To be clear, that was precisely my take on your position. I understand that my words get lost on people sometimes, and you'd hardly be the first.Madner Kami wrote: ↑Mon Jun 03, 2019 8:58 pmMy point is, that being black was tangential to Sisko's character. Racism against black people gets brought up in the frame of two episodes, directly when it involves a black man in the 1950s USA and once when speaking about the past and it's treatment of black people. And this is how it should be treated.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Mon Jun 03, 2019 6:22 pm This is an odd exchange of ideas. While I don't have much to say about the dynamic of treating him in such way or the other, I'm not sure if there is much room for the more racially introspective text or subtext as Madner's pointing out. Nick Furry being director of a spy organization also would be a weird place to park that car.
The weird thing being though that you guys are disagreeing in principle where as the substance for consideration you both agree on as being great for the most part. There's two established episodes where race is explicitly brought up. I'm really not sure if the New Orleans episodes involved any; did they? Anyways I felt like Madner's initial point was that it's not laiden throughout the show, which was immediately agreed upon. I'm of the mind that there would be disagreement if there was more of it in the show, but I'm not sure how the show as is serves as an example for either side of argument.
And it isn't at odds with showrunners conceiving the show with a black captain in mind. I doubt Star Trek would be the last show to opt for diversity for the sake of diversity itself. If you get into matters of representation in lieu of diversity, then a lot of people might expect it to get into racial issues just on the basis that that would be a distinctive topic to address for a big number of the people being represented. That said, the New Orleans episodes, while not dealing with racism IIRC, do flesh out the characters distinctively, and I think that has a positive effect on representation. The significance of that btw for anyone concerned is that I kinda doubt it would get as much blowback from people that have qualms with what you're saying in your second paragraph.
At the very least, when the show runs for 6 seasons and the show never explicitly gets into such subjects, I feel like it's just peculiar that they hadn't gotten into it at that point (I'll leave people to make of that what they will on their own terms). And I really liked that episode. It's normal for Star Trek to go back to more modern history, so their execution of story with that subject in my mind was a grand slam for lack of a better word.