Videos by ComicBook.com
However, when it came time to make Deep Space Nine in the early 90’s, the Trek creators were feeling restricted. As executive producer Rick Berman later explained in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion, Roddenberry’s “major rule” outlawed any substantial conflict among 24th-century human characters, which put a limitation on creating interesting narratives. Thankfully, the Deep Space Nine team bent the rules a bit, centering conflicts between Starfleet and non-Starfleet humans, as well as between 24th-century humans and their environment.
Why Deep Space Nine Broke Roddenberry’s No-Human Conflict-Rule

According to Berman, the DS9 creators were banging their heads against the wall, struggling to conjure anything exciting while relying solely on outside villains, explaining, “Gene’s major rule was to avoid conflict among his twenty-fourth-century human characters… But we needed this conflict for decent drama.” Rather than abandoning Roddenberry’s philosophy completely, however, the producers simply restructured the edict to mean no conflict among Starfleet humans. By setting the series aboard a former Cardassian mining station orbiting Bajor, they created a new atmosphere where Starfleet humans were no longer surrounded solely by like-minded officers. Unlike the Enterprise, Deep Space 9 was politically unstable, divided, and volatile.
In a station populated with civilians and non-Starfleet authorities, Commander Benjamin Sisko represented the Federation, but some of the tension comes from his interactions with humans who aren’t drinking the Starfleet Kool-Aid. Sisko even had some tension with his own son, Jake, over Jake’s decision to become a journalist rather than join Starfleet (as explored in episodes like “The Visitor” and “Nor the Battle to the Strong”). Other Federation civilians introduced even more friction. Kasidy Yates, for example, was an independent freighter captain, operating outside Starfleet protocol, and her relationship with Sisko created conflict, particularly regarding her involvement with the Maquis.









