Worf is also not attacking anyone or engaged in violence. All he is literally doing is telling people about their cultural heritage. If that threatens the authorities so much, maybe they have a reason to be threatened.
But the authorities are their parents. It is their parents who have chosen to set aside their Klingon traditions and raise their children the way they have.
Replace the word closet with the word religion, & I'm betting a lot less people agree with you, or at least wouldn't agree with you, that you should introduce other ones to their children, as being equal. That's a closer comparison, because a life among a community of likeminded people is hardly comparable to the isolation & confinement of being locked in a closet, & in this specific case, was the only avenue left to those abandoned people anyhow.If your parents chose to lock you in a closet your whole life, wouldn’t you want somebody to tell you the outside world exists? This is exactly that, just a bigger closet.
Whether you think it's fair or not, parents & cultures do & are encouraged to shape their children & their futures. Frankly, it's the only reason societies are capable of forming & existing at all. That relationship is a huge gray area, Dude. It maybe one of life's hugestParents don’t own their children’s future, and like in Masterpiece Society your culture doesn’t own you. Everybody has the right to be the master of their own destiny, whether their parents or culture like it or not.
The comment I was replying to was saying that Worf was challenging the authorities by teaching the 2nd generation Klingons about Klingon traditions and that such an act threatens those authorities.And the moment those children become adults, they have a right to be presented all their options and choose for themselves.
If your parents chose to lock you in a closet your whole life, wouldn’t you want somebody to tell you the outside world exists? This is exactly that, just a bigger closet.
Parents don’t own their children’s future, and like in Masterpiece Society your culture doesn’t own you. Everybody has the right to be the master of their own destiny, whether their parents or culture like it or not.
But the authorities are their parents. It is their parents who have chosen to set aside their Klingon traditions and raise their children the way they have.
Worf's honor was only restored when he was able to prove his father was wrongly stripped of his at Khitomer, & then kill the guy who set him up. There's no reason to believe those Klingons he brought back would be considered anything but outcast. That they lived is their dishonor & their offspring's, nothing wrongly accused about it, which is why Worf instructed them to keep the fact secretMind you, there's an irony that the traditionalist Klingons assume their children are damned in Klingon society. Worf has regained his honor after losing it and as such has an entirely different view than most Klingons.
That's just your perspective. They were POWs, not kidnapped, and only after they were disavowed by their own people did they give up that life, and chose not to end their own lives, as their way of life demanded. When they chose to live, they chose not to live as Klingons anymore. That's on them, not their jailer. Their "Societal taboos" weren't broken. They were abandoned, because there was no place for them in this new paradigm. Their jailer gave up his role, when he knew no one cared whether they lived or died, & chose to stay and live among them, to form a new type of society, probably in no small part due to him falling in love with a Klingon woman there, & she him.Their parents are prisoners who have had their societal taboos broken and are in a state of depression. They were kidnapped and put in this place. There's no way of getting around the fact the peace is a farce.
Not always. It's a better analogy than being confined in a closet anywayThat’s a poor analogy. Children raised in a given religion are fully aware other religions exist. Nothing is stopping them from making the choice to change religions after they grow up.
But no one was forcing their will on them. They were just making the best life they could for them, as evidenced by the fact that they finally just let them go, as perilous as that may turn out to be for allHow many people would think talking about other religions to a 17 year old is undermining their parents? If a child is 17 and the parents are still forcing their will on them they should be undermined.
They provided them a model to live by, and no one objected to that model. They gave them a life, the only life that was available to them, short of returning to the bigger society, shrouded in lies. They chose a new way of life for themselves & their heirs, that shed some of the old ways, that had to be shed, & quite frankly, were kind of barbaric anyway, if it would've deprived all of them of their lives entirelyThose Klingon parents weren’t just shaping their children’s futures, they were dictating them.
And they didn't... and they might not have, if they were allowed a natural development, but Worf gave them no choice, because he objected to it personallyIt’s the job of parents to guide children, not to chain them to the nest after they become adults.
That's just your perspective. They were POWs, not kidnapped, and only after they were disavowed by their own people did they give up that life, and chose not to end their own lives, as their way of life demanded. When they chose to live, they chose not to live as Klingons anymore. That's on them, not their jailer. Their "Societal taboos" weren't broken. They were abandoned, because there was no place for them in this new paradigm. Their jailer gave up his role, when he knew no one cared whether they lived or died, & chose to stay and live among them, to form a new type of society, probably in no small part due to him falling in love with a Klingon woman there, & she him.
They provided them a model to live by, and no one objected to that model. They gave them a life, the only life that was available to them, short of returning to the bigger society, shrouded in lies. They chose a new way of life for themselves & their heirs, that shed some of the old ways, that had to be shed, & quite frankly, were kind of barbaric anyway, if it would've deprived all of them of their lives entirely
And they didn't... and they might not have, if they were allowed a natural development, but Worf gave them no choice, because he objected to it personally
But they made that decision based on Worf's fairy tale version of klingon society and they probably had a rude awakening when they actually lived among other klingons.Given the fact the children almost unanimously abandoned the camp, I think it says everything you want to know about their feelings on their situation.
But they made that decision based on Worf's fairy tale version of klingon society and they probably had a rude awakening when they actually lived among other klingons.
Worf is genetically klingon but culturally he is a federation hippie living in a utopia that allows its citizens to live their lifes as they want to (within reason), Worf himself would never thrive among other klingons and in fact he always felt out of place when he was shown among them, he always always returned to the warm embrace of the federation where he could yap about honor and tradition without being disappointed by actual klingon society.
And at the end of the episode what did Worf do? Did he rejoin klingon society? Of course not, after advertising it to those kids for days/weeks he leaves telling them "I actually live in a multicultural society where I'm not following some klingon traditions. See ya, byeeeeee!" and kicks back on the Enterprise enjoying a big glass of prune juice in his tastefully decorated, comfortable quarters.
That is the exact opposite of what happened. Their home world refused to recognize that they were anything but dead. Dead is what Klingon society expected/demanded they all be, and still does. However, the Romulans didn't want to do that, & offered the Klingon POWs the alternative of not being dead, & living there with them instead. They chose the latter, & gave up their way of life, for this new compromiseThey were abandoned because a phaser was pointed at their head and they were forced to do it.
It wasn't a prison anymore, and the lie wasn't meant to keep them captive, but to protect them from the fate of being dishonored Klingons... who under most circumstances, anywhere but that planet, are killedThey didn't object to the model because they didn't know it was a prison and they were lied to.
Worf follows the textbook version of klingon traditions and those are kinda removed from reality. He's not Ned Stark in King's Landing, he's Daenerys dreaming of going to King's Landing, the foreigner who only knows the place in theory but thinks belongs there because that's where daddy lived.Worf does follow Klingon traditions. It's just that he's constantly involved in Game of Thrones-esque intrigue because he's Ned Stark and he never seems to get out of Kings Landing.
I think the problem with that, is that in order for the episode to have any conflict, they had to detain Worf. Them forcing him to stay is the catalyst that moves the premise along. Otherwise, he just leaves & never hassles them about their communityI always thought the Writer wimpied out in the episode anyway. It would have been a great part of the story for Worf to encounter his father still living; and Worf having to come to terms with that as well as the rest of the situation - but no, Worf's father (of course) was the 'good Klingon" and died at Khitomher with honor.
Why is abandoning old traditions such a bad thing?
To me, Klingon society seems based on outdated religious dogma. It would be like living in the dark ages where people were burned to death because the church decided you were a witch or something.
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