Nimoy once said so.Ok, I'm curious, really I am.
For best part of thirty years I've been hearing Klingons serve as a stand in for Russians with no clear idea as to where that came from, even in TOS. It seems to rely purely on a number of preconceptions and assumptions, without anyone ever really giving any kind of rationale.
I've also heard it stated verbatim in this thread by someone who expected that to fly as a statement with no rationale, yet went on to accuse others of lazy thinking when comparing the current crop of Klingons with the alt right.
This is despite the numerous references in the show to skin colour and a cultural group feeling their identity under threat by an essentially benign group of much more diverse "outsiders", all set against a background of the show's creative team having literally stated those themes are central to the show.
So, the question I am throwing out here, especially to you @RobertCardassian, is can anyone actually provide me with a well framed argument to support the assertion the Klingons are, or ever have been, a stand in for the USSR?
And there was a Trek film released in 1991 entitled Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, which definitely overplayed the Cold War allegory with a disaster in Klingon space loosely modeled after the real-life Chernobyl disaster, as well as the beginning of thawing of Federation-Klingon relations being based on the real-life thaw in US-Soviet relations. And of course, the prototype Bird of Prey added a whole "Hunt for Red October in Space" aspect to the story.
Kor