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Spoilers Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 2x05 - "Charades"

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There was an episode where centuries later someone said that the Eugenics Wars had taken place in the 1990s. Hard to tell what century it was when Spock said that - could have been anywhere in the range of seven hundred years in which the first season of Star Trek took place. That's based upon things said by characters in the episodes.
Khan gave an exact year of when he left earth.
 
My parents listened to Rush Limbaugh and enjoyed Star Trek.
Stereotypes are always one-dimensional and dumb, no matter which way they’re pointing.
Yes. Can't stand stereotypes. My wife found an AI picture generated to show Idaho as a person. Quite eye rolling.
 
One of the things I liked best, growing up watching TNG, was that species/race/gender were irrelevant; it was all about respect for life, especially sentient life, curiosity, integrity, and service in pursuit of a noble ideal. Everyone was striving to be their best self and work well as a team while they gallivanted about the galaxy.
That’s a great message and an optimistic vision of the future that’s broadly appealing.
 
I just don't get it. My parents raised me to treat everyone the same, which was a challenge as my mom's dad was raised in the south and struggled at times with some racist ideas. Somehow, though, I managed to grow up with more conservative parents and still see no issue with treating people based on their performance, not some political correctness nonsense.

I blame Mr. Rogers.

My mom and my grandparents raised me the same way, and I'm just as baffled as you are about how people can just be that way. My criteria for people are as follows...

1. You aren't a douche, bitch, or a dick to people.
2. You aren't trying to hurt people.

I think this is a pretty simple set of rules to live by when it comes to dealing with other people. You'd think keeping it simple would work for everyone, but apparently not.
 
Khan gave an exact year of when he left earth.

Right. He also said that a thing had happened at thus and such a point in the past.

If we agree to play the dumb game of pretending that these are real people and not actors reciting lines, let's stipulate that Khan would never lie about such a detail because he wanted Kirk to know exactly who he was and where he came from. :lol:
 
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One of the things I liked best, growing up watching TNG, was that species/race/gender were irrelevant; it was all about respect for life, especially sentient life, curiosity, integrity, and service in pursuit of a noble ideal. Everyone was striving to be their best self and work well as a team while they gallivanted about the galaxy.
That’s a great message and an optimistic vision of the future that’s broadly appealing.

I certainly remember people being upset over the PC-ness (1990's "woke") of DS9 having a black man as a lead and then Voyager having a woman captain and the episode with her and Belanna working out a solution to the episode's problem while ignoring the men in the room (boy did THAT trigger people!) This BS has been going on forever. How *did* people really react to that interracial kiss or a Japanese and Russian man being social equals with a white man?
 
I certainly remember people being upset over the PC-ness (1990's "woke") of DS9 having a black man as a lead and then Voyager having a woman captain and the episode with her and Belanna working out a solution to the episode's problem while ignoring the men in the room (boy did THAT trigger people!) This BS has been going on forever. How *did* people really react to that interracial kiss or a Japanese and Russian man being social equals with a white man?

Sheesh, some Southern NBC affiliates refused to air "Plato's Stepchildren" in 1968 and had social media existed during the Vietnam War I have no doubt "fans" would have excoriated Trek for having white stud Captain Kirk kiss a black woman who's a junior officer. Hell, NBC and Paramount Television got letters from perturbed fans who had issues with the show in addition to the diehard fans always trying to save it from being canceled!
 
I don't know for sure. Nobody I've seen has ever debunked the story and said those Southern stations weren't miffed about that episode's content. In the same way CBS affiliates reserved the right to not air controversial installments of The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour I can see Southern station owners being reluctant to broadcast that episode and deciding not to do so.
 
Is this ironclad? I’ve heard this a few times but I’ve never found compelling evidence (to be fair, I’ve not devoted much effort, though).
I thought I remembered this being debunked, maybe by the Fact Trek guys.

Although, it may not have happened for the initial network airing, I suppose some local channels may have left it out of their syndication rotation.
 
Sheesh, some Southern NBC affiliates refused to air "Plato's Stepchildren" in 1968 and had social media existed during the Vietnam War I have no doubt "fans" would have excoriated Trek for having white stud Captain Kirk kiss a black woman who's a junior officer. Hell, NBC and Paramount Television got letters from perturbed fans who had issues with the show in addition to the diehard fans always trying to save it from being canceled!
As to some Southern States not airing Plato's Stepchildren, I think that's more of a Star Trek urban myth.
 
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