Replicative Fading and the Demand for DNA
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Picard’s supplemental log flags an urgent summit with Prime Minister Granger as the Enterprise holds orbit over Mariposa, staking the colony’s future on the outcome.
Granger lays bare Mariposa’s origin: a landing breach left only five survivors, who leveraged their science to pivot to cloning. Picard names the strategy; Granger confirms the gene pool forced their hand.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Concerned and pragmatic—she is scientifically alarmed by the diagnosis and impatient with ethically simplistic fixes.
Pulaski functions as the clinical authority: she holds her tricorder, identifies and explains replicative fading to the group, rejects the moral surrender of offering crew tissue, and warns that repairs alone won't solve the colony's underlying genetic crisis.
- • Diagnose and communicate the colony's medical reality clearly
- • Protect crew members from being treated as biological resources
- • Replicative fading is a real, escalating biological threat that cannot be ignored
- • Medical ethics forbid coercive use of living personnel as genetic supplies
Exposed and pleading—Granger's desperation is palpable and his request carries the raw weight of existential fear for his people.
Prime Minister Granger confesses the colony's origin, frames cloning as the only historical option, and pleads desperately for fresh DNA while later pivoting to request technical repairs when refused.
- • Obtain fresh DNA to stave off replicative fading and preserve the colony
- • Secure any assistance (including repairs) that will prolong Mariposa's survival
- • Cloning from new genetic material is the most direct way to halt biological decline
- • Outside help (Starfleet) is necessary and possible to save the colony
Calm and principled on the surface; privately pressured by the moral weight of deciding another society's fate.
Picard chairs the meeting with calm authority, restating facts, listening to Granger's confession, refusing the DNA request on principle, and redirecting the solution toward technical aid and away teams.
- • Preserve crew autonomy and bodily integrity by refusing to commodify officers' DNA
- • Provide practical aid to save lives without violating ethical standards
- • Individuals' bodies cannot be treated as resources for another society
- • Starfleet has an obligation to help but within moral constraints
Resolved and indignant—his refusal is rooted in a visceral sense of personal integrity and existential discomfort.
Riker reacts viscerally to the proposal, rejects the idea of being cloned with a personal, almost offended outburst, obeys Picard's order to form away teams and stands as a protector of crew dignity.
- • Protect his and the crew's bodily autonomy
- • Follow Picard's command to organize practical aid (away teams and repairs)
- • Being cloned en masse would diminish individual identity
- • There are morally preferable ways (e.g., children) to perpetuate humanity
Protective and unified—there's a shared moral refusal to allow crew bodies to be repurposed as spare parts.
The Enterprise crew collectively are invoked as potential donors and practical labor: they rise when ordered, represent a protective institutional stance against commodifying citizens, and will serve as the workforce for repairs.
- • Avoid being treated as a genetic resource by Mariposa
- • Carry out the captain's orders to provide technical assistance
- • Crew members' bodily integrity is inviolable
- • Starfleet's role includes providing non-exploitative aid
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Dr. Pulaski's medical tricorder rests in her lap and functions as the visible token of clinical authority; its presence underwrites her diagnostic statements about replicative fading and grounds the medical reality of Granger's confession.
The coffee service sits on Granger's desk as curated hospitality, signaling formal diplomacy; it is present but unused, its neat placement contrasting the moral disorder of the conversation and underscoring the ceremonial shell over desperate plea.
Two glasses — each participant holds a glass — function as minor props that punctuate the meeting: they humanize the parties, mark ritualized civility, and visually emphasize the shared yet contested space where Granger's plea is made and refused.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Prime Minister Granger's executive office acts as the stage for the negotiation: its polished ceremonial trappings and arranged hospitality frame a meeting that quickly becomes morally fraught, turning a formal office into a crucible where survival, identity and ethics collide.
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."
Part of Larger Arcs
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."
"PULASKI: Each time you clone you're making a copy of a copy. Subtle errors creep into the chromosomes, and eventually you end up with a non-viable clone."
"RIKER: You want to clone us? GRANGER: Yes. RIKER: No way. Not me."