Mariposan clones are represented indirectly as the cohort suffering replicative fading—their demographic crisis is the subject of the meeting and the impetus for Granger's request.
- • Seek interventions that will preserve the population's viability.
- • Maintain societal continuity and avoid collapse.
- • External genetic input could stabilize or rejuvenate the clone stock.
- • Their cultural rejection of sexual reproduction is irreversible and non-negotiable.
Pleading, anxious, quietly adamant that survival may require morally uncomfortable choices.
Prime Minister Granger pleads for help, recounts Mariposa's origin, explains cloning necessity, and asks for tissue samples or, alternatively, repair teams—displaying urgency and pragmatic desperation.
- • Obtain genetic material to arrest replicative fading and preserve the colony.
- • Secure any possible aid from the Enterprise, including technical assistance.
- • Survival justifies extraordinary measures, including cloning from external DNA sources.
- • The colony's long-term continuity outweighs individual discomfort about cloning.
Calm, morally grounded; conciliatory toward Granger but resolute against violating crew autonomy.
Picard chairs the meeting with measured authority, asks how the Enterprise can help, refuses to commodify his crew's bodies, and authorizes technical away teams to repair Mariposa's equipment.
- • Prevent harm to Enterprise personnel and preserve crew autonomy.
- • Provide practical, non-invasive assistance to keep Mariposa viable if possible.
- • Individuals cannot be treated as expendable genetic resources for another society's survival.
- • Starfleet's role is to offer technical and humanitarian aid without compromising core ethical standards.
Offended and resolute on the matter of personal uniqueness; professionally compliant when given operational orders.
Riker responds viscerally and personally to the request for cloning, rejecting the idea aloud, then immediately follows Picard's order to form away teams and prepare repairs.
- • Refuse to allow himself or crew to be cloned, defending individual dignity.
- • Execute Picard's orders promptly and organize practical help for Mariposa.
- • Personal identity and uniqueness are morally significant and cannot be quantified into copies.
- • Starfleet officers must follow command decisions even while objecting morally to requests.
Implied concern and readiness; individual crew members are not personally consenting to donation and are shielded by command ethics.
Enterprise crew are invoked collectively as a potential genetic resource and as personnel to perform repairs; they stand to be protected by command decisions and are ordered into away teams.
- • Preserve crew autonomy and safety.
- • Fulfill Starfleet mission to provide technical assistance.
- • Crew members should not be used as biological commodities.
- • The ship must offer practical aid within ethical boundaries.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Pulaski's medical tricorder rests in her lap and functions as the clinical anchor for the conversation: its presence underlines her authority, supports her diagnosis of replicative fading, and visually signals that this is a medical as well as political crisis.
The office coffee service sits on the desk as curated hospitality; its presence softens the formality but becomes incidental as the meeting intensifies—cups are used while characters speak, giving the scene a domestic, civilized surface over a morally fraught exchange.
Mariposan tissue samples are referenced conceptually as the very resource Granger seeks—though not physically present in the office, they frame the ethical dilemma (tissue for cloning) and foreshadow downstream disputes about consent and ownership of biological material.
Two drinking glasses function as handheld props: characters hold them during the exchange, providing small physical gestures that punctuate dialogue and humanize the negotiation—serving as a reminder of civil ritual amid an uncomfortable moral request.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Granger's executive office functions as the formal negotiation chamber where hospitality and politics collide. The room's polished desk and arranged seating create a veneer of civility that is stripped away as the meeting exposes deep ethical disagreement about survival and bodily autonomy.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"After Riker refuses DNA donation, Mariposan clones abduct him and Pulaski to harvest tissue without consent."
"Diagnosing replicative fading logically leads Pulaski to reject cloning as a fix and propose natural reproduction instead."
"Diagnosing replicative fading logically leads Pulaski to reject cloning as a fix and propose natural reproduction instead."
"Pulaski’s diagnosis of replicative fading escalates to the hard timeline of two to three generations before collapse."
"Pulaski’s diagnosis of replicative fading escalates to the hard timeline of two to three generations before collapse."
"Mariposa’s suppression of sexuality is thematically reversed by Pulaski’s plan that mandates robust sexual reproduction to restore genetic diversity."
"Mariposa’s suppression of sexuality is thematically reversed by Pulaski’s plan that mandates robust sexual reproduction to restore genetic diversity."
"Mariposa’s suppression of sexuality is thematically reversed by Pulaski’s plan that mandates robust sexual reproduction to restore genetic diversity."
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"GRANGER: We need an infusion of fresh DNA. I was hoping that you would be willing to share tissue samples from your crew."
"RIKER: No way. Not me."
"PULASKI: Repairing the equipment is not going to solve your problems."