Agreed, I personally enjoy Chuck's analyzing of films and episodes, as well as looking into the history of the work, and while I do feel that their are episodes of Star Trek or any other media that do deserve being torn into like "Code of Honor" or "Unexpected" that are terrible and offensive, I do feel it's more constructive to talk about what worked and what didn't without going full angry reviewer, as I feel that someone simply ranting about how much they hate something can come across as fan entitlement than proper criticism, even when that criticism is justified.Freeverse wrote: ↑Sun Sep 20, 2020 5:25 pm I usually avoid discussions of Discovery because it makes me just... extremely tired. I had to drop Chuck's reviews of the series because they're, frankly, upsetting. And before you chime in with "Well, what about Voyager and Enterprise? Those reviews could get really angry, too!", yes, I feel the same way about those reviews, when they did get really angry. It seems to me he's softened on Voyager, and honestly Enterprise is the only show that actually deserves that level of vitriol... sometimes. But I sincerely believe he's not at his best when something gets under his skin. I hold no enmity for Chuck, he produces so many videos that I can easily just skip the ones that are going to upset me, and he deserves a chance to cut loose now and then.
And just to stress that this is unrelated to me being a fan of the subject, I feel this way about his Lost World review. A movie that I have thought about precisely one time in my whole life before his review came out, and the thought was mostly just "oh, ok, I guess there are dinosaurs again". I felt some suspense at the hanging car moment, and I thought it was kind of fun, in a campy b-movie sort of way, when the girl does gym-kata on a raptor. That's the fullest extent of my defense of the movie, but I was still bothered by the review, just because of how it was approached. Again, no hate on Chuck, it was just that I didn't enjoy the work in this case.
And while I do agree with many of his points Chuck has made, at this point I watch his reviews about Star Trek Discovery more out of obligation, and I like to talk about what I personally like about the series here in the forums because I genuinely feel there is good things to talk about Discovery and I want to share that.
Absolutely agree with all this, especially about Star Trek's optimism being centered around the embracing of diversity.Freeverse wrote: ↑Sun Sep 20, 2020 5:25 pm But I feel like I have something to contribute to the conversation about disability, so I want to focus on that. I don't feel like diving into my full medical history, but I will say that I have a certain chemical imbalance that has affected my life a great deal over the years. And as someone who struggles with a condition that, make no bones about it, limits me, I take umbrage with the idea that people like me simply wouldn't exist in a positive future. People should not be erased, and I feel like that's exactly what we would be doing if we were to presume that disabilities can simply be "fixed" in a sufficiently advanced, sufficiently moral future.
That being said; there actually are, in fact, disabilities that can be reversed, to one degree or another. The specific issue that I have, is not the idea that medical science can minimize the problems that some of us are born with or that some of us are afflicted with later in life, but the arrogant notion that literally all of them will be. There are things I just can't do, that I would happily undergo a safe procedure to be able to do, and I imagine that is the case for many people who are disabled in one way or another. I can't speak for everyone, but I have heard others express this same sentiment. But not everyone feels the same way, either. I have also heard people who wouldn't want to be "normal", regardless of if it would grant them increased agency in certain ways.
Now, the opposite bothers me as well. The idea that "disability is a social construct" is frankly... just disgustingly patronizing. It's misery porn of the highest order, and with real living people as the subjects. And I hate that there are other disabled people with this exact mindset, because it's a perversion of the truth, and a very important truth. The world is not made for disabled people. There is a socially constructed component to disability. For one thing, what exactly constitutes a disability is, ultimately, something that we just kind of decided on, and have tweaked one way or the other over the years. Just look at the way that mental health professionals have shifted the way that they talk about and treat people on the autism spectrum.
So, I think that it's important that we don't stand in the way of people who would choose to change something about themselves, but it's just as important that we stop shaming people for the way they are. And I think that there would be some folks who, right now, would make that change, but might change their mind if that shame weren't so ingrained into us by a society that was built in a way that often fails to even consider people with disabilities. And it's not a monolith, it's not like every singe part of society is hostile to disabled people, but there are definitely buildings that weren't constructed with disabilities in mind, and the way that we talk about workers rights often leaves disabled folks out of the discussion, and other things like that.
Ultimately, It doesn't make any sense to me that Star Trek should be completely devoid of disabled people, and one of the reasons for that is the fact that a big part of Star Trek's optimism is centered around the embracing of diversity. But the idea that all forms of disability would simply not exist isn't optimism; it's fantasy. And, you know what? That's fine, too. There's plenty of room for fantasy, even in Star Trek. So if part of what appeals to you is the fantasy of a world where your life would be completely different, then I say you belong in the fandom just as much as any of us. But what appeals to me is not that I would have a fundamentally different brain or body in the future, it's that my differences wouldn't have been looked down on, but instead that I would have gotten the help I needed much sooner in life. And I think there should be room for both of us in Star Trek, so I say that making people with disabilities visible in the utopian future shouldn't be frowned upon.
Also, no matter how advanced the medicine is in the universe of Star Trek, right now, down here on earth, in reality, there are still a lot of people with disabilities. And giving them characters they can see in the utopian future who are similar to them is a thousand times more important than any number of canon or continuity based worldbuilding details could ever be. Really, I love canon and continuity quite a bit, I mean, I read comics for Uatu's sake... But I love actual, real-ass human beings living here on earth a lot more.