clearspira wrote: ↑Fri Apr 07, 2023 9:21 am
hammerofglass wrote: ↑Thu Apr 06, 2023 1:17 pm
So it's kind of weird that latest episode had an aside just to establish that Shaw is deliberately deadnaming Seven to piss her off. Like did they think he was getting too likable or something? In real life that kind of open blatant bigoted harassment would cost him his job. Like seriously what, does he do the same thing when people get married and take a new surname?
Data pulling a Durkon was pretty cool.
Exhibit 123424252 that the ''liberal left wing utopia'' of Star Trek is actually far more right wing than the fans of all colours actually like to admit. In real life this bigot would be effed five ways from Sunday. And the irony, Trek has never changed has it? Not really. McCoy going on his racist rants would have seen him turfed out of the service too.
And this just personifies really what i've been thinking about this franchise in general for a while. Sorry to rant here slightly, but the older I get, the more I realise that Star Trek is overall pretty shit and always was. To quote Fry from Futurama: ''You know. 1966? 79 episodes, about 30 good ones.''
And that does encapsulate really the entire experience of all Star Trek. For every Best of Both Worlds, City on the Edge of Forever, In the Mirror Darkly; there are ten forgettable or outright awful episodes in between. Statistically, you are more likely to get crap when you turn into an episode of Trek then something that blows your mind.
I'm sure this is an especially popular opinion, but I suspect that a society cannot survive for long enough to achieve something like interstellar travel if it's long embracing the more extreme ideas of being "woke" or cancel culture, etc. That
doesn't mean that anyone should be able to say literally anything they want with no consequences, but I do think that there's a degree of any kind of "undesirable" speech and opinions that a society needs to be able to tolerate to last for very long.
Just to give one in-universe example, if McCoy had been kicked out of Starfleet - or even society - his absence would have had severe repercussions. We know that he saved members of the crew countless times. At a minimum, without McCoy Spock would almost certainly have died during the 5 year mission, and think of all the galaxy-changing repercussions that would have caused - everything from the probable extinction of the Klingon Empire to the destruction of the Earth by V'Ger to who knows what else, and then on top of that we have secondary effects such as the takeover of the entire quadrant by the Dominion for lack of the Klingons, etc. We also know that apart from saving the lives of the crew that McCoy developed all sorts of treatments over his career which obviously would have had long-ranging repercussions.
The point is that a huge part of the reason that the entire Federation even exists by the time of Picard and company is that McCoy was in the service a century earlier. If he'd been cast out because he made some quips about Vulcans from time to time - quips made, by the way, to a Vulcan that he very obviously in fact respected a great deal - then chances are there may be no Klingons or humans - or at least only a small remnant - by the end of the 23rd century.