So 55% of the Mars population are in support of a close, stable and centuries old relationship between the two. That I can buy.Mars is Scotland to Earths England. I can see that.
So 55% of the Mars population are in support of a close, stable and centuries old relationship between the two. That I can buy.Mars is Scotland to Earths England. I can see that.
So 55% of the Mars population are in support of a close, stable and centuries old relationship between the two. That I can buy.
Ah ok, historically, yes that would be a little...tenserI was also thinking of Edinburgh back in ye olden days. Second Capital of the Empire after London. Not that I am pro Empires etc, just purely from an historical perspective.
Ah ok, historically, yes that would be a little...tenser![]()
Random headcanon:
The current "gloopy" look of the Klingons on Star Trek: Discovery is a manifestation of the massive genetic shift much of the species is currently undergoing, as many bloodlines--and even individuals!--still infected by the human Augment virus begin shifting back (for mumblescifi reasons) towards the Klingon baseline form they'll reach some years down the road. This will happen in waves over time; there will still be infecteds during TOS, though they'll have "re-Klingonized" by the 2290s.
The baroque design of Discovery-era Klingon ships, art objects and costume is a revivalist fad harking back to ancient Klingon designs from millennia ago, part of the same cultural movement as T'Kuvma's radical fundamentalism. It'll pass in a few years.
As a reaction against this, during the 2260s Klingon society goes through an antitraditionalist revolution, becoming a dystopian surveillance state that's deeply cynical about the old "honor" traditions. Sneaky backstabbing becomes the new thing, for a while. But this passes too, within about two decades.
Also: whatever TOS-R showed, the Klingon ship the Enterprise destroys early in "Errand of Mercy" is a Bird of Prey.
In the 2280s, the USS Excelsior's live trial run of transwarp drive works just fine--and turns the crew, Captain Styles included, into lizards. So so much for transwarp, at least with live crews.
Nebulae like the Mutara Nebula are of a "hyperdense" class not known to modern-day science.
- There is no Federation Army or Starfleet Marines. Many chances existed for Star Trek to make direct references to this, or back up a deleted scene from Star Trek VI, but instead its always Starfleet fighting in ground battles. Its a unified service.
The uniforms in TMP were uniforms for non-commissioned Federation ships. And after TMP when the Enterprise refit was completed and a new multi year mission was commissioned the uniforms looked like this.
Janice Lester was the blonde lab tech (blonde at the time).Carol Marcus was the "blonde lab technician" that Gary Mitchel set Kirk up with.
Lt Mira Romaine is from Mars, TOS Lights of ZetarMars and Earth had a rivalry in the early days of space travel that never really went away, even after the Federation. Part of the lingering tension is that Mars feels undercut by history, as the Federation is very Earth-centric. Terrans think Martians are ridiculous because not only is Mars next to the most protected planet in the galaxy, so what do they have to be in a snit about.
For some reason I just really want more Mars in Star Trek. Especially because of all the ballyhooing we're doing about it now. Someone's gotta be from Musktown, Mars.
Janice Lester was the blonde lab tech (blonde at the time).
Mitchell was deliberately fukking with his instructor when he did it.
Not even Moriarty? He was certainly self-aware, as was Vic Fontaine. They were also intelligent.Sentient holograms NEVER became a thing, despite the Doctor being so. Just him. NO OTHERS.
Not even Moriarty and Vic. They were just really, REALLY sophisticated holograms, but not sentient. Personally, I have a problem with humans simply creating new life in a lab like that. I'll accept Data and even the Doctor as the outliers, but I hate the idea of there being more and more. Perhaps in another couple of hundred years or so...Not even Moriarty? He was certainly self-aware, as was Vic Fontaine. They were also intelligent.
If Data and the Doctor can be sentient, it's surely inevitable that more holograms will be capable of the same.
That's fair enough, so it's a metaphysical thing.Not even them. They were just really, REALLY sophisticated holograms, but not sentient. Personally, I have a problem with humans simply creating new life in a lab like that.
But remember, the thread is about our own head canon. Not trying to start a debate here. I realize my views often contradict others'.
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