Well, what I'm saying that since I don't think the show's very good I have no reason to try to accommodate any inconsistencies it introduces. I mean, I watched about 50% of it last year. Who gives a fuck what it contradicts.
Generally speaking, I don't think it's important to reconcile inconsistencies even in the Trek I do like - the things were made over more than half a century, they're fiction, they're not consistent, who cares?
From what I've seen, there's no big narrative inconsistency between Enterprise, STD and the 24th century shows. There are some visual inconsistencies. But the only thing that sticks out as not belonging, now, are TOS and the movies based on it - so it's simplest to recognize that they were never written to fit into a larger narrative that would span thousands of characters and hundreds of years of faux history.
Every Trek fron TNG onward more or less was conceived to do just that. It started the moment that Roddenberry (or the folks who preceded him on the new Trek, like Greg Strangis) said "These stories take place a century after Star Trek, and this is how things are then."
This is why it's a matter of straightforward observation that TOS and the rest of Trek are distinct from one another while acknowledging that the creators of the latter try to backfit it to TOS - but that in fact they are never committed to that when they consider that a present story demand requires an exception or the provision of an extraordinarily strained and implausible rationalization.
The TNGVerse is a kind of rolling reboot - it has to eventually* run over much of the TOS timeline and at some point there will be revised looks at Picard's era, etc.
(By "eventually" I mean, of course, "Real Soon.").