"Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" Past Tense, Part I (TV Episode 1995) Poster

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8/10
Stuck in the year 2024
Tweekums20 April 2010
Warning: Spoilers
When Sisko, Bashir and Dax beam down from the Defiant to San Francisco they think the worst thing that will happen is that they may have to listen to a few boring after dinner speeches at Star Fleet headquarters, however due to a problem involving chronoton particles they end up in the year 2024. Sisko and Bashir are promptly picked up by the police and because they have no ID or money they are taken to an area called Sanctuary which is a closed off area of the city where the homeless, jobless and mentally ill are dumped out of the way. Dax has rather more luck as she was found my a wealthy computer engineer who helps her get new ID. Sisko realises they have a problem when he sees that the date is a few days before a famous riot takes place in the Sanctuary District.. a riot that will lead to changes in US policy and ultimately the formation of Star Fleet. Things get worse when a sanctuary resident is killed while trying to protect Dr Bashir... a resident who's actions during the riot should have prevented a bloodbath. His death has repercussions in time as the Defiant loses contact with Earth and scans show no sign of Star Fleet.

Usually when Star Trek episodes send people to Earth's past the either end up in our present or into an interesting time before the episode was made, having them stranded in our near future made a nice change. The story itself was fairly gripping and I liked the way they dealt with the problems of Dax's spots. I look forward to discovering how they will correct the time line and return to their own time in the conclusion to the story.
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7/10
Twenty years later, this is disturbingly familiar
aarondyer-36-69877118 June 2014
I'm a Star Trek fan from its beginning, and I know that one thing they do poorly is time travel. This story is not an exception to the general rule, but today's viewer can be distracted from the flaws by the jarring effect of seeing what writers in 1995 considered fiction.

The "sanctuary" district in San Francisco interns the homeless, the unemployed, and mentally ill people. The government processes them and hands out food stamps. Welfare is not merely accepted, but an enforced one. The writers call the Bell riots a watershed moment of the 21st Century as a harbinger of change for the better. Today we can look at this fiction and see how much closer we are to it now than we were twenty years ago.

I've always admired Arthur C. Clarke for his vision of the future. He was startlingly accurate in his depiction of online media, but we lack only extraterrestrials to drive us forward into his vision. "Past Tense" doesn't require its writers to look so far ahead. They only had to extend a trend line of poverty a few years out. But, while it might have seemed far- fetched in 1995, today's viewer can see that the trend line is no longer fiction.

The only real requirement is that the writers not let the characters get in the way. There is little in the way of character development. Sisko, Bashir, and Dax are observers, even when Sisko has to take part in the action.

Still, I'm not convinced about the writer's view of neckties in 2024...
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8/10
Sanctuary City
kchiefs121 April 2021
Here we are in 2021 & it's oh so familiar. Watch this episode set in 2024 to see our future. Great two part episode.

8/10.
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10/10
Deep Space 9's Version of "Future's End"
XweAponX1 May 2015
It's not that Time Travel stories are *explained* well in the Trek Universe, it's that they are *performed* and Produced well.

Every time travel tale has a gimmick or a gadget. I should say, every "Unwanted Time Travel" tale because in Trek, these are all accidents. Twice in the Trek Universe has time travel been done deliberately, in 1968's The Original Series episode "Assignment Earth" and in 1986's "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home".

As far as I can recall, these are the only two instances that were deliberate, maybe The Original Series "All Our Yesterdays" - Which had Kirk deliberately setting up a time portal for Spock and McCoy. Although, the original time travel was an accident because Mr Atoz (Ian Wolf) accidentally let Kirk jump into the "Atavacron".

Whether in TOS, TNG (Time's Arrow), Voyager or on DS9, Trek has a style when it comes to Time Travel stories, there is always some gadget that caused it, be they the Walls of the Cave on Dividia II, or in this case, a malfunction of the Romulan Cloaking Device which had been installed on The Defiant.

What interests us here, is that in our world, this story almost happened - In Los Angeles, where creation of something like what we see here, a "Sanctuary District" almost happened, by bean-counting reactionary politicians in that city whose solution to the Homeless problem is to not see them and then refuse to acknowledge their existence. One thing I will say, is that this so-called "Forced Welfare State" will never happen, it is always the choice of the Citizen to use Welfare, or to not use it. Most people who are on it, don't like the necessity of being on it. But it is better for it to BE there so we CAN choose to use it or not, I won't have someone else "Choosing For me", by denying me the right to choose it - By Eradicating it.

Fortunately, this concept was shouted down by the public in our world, it never happened. However, in our Trek story, this is going to happen in 2024, about 9 years from now.

What is great about Trek is that they can foresee future technology, sometimes getting it right - We already have communicators (iPhones) and things like Tricorders. What I like here are the Future "Internet Terminals", which look like a cross between a 1980 Dynagraphyx Dumb Terminal and a 80486 or maybe even a Pentium system, with extra displays and a Stylus. One thing was done right, the security cards used to access the terminals, I don't think USB had been put into use back when this was made, but today we have security chips flashed into USB drives, I use one for Pro Tools to enable my Plugins, it holds my I-Lok User ID and my Account Info.

This is not the first Trek episode involving Time where something got changed and our Principles must needs change it back, Harlan Ellison wrote "City on the Edge of Forever"- Which is the same as we see here, future is changed, something very bad has to happen to change it back. Or rather, something bad did happen, was accidentally prevented, and it changed the whole future.

These episodes are basically iterations of "The Butterfly Effect", or in Fringe science, "The Firefly Effect", but it is all the same thing, the idea that if time travel can occur, would changing very minor things result in a drastic change in our history? This is a premise that cannot be tested - YET.
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8/10
The name's Bell...
snoozejonc22 April 2022
A transporter accident sends Sisko, Dax and Bashir back to Earth, 2024.

This is a strong episode with a good setting and interesting story.

The plot sets the scene nicely for what feels likely to be an eventful conclusion. I think the plight of the homeless is a worthwhile subject and it is tackled well by the writers as they give a prediction of where they think Earth will be by 2024. Also the racial themes are subtlety included with Jadzia's contrasting experience.

Sisko and Bashir have similar roles to Kirk and Spock in 'City On The Edge of Forever'. This leads to some memorable scenes with Avery Brooks and Alexander Siddig on top form. I also love Dick Miller's cameo, which was inspired casting.

I know it is nothing new for Star Trek, but some of the technobabble feels incredibly contrived to fit the story. Colm Meaney delivers it confidently as always, but it is blatant box-ticking by the writers at times.

Visually it is one of the best DS9 episodes of the show so far, primarily due to the ambition of a 1990s production showing us Earth 30 years into its future and it not looking bad in 2022.
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9/10
Well Set Up
Hitchcoc12 October 2018
Jadzia, Bashir, and Sisko try to go to a conference in San Francisco. During the transport, something goes wrong and they find themselves in 2024. LIfe on earth has become a serious class structure, where the poor and defenseless are put in ghettos. The problem has to do with the mutation of time due to actions taken by Sisko and Bashir. The second half should be interesting.
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9/10
"Eventually people in this century will remember how to care"
eventsman15010 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
A powerful episode mostly set in 2024. Sisko, Bashir, and Dax are thrust back in time through a transporter malfunction. Dr. Bashir's comments on the lack of mental health care for the unhoused people living on the street in the "Sanctuary District" are on the nose. How sad that as 2024 approaches, society isn't looking much better than the bleak view depicted here. This episode has echoes of the classic TOS episode "City on the Edge of Forever" with the Starfleet temporal directive to avoid getting involved for fear of changing their own history. Except in this case the opposite happens, in a way. The dystopic view and social attitudes of this imagined 2024 are frighteningly accurate - though the technology and wealthy people's fashions that Dax encounters are cringeworthy.
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6/10
Mildly interesting
Paularoc18 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Sisko, Dax, and Bashir are to attend a conference at Starfleet Headquarters in San Francisco. But when beaming down there is a time shift and they end up in the year 2024. Bashir and Sisko are quickly arrested as vagrants and since they are without identification cards, they are soon sent to one of the many Sanctuary Districts. These districts are used to enclose all the homeless, unemployed and in some cases mentally ill. It is a dreadful place with roaming gangs of thugs; people do not have adequate food or housing and medical attention is nonexistent. Bashir is appalled at the conditions and simply cannot understand how such conditions can be allowed to happen. Sisko, by an incredible plot coincidence happens to be a student of this period of history and knows that soon there will be riots, the resolution of which will change the course of history. A man named Gabriel Bell will protect hostages and the world will learn the truth about the Sanctuaries. Unfortunately, Bell is killed when trying to protect Bashir from thugs. In the meanwhile, Dax, with the help of a wealthy protector tries to find out the whereabouts of Sisko and Bashir. I am a fan of time shift stories but I did not find this one particularly interesting even though the acting throughout was convincing. Given this show is from the mid nineties, it was quite striking that the view of 2024 was of a period of massive unemployment and distress. A thought that is now too close for comfort.
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9/10
Eerily prescient
ddumble23 September 2022
When this episode was broadcast, it was largely ignored; looking at it from 2022 it is eerily prescient in predicting the homelessness crisis and the inadequate government response to it. The homeless encampments where I live look very much like the Sanctuary District Sisko and Bashir find themselves in after inadvertently transporting to San Francisco in 2024.

It is also a wry commentary that two men of color, Sisko and Bashir, and locked away after being discovered without ID while Dax, an attractive Caucasian female, is rescued by a white knight.

This is also the first episode in the series that depicts Sisko as a "hero" whereas he is usually the competent administrator of DS9. This two parter marks the beginning of DS9 finding its footing and becoming what I believe is the best incarnation of the Trek franchise.
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7/10
The first time travel episode of the series.
planktonrules21 December 2014
This is a two-part episode that marks the first time the folks from "Deep Space 9" went into the distant past. In this case, Dr. Bashir, Jadzia Dax and Commander Sisko are beaming down to Earth when, inexplicably, they arrive in 2024! This turns out to be a real lousy time and place, as San Francisco has special 'zones' where they place the poor and homeless--and Sisko and Bashir are stuck in this hellish place. As for Jadzia, she's is a heck of a lot smarter than her companions and soon she ends up finding herself with the HAVES-- living life among the rich elite. It's easy to admire her ability to think on her feet and figure out that she's in the past much faster than the guys. Regardless, the two guys turn out to be REAL stupid, as they turn out to be responsible for killing a guy who is important to history--and as a result, the timeline is seriously destroyed and the Federation doesn't appear to be affected.

This is a decent episode but I also marveled at how clean and very well groomed these homeless folks often were! Also the explanation for why the Defiant continues to exist seems REALLY lame and contrived. And, the whole Gabriel Bell angle is a bit predictable. Decent but it could have been better.
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1/10
Time Travel moralizes society ills
evony-jwm13 April 2021
The problems get all solved in the future apparently LOL. Yet said problems were worse before capitalism appeared.. then said problems increased with the rise of anti-capitalism / socialism..

Then there's the time loop paradox goofs.
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