Surely a coincidence that this matches the political divide in the US.
Terry said it’s a non-Federation Planet.M'Talas Prime had a Starfleet recruiting installation and the Federation was putting statues to commemorate Starfleet personnel there. I think that points to it being a Federation member, (e.g., the US military does recruit non-citizens but doesn't put recruiting installations outside US territory) and maybe M'Talas Prime presumably started as a human colony given the human-to-alien ratio of the population we see.
Terry said it’s a non-Federation Planet.
Which makes sense, no federation planet would have a seedy underworld line we saw in these last two episodes.
In the eyes of the law if Jack's birth certificate lists him as a Crusher and Beverly has not remarried or named someone else as the father, then Jack can lawfully claim to be a Jr. and be afforded all the legal rights as one of Jack Sr.'s offspring.
The law only recognizes official documents, not the actual bloodline.
Now if someone were to challenge Jack Jr.'s claim in court, say to get DNA testing done and proved he was not actually Jack Sr.'s son, then the court would disallow his claim.
Government Red Tape often trumps actual facts.
In Hungary, as recently as 15 years ago, it was still customary (e.g. for 2 out of every 3 marriages) for women to not only take their husband's name but to have their entire legal name changed to what basically means "wife of [husband's name]" and nothing else, with an additional 20% opting for "[maiden name], wife of [husband's surname]", which is the only common traditional form that is still popular today, competing with other forms (e.g. taking the husband's surname in western style, hyphenating or just keeping your own).
I think that's overstating things. Women not taking their husbands' names goes at least as far back as when women's lib was is full bloom in the '70s. The 2013 article seems to be coming from the perspective of "Why is this still a thing?," rather than announcing the invention of the wheel.We are talking about the US in the 80s. I'm sure that the authors couldn't even fathom that a woman could not take husband's surname.
And still, in 2013, 90% of the women did it. I suppose that in 87 was even more. If something is done by more than 9 out of 10 people I'm reasonably sure it's considered the default. And there's that 50% of people who say that wives should be required BY LAW to take their husband's surname. And as for the 70s lib, I'm sure over time people have categorized it under the label "Crazy Things Feminists Said in the 70s". I admit I didn't look long, but this about husbands' last names doesn't seem like a serious discussion happening right now in the United States, except on a very academic level. Even now, if a husband wanted to legally take his wife's surname, in some states it would be a somewhat complex process, while the reverse is easier because it is considered a "naturally" part of marriage. I'm reasonably sure they weren't more enlightened in '87 than that. I mean, Star Trek was just AMERICA IN SPACE. Before the new series the characters were very fond of saying how progressed and brightened the future was, but you rarely saw any evidence of that on screen. I mean, during TOS they thought it was incredibly modern to have a black woman be a glorified receptionist in a miniskirt, whereas in the contemporary "Mission Impossible" a black man was a scientific genius and was treated on a par with other team members.I think that's overstating things. Women not taking their husbands' names goes at least as far back as when women's lib was is full bloom in the '70s. The 2013 article seems to be coming from the perspective of "Why is this still a thing?," rather than announcing the invention of the wheel.
And still, in 2013, 90% of the women did it. I suppose that in 87 was even more. If something is done by more than 9 out of 10 people I'm reasonably sure it's considered the default. And there's that 50% of people who say that wives should be required BY LAW to take their husband's surname. And as for the 70s lib, I'm sure over time people have categorized it under the label "Crazy Things Feminists Said in the 70s". I admit I didn't look long, but this about husbands' last names doesn't seem like a serious discussion happening right now in the United States, except on a very academic level. Even now, if a husband wanted to legally take his wife's surname, in some states it would be a somewhat complex process, while the reverse is easier because it is considered a "naturally" part of marriage. I'm reasonably sure they weren't more enlightened in '87 than that. I mean, Star Trek was just AMERICA IN SPACE. Before the new series the characters were very fond of saying how progressed and brightened the future was, but you rarely saw any evidence of that on screen. I mean, during TOS they thought it was incredibly modern to have a black woman be a glorified receptionist in a miniskirt, whereas in the contemporary "Mission Impossible" a black man was a scientific genius and was treated on a par with other team members.
You mean the crazy guy who had a psychotic break?Well, they had Dr. Daystrom in TOS.
You mean the crazy guy who had a psychotic break?![]()
You have a pointYes ... but it was also acknowledged that he was a child prodigy and genius. His role was definitely not a borderline racist black cliché.
But it wasn't unheard of in 1987; it simply wasn't the norm.And still, in 2013, 90% of the women did it. I suppose that in 87 was even more. If something is done by more than 9 out of 10 people I'm reasonably sure it's considered the default. And there's that 50% of people who say that wives should be required BY LAW to take their husband's surname. And as for the 70s lib, I'm sure over time people have categorized it under the label "Crazy Things Feminists Said in the 70s". I admit I didn't look long, but this about husbands' last names doesn't seem like a serious discussion happening right now in the United States, except on a very academic level. Even now, if a husband wanted to legally take his wife's surname, in some states it would be a somewhat complex process, while the reverse is easier because it is considered a "naturally" part of marriage. I'm reasonably sure they weren't more enlightened in '87 than that. I mean, Star Trek was just AMERICA IN SPACE. Before the new series the characters were very fond of saying how progressed and brightened the future was, but you rarely saw any evidence of that on screen. I mean, during TOS they thought it was incredibly modern to have a black woman be a glorified receptionist in a miniskirt, whereas in the contemporary "Mission Impossible" a black man was a scientific genius and was treated on a par with other team members.
In concept art for the episode, the shuttle was a lot smaller. I wonder if the FX team made a mistake or if it was scaled up to make it easier to see
https://twitter.com/daveblass/status/1627505656314970113?s=46&t=lcMSxVR61ASQr086eLW1Uw
They also said the shuttle was scaled properly based off the notes given by productionOne of the VFX artists mentioned it was scaled up so that the docking ports were the right size.
In Quebec, marriage, by itself, is not a legal reason for taking a spouse’s family name. Only a (VERY EXPENSIVE) legal request for a full name change can make it happen and it is strongly discouraged. Been the case since 1977. In that year, when the law was established, it was also retroactively applied to all living married women. There was no option to grandfather existing uses, which led to much confusion among the elderly (my grandmother had been using her husband’s name for 50 years, nearly 3/4 of her life, for example). The attitude described above by Americans towards women who don’t take the husband’s name is just as strong, if not more so, towards those who do here. As for the rest of Canada, it works quite similarly to the US—automatic name adoption—though choosing not to is not difficult nor poorly received. Seems largely driven by the inertia of tradition rather than a significant ideological motive.
Wait, that's not a French accent???Jack is basically British. (Can’t get more British than Downton Abbey).
The Shrike looks like a ginormous Tie Silencer/Interceptor.
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