In an attached clip from the video āgameā Star Trek: Klingon (in-universe an educational holodeck program), a holographic Gowron violently shakes the player and yells player, āWhen I say jump out of an airlock, you will JUMP OUT OF AN AIRLOCK!ā
My question is, outside of edge cases where itās actually necessary to win a battle, would this level of order-following actually align with proper Klingon theology?
I feel like this would be an honorless death (kind of like if your commander told you to stab yourself with a dāk tahg), and thus if you were actually given an order like this, the proper Klingon thing to do would be to challenge your commanding officer to honorable combat. I could see a more Martokian view that honor demands you follow your commander, though, but I feel like even he would have limits.
I can think of three explanations for what Gowron said: 1) Itās simply a hyperbole. 2) Gowron isnāt exactly a beacon of Klingon honor (as seen in the last episodes of DS9), so maybe itās a misinterpretation. 3) Itās a mistake in the program. Either itās a glitch if it was made in cooperation with the Klingons or it was done entirely by Federation researchers who messed up a bit.
Obviously, this game falls more in Memory Beta territory, but Iād argue itās reasonably canon, as itās basically screen (live action or animated) Star Trek and a song in this game was later canonized in DS9.
4.) Itās a changeling and theyāre testing to see how obedient the Klingons can be so they might become the JemāHadar of our quadrant.
Iām not sure that fits the frame narrative of it being a holodeck program, especially considering that the player using the program is assumed to be a human (in another one of these scenes, the program stops and Gowron rants about how heās going to have to start teaching the Klingon way instead of the human way).