Ah, I missed the initial point, and I appreciate the clarification.^Those are interspecies relations. In the trek universe those seem to be more common than interracial relations![]()
Ah, I missed the initial point, and I appreciate the clarification.^Those are interspecies relations. In the trek universe those seem to be more common than interracial relations![]()
Why should the other option be African and not American?
B'Ellana was more or less 'white', except when the story required her to be Klingon for a given episode
Well... do not volunteer to be the first to try it out. That's where my line is drawn, at least when it comes to Gorn...
One thing that's always kind of irked me about Star Trek is that while the series has of course made great strides in promoting diversity on television, they rarely feature long-term interracial relationships. I think the rebooted JJ-Trek is one of the first to do so with Uhura and Spock being a continuing relationship through the three films so far.
Maybe someone can correct me, but it seems that every time we're shown a married couple (or an otherwise serious relationship) they are both the same race. Both of Sisko's wives were also black. Robert Picard's wife was also white. B'Ellana was more or less 'white', except when the story required her to be Klingon for a given episode, and Tom was obviously white. Janeway's fiancé first introduced in "Caretaker" was also white. Tuvok's wife was another "black" Vulcan. Both Phlox and one one wife of his we met were "white" Denobulans.
One of those things that's always sort of lurked in the back of my brain for a while.
What if they were more daring in showing humans paired with non-humanoid intelligent aliens? For instance, Horta, Tholians, Caitians, Gorn, or Species 8472.
Kor
Hispanic
But are mostly "Brown."Hispanic can be white
Technically, "Hispanic" is supposed to mean connected to Spain. But in the US, the term "Hispanic" is commonly used in an imprecise way to refer to people from Spanish-speaking Latin American countries, no matter what their exact ancestry or shade of skin color.Hispanic can be white. Under its most common definition, it refers to individuals whose ancestry is rooted in Spain, which is a European nation.
There is definitely a certain shared cultural experience among those from Latin America living in the US. Even Ricardo Montalban, who was from Mexico City but whose parents were both 100% Spaniards who immigrated from Spain, found himself marginalized in Hollywood as a "brown" person.
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