Thanks!
That graphic is a most excellent reply because on another track, I was working on something from the book of Genesis at the time you posted it.
I'm always up for a little diversion because I just never know. And this is great!
With that kind of cross link, I needed to refresh my memory about the explanation:
Kirk avoids Carol and David's questions about Khan by asking for food. Carol and David show Kirk, McCoy and Saavik the Genesis cave, which was created by a smaller Genesis Device: deep within Regula a stable ecosystem now exists, having been created in one day. Before Kirk and Carol join them, they both speak briefly about their past relationship and reach a moment of reconciliation.
In the cave, Saavik asks Kirk, who is casually eating an apple, about his performance on the Kobayashi Maru scenario. McCoy informs her that Kirk is the only Starfleet cadet to beat the no-win scenario. However, Kirk admits he reprogrammed the simulation, making it possible to save the ship and her crew. David chuckles and says he cheated, and Kirk qualifies that he changed the conditions of the test also citing that he had received praise for original thinking and that he does not believe in the no-win scenario. Kirk then promptly contacts the Enterprise and Spock says they should prepare for transport. Kirk smiles at a dumbfounded Saavik and asserts that he doesn't like to lose. Saavik questions what happened throughout the transport and Kirk reminds her of Starfleet Regulation 46A: Spock had modified his report (hours instead of days) to deceive Khan because their adversary may have been monitoring the Enterprise's transmissions. When Saavik suggests that Spock lied, Spock merely replies he "exaggerated."
DO stay with me, sway with me. Don't give up the small wooden boat because over at Wikipedia,
The phrase "Kobayashi Maru" has entered the popular lexicon as a reference to a no-win scenario. The term is also sometimes used to invoke Kirk's decision to "change the conditions of the test."
Turns out that "Kobayashi Maru" has a Hebrew page. It informs that the no-win situation is a "תרחיש ללא מוצא", which translates to a "scenario without an exit".
I know how to add up the letters, but it's quicker to go here to paste in such queries. I provided the link so that anyone present can replicate the results, if desired. That search page finds matching values in the Torah, and all the Tanakh.
With that said, a dead-end scenario --
"תרחיש ללא מוצא"
= 1116, and is the sum of the first two words of the Bible, of Genesis: "Bereshith bara". The Hebrew word order reads as in the beginning created.
It goes on, really multiplies, but first you've got to hand it to the God of Abraham to get there first, like He's living in a movie. There's no competition!
OH, wait, no because actually that's
Bereshith bara Elohim...
Up high.
Down low.
[Victim misses.]
Too slow! (with finger guns)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_five
(He reprogrammed the simulation, making it possible to save the ship and her crew.)
There's a verse for that:
Genesis 32:28 And he said, Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel: for as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed.
Israel gets the last word, the last word of the Torah:
Deuteronomy 34:12 And in all that mighty hand, and in all the great terror which Moses shewed in the sight of all Israel.
Can DO!
Kol Israel, bereshit bara...
Okay, the words rerun in English:
All Israel in the beginning God created...
Revelation 5:5 And one of the elders saith unto me, Weep not: behold, the Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, hath prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven SEALs thereof.
Bottom line:
There's simply no excuse for a Culture of Brutality, Cheating and Drugs.