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  • 00:00

    Hi all! Another week, another review of Discovery’s season three, this time “Die Trying”.

  • 00:07

    Spoilers ahead for this review We waste no time in this episode getting int

  • 00:12

    contact with the remnants of Starfleet and the United Federation of Planets. The tracking

  • 00:17

    down of the organisation was accomplished much faster than I thought it would, suggesting

  • 00:23

    that the series has far more to bring to the table than simply rediscovering the UFP.

  • 00:28

    Discovery, despite giving prior warning to the Starfleet’s base receives a chilly welcome

  • 00:33

    which is completely justified, but leads to a disgruntled Discovery crew. Looking at it

  • 00:39

    from the Starfleet side, not only has the fleet been operating in “triage” mode

  • 00:44

    for the past few decades, but from their point of view, a ship lost in 2258, with no record

  • 00:50

    of anything like a Spore Drive or the Section 31 Control AI, all classified incidents, turns

  • 00:56

    up via time travel. The last time the Federation interacted with time travel, was the culmination

  • 01:02

    of the Temporal Accords at the end of that messy Time war that had hotspots erupt all

  • 01:07

    throughout history. No wonder Admiral Charles Vance wouldn’t

  • 01:12

    let them near anything until they’d been thoroughly vetted. We learn that the united

  • 01:17

    Federation has lost its governmental structure and now Starfleet seems to be all that holds

  • 01:23

    its remaining worlds together. From the minute the Commander in Chief is introduced, we’re

  • 01:28

    presented by a barrage of situations from multiple crises involving the Emerald Chain

  • 01:34

    and an unknown pathogen. I’m pleased to see that Starfleet seems to still be trying

  • 01:39

    to be Starfleet, provide aid to all these issues, it’s just overwhelmed, spinning

  • 01:45

    so many plates. Over time, many are going to be dropped and we’re told that over time,

  • 01:51

    the Federation dropped from 350 members down to 38.

  • 01:56

    A big contributing factor is apparently the loss of the UFP subspace network isolating

  • 02:01

    the former member planets from the diminished fleet. As we saw with Trill, and to a lesser

  • 02:07

    extent, Earth, many of the worlds are doing fine, they’re just sort of going it alone

  • 02:14

    until the UFP returns. Makes me think that we could see some real contribution towards

  • 02:21

    the reconstruction of the Federation by the end of the series, but we need to see the

  • 02:25

    UFP council recreated fully. Hopefully Starfleet does not retain control of the 38 worlds as

  • 02:31

    it currently has, government needs to be separate from the military, but has Starfleet been

  • 02:37

    in control for so long that they’ll know when to hand over the reins? Questions for

  • 02:42

    later. It was super fun to see the Discovery crew

  • 02:45

    nerding out over the 32nd century Starships. Made me think of some of the reactions from

  • 02:50

    certain Star Trek channels out there and to be honest, I’m thinking of gathering as

  • 02:54

    much info as I can on them to do my own. Also, it looks like I might have to update my Voyager

  • 03:00

    Legacy video. We’ve got at least 10 others to add to the list, and it does give me the

  • 03:05

    warm fuzzies to see that the Voyager also gets the legacy registry treatment that the

  • 03:11

    Enterprise received. There’s mention of organic compounds in

  • 03:15

    the hull, entire segments of ships being holographic, and they note a ship that doesn’t even have

  • 03:21

    pylons. Such a plan was considered for the earlier Universe class Enterprise-J, so it’s

  • 03:28

    nice to see how the technology has evolved to crazy levels. Amazing that entire ships

  • 03:34

    can be supported by holographic components, their holograms must be so advanced, oh wait…

  • 03:42

    they can be killed by trying to process irregular blinking apparently. That was the only scene

  • 03:47

    in this episode that gave me the Spock-eyebrow reaction then a facepalm.

  • 03:52

    The distortion field that hides the fleet HQ is one being powered by all the surrounding

  • 03:58

    vessels and makes for a very alien, and rather un-federation style display, which I’m alright

  • 04:05

    with, again, we’re 800 years further on than TNG era stuff. Things like this (added

  • 04:11

    to the touches like the entire floor materialising in the station when needed) create the look

  • 04:16

    and feel of a very advanced power. Comparatively, the crew of Discovery is even further highlighted

  • 04:22

    as being very out of place when compared to this, isolating them even more than the mistrust.

  • 04:28

    Hence their protest at being split apart when the only thing that they have now is one another.

  • 04:34

    I like the new uniforms of the era, well, I like the admiral’s version, the jumpsuit

  • 04:40

    one looks a little too plain for me, I prefer the two piece suits, I think only enterprise

  • 04:45

    made the onesie look good and that’s because those were utility overalls.

  • 04:49

    A big plot point is dropped with the repetition of a song that Tal is familiar with in a recording.

  • 04:57

    Burnham seems to be the only one to find it strange as its nothing by itself, yet. But

  • 05:04

    Chekov’s gun and all that. Also Sulu’s plant. So here’s my theory and I’m sure

  • 05:12

    its not the only one along tis line. But in my first review, I pointed out that the only

  • 05:17

    recorded instances of dilithium being destroyed involved resonance in its crystalline structure

  • 05:23

    that built until it shattered, like we saw with the Crystalline Entity and in real life

  • 05:29

    with similar structures. Now we have the notice of a strange song with no clear origin point

  • 05:36

    making its way into people’s minds. What if the phrase uttered, “it just makes its

  • 05:40

    way into the ether” proves to be literal and a signal crossed the galaxy, resonating

  • 05:46

    with all the dilithium until… the Burn. I also said that the dilithium might be alive

  • 05:53

    and have done it out of protest, which I was joking about, so I just hope this isn’t

  • 05:58

    “the song of the dilithium crystals” or some such, or some such weirdness.

  • 06:02

    Speaking of the Tikhov ship, we get to see a good old-fashioned style “ship in distress

  • 06:07

    story” with the seed vault drifting into an Ion storm, some radiation interference

  • 06:12

    coinciding with a mid-transport being to create a distorted entity. Watching them piece together

  • 06:18

    what happened was well paced, but the sort of thing that a single episode could have

  • 06:24

    been comprised of. Nahn makes the choice to leave, which surprised

  • 06:29

    me, but also was not a decision that impacted me that hard and considering I liked her character,

  • 06:35

    that’s odd. Maybe it’s because we didn’t get enough of her this series, and now she’s

  • 06:40

    gone, or maybe it’s because I think we’ll see her again. She was also still the late

  • 06:45

    addition to the crew which made her the outsider, so again, her leaving was lessened by that

  • 06:51

    peripheral status in my mind. If I had one criticism of this episode, its

  • 06:55

    that there was a lot of development crammed into it, locating Starfleet, the crew debrief,

  • 07:01

    Nahn’s decision to leave, the song and whatever the hell Mirror Georgiou’s agreed to. Then

  • 07:07

    again, there’s not enough here to stretch over two episodes really amd I wasn’t lost

  • 07:11

    at any point so it did well there. Georgiou is finally on the back foot too, after being

  • 07:18

    confronted by whoever David Cronenberg is playing here, maybe himself. Considering this

  • 07:23

    director’s favoured dark science fiction, his character seems completely unphased by

  • 07:29

    Georgiou’s bluster, I really get the sense that he’s seen some serious Trekking in

  • 07:34

    his life. Georgiou has gone from a time where the Mirror

  • 07:37

    Universe was a classified unknown and her survival a dark secret wrapped up in the notorious

  • 07:43

    Section 31, to a time where it’s common knowledge enough to have been studied consistently

  • 07:49

    and now ancient, 500-year-old history. He throws the fall of the Terran empire back

  • 07:55

    in her face, which we are aware of from DS9 as well as the killing of the Vulcan science

  • 08:01

    team at First Contact, which we saw in Enterprise. Now we have her weird freezing up on the Discovery

  • 08:08

    as a clear indicator that she’s made some pact with, whatever he represents.

  • 08:14

    Burnham and Saru are forced into a confrontation of sorts as her new way of operating, which

  • 08:21

    is basically the same as ever minus justifications, clashes with his responsibilities as a captain

  • 08:27

    to his crew and the chain of command. She proves to be an able commander, after all,

  • 08:32

    it was what she was pegged for before her mutiny and successfully completes her mission,

  • 08:37

    showing Starfleet how they operate. Despite being so adherent to the preservation and

  • 08:43

    reunification of the Federation, she seemed willing enough to risk it all to “get her

  • 08:47

    hands on” the data to try to cure the illness. I think we’re going to continue to see Burnham

  • 08:53

    struggle to adjust back to the formal Starfleet life, she’s capable of being both a model

  • 08:59

    commander and a roguish maverick, but those two don’t always go well together, but when

  • 09:06

    it do, we get a Kirk-style leader. Detmer is still struggling with the responsibility

  • 09:12

    of flying Discovery and I hope she doesn’t lockup in tense situations in the future,

  • 09:17

    but the crew looking out for one-another is definitely showing the family dynamic, rather

  • 09:23

    than merely saying there’s one there. All in all, I enjoyed this episode immensely,

  • 09:29

    however it was mostly due to the answers provided and the lore dump that was dropped at my feet

  • 09:35

    as well as the technobabble and tech stuff. In terms of character’s it’s been more

  • 09:41

    of the same, which isn’t bad, its just in this instance it was all overshadowed by the

  • 09:46

    reappearance of Starfleet. So thanks for watching this review of episode 5. I’m really excited

  • 09:52

    to explore these new vessels more and I hope we get some more screentime with them, perhaps

  • 09:57

    the Voyager J is the current flagship or do you think there’s a new Enterprise out there

  • 10:03

    still? Thanks again and until the next one, Goodbye!

All

The example sentences of JUSTIFICATIONS in videos (7 in total of 8)

is verb, 3rd person singular present basically adverb the determiner same adjective as preposition or subordinating conjunction ever adverb minus noun, singular or mass justifications noun, plural , clashes noun, plural with preposition or subordinating conjunction his possessive pronoun responsibilities noun, plural as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner captain noun, singular or mass
then adverb you personal pronoun want verb, non-3rd person singular present to to write verb, base form out preposition or subordinating conjunction your possessive pronoun justifications noun, plural and coordinating conjunction the determiner final adjective line noun, singular or mass , which wh-determiner will modal be verb, base form some determiner number noun, singular or mass
additionally adverb , i personal pronoun 'll modal go verb, base form into preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner history noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner research noun, singular or mass as adverb well adverb as preposition or subordinating conjunction justifications noun, plural for preposition or subordinating conjunction particular adjective decisions noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction why wh-adverb i personal pronoun selected verb, past tense 200 cardinal number celsius noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner operating verb, gerund or present participle temperature noun, singular or mass
that preposition or subordinating conjunction most adjective, superlative of preposition or subordinating conjunction these determiner justifications noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present grounded verb, past participle in preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner misunderstanding verb, gerund or present participle of preposition or subordinating conjunction how wh-adverb digital adjective audio noun, singular or mass works noun, plural .
justifications verb, 3rd person singular present i personal pronoun do verb, non-3rd person singular present n't adverb recall verb, base form congress noun, singular or mass talking verb, gerund or present participle about preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner year noun, singular or mass on preposition or subordinating conjunction whether preposition or subordinating conjunction they personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present going verb, gerund or present participle to to do verb, base form
need noun, singular or mass to to prove verb, base form what wh-pronoun its possessive pronoun moral adjective justifications noun, plural might modal hypothetically adverb be verb, base form and coordinating conjunction how wh-adverb could modal he personal pronoun possibly adverb show verb, non-3rd person singular present
if preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner deposits noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present scrutinized verb, past participle at preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner stage noun, singular or mass , none noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner justifications noun, plural that wh-determiner will modal exist verb, base form

Use "justifications" in a sentence | "justifications" example sentences

How to use "justifications" in a sentence?

  • If you look in real life, it is very hard to describe people as good people, bad people, heroes or villains. People aren't bad people. They all have their justifications.
    -Lennie James-
  • I love it when my justifications for avoiding housework are actually legitimate.
    -Julie Kenner-
  • Illusions... are simple facts, but they have been created by the mind, by the spirit, and they are one of the justifications of the new spatial configuration.
    -Georges Braque-
  • The missiles come first, and the justifications come second.
    -E. P. Thompson-
  • Over-reliance on strictly economic justifications has already begun to hurt the quality and range of education at every level of American life.
    -Charles M. Vest-
  • When I did 'Babe' I wanted to talk about animal rights without going through some convoluted justifications about using animal products.
    -James Cromwell-
  • With all the justifications I have had in place, telling the truth under certain circumstances was in my universe no different than telling a lie or withholding.
    -Mike Rinder-
  • As the Internet breaks down the last justifications for a professional class of politicians, it also builds up the tools for replacing them.
    -Aaron Swartz-

Definition and meaning of JUSTIFICATIONS

What does "justifications mean?"

/ˌjəstəfəˈkāSH(ə)n/

noun
action of showing something to be right or reasonable.
other
Reasons or facts that explain why some things are true.