That‘s oversimplifying the situation in a way that dangerously reduces criticism to overreaction, or lumps it together with extremes so that acceptable reaction by implication becomes “praise the show or remain silent, because history says you‘re doomed to be wrong”.
With the exception of TOS (and very arguably ENT — I prefer S3 to the fan-serving S4), all the series (including the film series) are commonly seen to have generally improved with time, yet partly because of TOS it isn’t unreasonable to expect a series to be good out of the gate. Criticism of early TNG is still valid, as is that of early DS9, VGR, ENT and DSC. It is also relative — if continuity is not an issue, the focus will be on other things, like specific design choices or bland and repetitive writing. I was there when the NX-01 was revealed, but why criticize the “Akiraprise” now, retreading years of that discussion, when time is better spent on a current show such as DSC? Also, we knew it would fit with TOS because of who was making the show, but it was unprecedented then to adapt a background design for a hero ship and the same exact criticism was repeated when Discovery was revealed in 2016. That hadn’t gone away, but then of course we also had the more substantial changes as opposed to ENT’s mere compromises.
Issues which are truly difficult to resolve remain so to this day; they just become less current and are put on the back-burner. We still don’t fully understand all that happened between TOS and TMP, but at least TMP was clearly later. We can discuss TMP now, or we can leave it be and argue as I did that updating one century and famous characters just isn’t in the spirit of Star Trek, which had no problem creating an entire era without Kirk, with shows and movies that weren’t even allowed to mix on a regular basis. Therefore, whether we sweep past inconsistencies under the carpet or keep talking about them forever, the better question is if the franchise shouldn’t try to avoid them in the future? Pick a year such as 2396 and say “that’s the future ‘now’ according to the Bermanverse — now what can showrunners do that can exist without the good-old?”
I'd accept that if it weren't for at least one underlying problem in your argument.
It isn't the discussion which fades, it's the hyperbole.
Here we are on a site discussing a TV series from over half a century ago, often in excruciating detail, but the venom, the anger is all reserved for the latest iteration. No one seethes over the TMP changes now, but that doesn't mean TOS and TMP aren't still discussed, rather they are discussed with the benefit of hindsight and the perspective and balance that brings. They are familiar, known, entities and don't challenge us the way they once did.
DSC, on the other hand, is brand spanking new. It takes us out of our comfort zone by virtue of being something quite different to what came before, much as DS9 was quite different to TNG. Some of the criticism aimed at it is doubtless valid and thoughtful, but doesn't it seem just a little strange that we yet again heard so much about the fact they changed the Klingons, that the ship is too big/too advanced, that the crew behave differently to the last lot, so on and so forth.
In other words we are voicing much the same complaints time and again, seemingly willing to overlook the relevance of those complaints to each and every series which has come before.
All of this has happened before and it will likely all happen again.
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