That's the thing: you're describing how Klingons have always behaved, from ToS onward, barring individual exceptions like Worf (who was raised human).Worffan101 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 10, 2020 10:59 pm
The way that season 1 goes out of its way to show that Burnham is right. The Klingons really ARE universally thuggish and violent savages who hate us because we love our freedom. The only way to stop these fanatical, religious-terrorist foreign filth from slaughtering our women and children is for our brave military to heroically install a puppet dictator and threaten to slaughter them in droves if they ever step out of line. This is good because we showed enough restraint to not commit genocide and wipe out these barbaric scum!
Hail Space America! MISSION ACCOMPLISHED!
Basically, season 1 is marinated in the most toxic kind of racist, xenophobic neoconservative ultranationalism. It makes Bush, Cheney, and Jack Bauer look like hippies. PACIFIST hippies.
Go back to Errand of Mercy where Klingons were introduced: the Organians had done nothing to harm any Klingon anywhere, yet Kor and his occupying force felt perfectly content murdering any number as they pleased. Kor promised a thousand dead Organians for any dead Klingon: later, he orders two hundred arbitrary Organians for every hour until Kirk is captured and brought to him. These are clearly common, accepted practices: the second even has a numbered designation, with a wiki page! (Special Occupation Order 4). We are given no reason to assume that Kor was bluffing, or that his warriors wouldn't hesitate in the slightest to carry out these orders.
The fact that the war was ended by the godlike Organians literally neutralizing both sides doesn't change Kor's actions. And his actions are clearly not those of some renegade Klingon cowboy cop going above and beyond his mandate: we see more of the Klingon military in Deep Space 9, and it shows that Kor is just your average Klingon. Way of the Warrior gives us the unprovoked invasion of Cardassia, where Worf gives us this gem: "If the Klingon Empire has reverted to the old practices, they will occupy the Cardassian homeworld, execute all government officials, and install an imperial overseer to put down any further resistance."
This isn't just a mindset restricted to the upper levels of the Klingon military: Cut to Nor The Battle To The Strong, and we see that there's virtually no self-control in the entire the Klingon military. Everyone just accepts the fact that Klingon warriors will butcher the medics and patients at the med post Bashir visits, and the location is repeatedly bombed. Jake and Bashir, one of whom is a uniformed medic, are repeatedly shelled. We also get this: "Medical personnel are fair game as far as Klingons are concerned. They'll even kill wounded right in their beds. They think they're giving them an honourable death"
The only difference between Discovery and previous incarnations of the Klingons is that we actually get to see their barbarism first-hand. We get to see the torture, the executions and the unprovoked murders. Their culture has always been built around unrepentant destruction of everything that's not strong enough to resist them: it's just that we, the viewers, go the nice, sanitized version so that nerds could play with their bat-leths without realizing "Hey, I'm dressing up as a war criminal!"
Heck, things get a lot darker when you think about what we don't see in the series: when was the last time we saw a non-Klingon from the Empire? They occupy an area of space roughly similar to the Federation, and there are a lot of species in the Federation. The charitable answer is that the non-Klingons are enslaved, like the prisoners we saw in Rura Penthe or the Arin-sen refugees we see in "Judgment" on Enterprise. The uncharitable answer is that they were killed off, possibly 200 at a time.
It's not racism if there is, in fact, a deep-rooted genocidal impulse that drives Klingon culture and that simply by existing, the Empire represents a threat to all free life forms everywhere. I can multiply the examples above: those are just the ones that come to mind easily.