I know it wouldn't be thematically appropriate, but sometimes the angry chimp brain part of my brain is like... maybe Jim Kirk could commit a liiiiiittle murder. These scenes are all from one season of the show:
KIRK: Well, there's one difference between us. I'm hungry.
KIRKBOT: The difference is your weakness, captain, not mine.
KORBY: One at a time, gentlemen. Captain?
KIRK: Eating is a pleasure, sir. Unfortunately, one you will never know.
KIRKBOT: Perhaps, but I will never starve, sir.
("What Are Little Girls Made Of?")
KIRK: How does it work?
THERAPIST: Quite simple. Off-on switches, and the large control here changes the strength of the brain neutralizing beam.
ADAMS [contemptuously]: Captain, you remind me of the ancient skeptic who demanded of the wise old sage [Hillel the Elder] to be taught all the world's wisdom [the Torah] while standing on one foot. [The substitutions were made for antisemitic Roddenberry reasons; the allusions to Judaism in the Adams-Kirk conflict were explicit in Shimon Wincelberg's script; Adams is implicitly comparing his brainwashing """advances""" to the Torah, himself to Hillel the Elder, and Kirk to the short-sighted goy skeptic for asking reasonable and courteous questions, all of which is wildly fucked-up.]
("Dagger of the Mind")
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SPOCK: Kodos began to separate the colonists. Some would live, be rationed whatever food was left. The remainder would be immediately put to death. Apparently he had his own theories of eugenics.
MCCOY: Unfortunately, he wasn't the first.
SPOCK: Perhaps not. But he was certainly among the most ruthless, to decide arbitrarily who would survive and who would not, using his own personal standards, and then to implement his decision without mercy. Children watching their parents die. Whole families destroyed. [...]There were nine eye witnesses who survived the massacre, who'd actually seen Kodos with their own eyes. Jim Kirk was one of them.
LENORE: Are you like that, captain? All this power at your command, yet the decisions that you have to make—
KIRK: Come from a very human source.
LENORE: Are you, captain? Human?
KIRK [his manner remaining suspiciously smooth, with no visible reaction to the question]: You can count on it.
LENORE: Tell me about the women in your world, Captain.
KIRK [still smoothly]: I'd rather talk about you. You must have wanted to perform since you first saw your father act. When was that?
KIRK: What were you twenty years ago?
KODOS: Younger, captain. Much younger.
KIRK: So was I. But I remember. Let's see if you do.
[...]
KODOS [forced to read his speech to those slated for death/the genocide]: The revolution is successful, but survival depends on drastic measures. Your continued existence represents a threat to the well-being of society. Your lives means slow death to the more valued members of the colony. Therefore I have no alternative but to sentence you to death. Your execution is so ordered. Signed, Kodos, governor of Tarsus IV.
KIRK: I remember the words. I wrote them down.
KIRK: Are you sure? Are you sure you didn't act this role out in front of a captive audience whom you blasted out of existence without mercy?
KODOS: I find your use of the word mercy strangely inappropriate, captain. Here you stand, the perfect symbol of our technical society. Mechanized, electronicized, and not very human.
LENORE: Everything's always later. Later. Latest. Too late. Too late, captain. You are like your ship, powerful, and not human. There is no mercy in you.
KIRK: If he is Kodos, then I've shown him more mercy than he deserves. And if he isn't, then we'll let you off at Benecia, and no harm done.
LENORE: Captain Kirk. Who are you to say what harm was done?
KIRK [jerking around, the controlled flirty, mild-mannered mask finally dropping to reveal cold fury in his face and voice]: Who do I have to be?
KODOS: Murder, flight, suicide, madness. I never wanted the blood on my hands ever to stain you.
LENORE: I did it for you. I've saved you.
KIRK: By killing seven innocent men.
LENORE: They weren't innocent!
("The Conscience of the King")
-
KIRK: What happened to the Gorn?
METRON: I sent him back to his ship. If you like, I shall destroy him for you.
KIRK: No. That won't be necessary. We can talk. Maybe reach an agreement.
METRON: Very good, captain. There is hope for you. Perhaps in several thousand years, your people and mine shall meet to reach an agreement. You are still half-savage [Kirk gives his usual "fuck you" smile], but there is hope [Kirk sobers].
("Arena")
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KIRK: I'd like those answers now. First, the purpose of your star flight.
KHAN: A new life, a chance to build a world. Other things I doubt you would understand.
KIRK: Why? Because I'm not a product of controlled genetics?
KHAN: Captain, although your abilities intrigue me, you are quite honestly inferior. Mentally, physically. In fact, I am surprised how little improvement there has been in human evolution.
("Space Seed")
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ANAN [about Kirk's phaser]: I assume that is what you used to destroy disintegration chamber number twelve.
KIRK: A very efficient weapon. I'm not afraid of using it.
ANAN: My first impression was correct. You are a barbarian.
ANAN: Millions of people horribly killed. Complete destruction of our culture here and yes, the culture on Vendikar. Disaster, disease, starvation, horrible, lingering death, pain and anguish!
KIRK: That seems to frighten you.
ANAN: It would frighten any sane man.
KIRK [his smile distinctly more feral and defiant than usual]: Yes. You're quite right.
ANAN: Don't you understand, captain? We have done away with all that. Now you are threatening to bring it down on us again. Are those five hundred people of yours more important than the hundreds of millions of innocent people on Eminiar and Vendikar? What kind of monster are you?
KIRK: I'm a barbarian. You said it yourself.
("A Taste of Armageddon")
In the trial of Captain Kirk, in the comic Star Trek vol 2 11# August, 1990, several witnesses were called in who had appeared in the TV show, Anan 7 ("A Taste of Armaggedon"), Bela Oxmyx ("A Piece of the Action") and Leonard James Akaar ("Friday's Child"). ("Let's Kill All the Lawyers" Star Trek 11# vol 2, DC Comic Event)
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