Why not?
Well, if you want to play that game then technically there could only be one uniform. For everybody. Because even two completely identical uniforms are not the exact same uniform.But you did say the "exact same uniform."
Because no women served in the Roman army, making the entire discussion about Roman tunics completely irrelevant to the subject at hand. My original comment pretty obviously referred to services comprised of both genders.Maybe not, but they were only issued to men.
Yes, there's no predicting the future with certainty, but you can extrapolate existing trends and make an educated guess. And the existing trend in military uniforms is towards a unisex design, as they're more practical and more uniform. That has been the trend for a couple of centuries now. Compare the field uniforms the British army wore in 1776 to to any and all following wars. They are increasingly simplified and practical. It's a good bet that such a trend will continue.It may make sense now. But in 100 years when cultural sensibilities have changed, yet again, it may not make any sense. After 50 years of exact gender neutrality, we may find that the next cool thing will be extreme gender polarity. I have no idea what the future will look like. But I can guarantee that it wont look anything like what are today or what we envision the perfect to be. Not only that, but they will look back at us and all our "progressive/conservative" talk as uneducated, backwards, and primitive.
There is a real evidentiary issue here, Cogley has that right. But the accuser is known, it's no mystery in the courtroom or on the Enterprise: it's the state. The computer is only an instrumentality of the state; it is its eyes for any perceived transgression of this kind (gods know what it saw in The Enemy Within. But Rand didn't try to bring charges.). Any and all evidence created by the computer would be subpoenable by defense, and anything known by prosecution disclosed on discovery, in US jurisprudence.Isn't that the very issue being fought in courts over traffic cameras?
Janice Lester stated quite vehemently that women could not serve as Captains in Starfleet in Turnabout Intruder!
JB
Actually, yes it does. Whoever is in command of the ship IS the captain, and is referred to as such (regardless of actual rank).
TOS had flatscreens all over the place. Hell, the first thing I thought when I saw my first large flatscreen television was, "Wow! It's the viewscreen on the Enterprise Bridge."
Perhaps, but not on the desks..or the tables
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/i...triangle-schematics-theenterpriseincident.jpg
Please everyone, resist commenting on the female captain thing. It's a cancer that I've seen consume whole threads alive. We must stamp it out while we still have the chance.
I therefore declare:
You are right. You can continue going forward knowing that you not only won the debate, but you were right all along.
You are right. You can continue going forward knowing that you not only won the debate, but you were right all along.
only Kirk and Spock had sex
The context of Lester's statement clearly states that she is speaking directly about how Kirk's status as captain affected their relationship and not about any gender-discrimination policy against women. The exact quote is "Your world of starship captains doesn't admit women." In another context these very same words could admittedly be interpreted to mean exactly the latter. But again, the context of the situation clearly dictates that Janice is speaking about how the responsibilities of starship captains leave them little time or opportunity to pursue serious or lasting relationships. And again, as others have noted, there's the nut factor too.
Yes, I see how it could be ambiguous but I still hear it as a male dominated accusation, Todd! And so do a lot of others as well...
JB
Nope. The antennae assembly was stationary except when Dave when out to service it, and only then it rotated to a different position and stopped (presumably so he could access the AE-35 unit).Discovery's "AE-35" antenna was shown spinning like a radar.
Nope. The antennae assembly was stationary except when Dave when out to service it, and only then it rotated to a different position and stopped (presumably so he could access the AE-35 unit).
Thanks!
That is okay, I think you're wrong too.
TOS doesn't take place in an environment like the early space age... almost nothing about TOS was meant to be that new in-universe. Heck, the Enterprise is some twenty years old during TOS. She is a starship with a lot of light years under her belt the first time we see her.
Wait, in that episode the computer system of the Enterprise is described and the age of the technology is given...
Kirk: Genius is an understatement. At the age of twenty four, he made the duotronic breakthrough that won him the Nobel and Zee-Magnes prizes.
McCoy: In his early twenties, Jim. That's over a quarter of a century ago.
Seems like the computer technology on the Enterprise isn't so bleeding edge in that episode.
And as for technology post-TOS, it falls into the Mary Sue category... and there are other sections of the forums for them.
Again, consider the difference between consumer technology and something that needs to be serviceable... Spock repairs a communicator in Patterns Of Force and is able to extend the abilities of a tricorder in The City On The Edge Of Forever. Mobile phones and home electronics today aren't designed to be repaired, their meant to be replaced. The Enterprise can get stuck out in the middle of nowhere for months or years... and was stranded in one solar system for quite a few months in The Paradise Syndrome (the warp engines damaged beyond their ability to repair and having to wait for rescue).
If they had restricted it as a way to get from point A to point B it would have been fine, it's when they started giving it abilities beyond that that it started to be more than a little ridiculous.The transporter..
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