I'm currently rewatching all of Star Trek with my family -- TOS with my wife, and we're also including my eight-year-old daughter in a watch-through of Voyager. (Voyager's not my favorite of the series, but we thought we'd use it as a female-empowerment example. Many of the strongest characters on Voyager are women, after all, especially Janeway and Torres. Daughter's favorite character is currently Kes.)
This week happened to fall as a World War II theme. We watched Voyager's "Jetrel" followed by the original's "Patterns of Force". We didn't plan that, but that's the way it fell out.
Human nature, it seems, never changes. We all found immediate relevance to today's political situations around the world. I'm finding it hard to have hope for the future, but that's why Star Trek's idealism remains so necessary.
This week happened to fall as a World War II theme. We watched Voyager's "Jetrel" followed by the original's "Patterns of Force". We didn't plan that, but that's the way it fell out.
Human nature, it seems, never changes. We all found immediate relevance to today's political situations around the world. I'm finding it hard to have hope for the future, but that's why Star Trek's idealism remains so necessary.