The N-word is dropped, brilliantly, in "Far Beyond the Stars".
Not onscreen, but characters in A Flag Full of Stars used "turtleheads" several times.
But Klingons weren't turtle heads in McCoy's day.
I've figured that it was somewhat of a coincidence... that the smootheads may have been seen as something of undesirables, lumped together, and consolidated into an area of space. It just so happens that was the area of space Kirk's 1701 was operating in, so they had a sort of disproportionate contact with them.
Even so, given that Klingona with brow ridges had not been seen yet, McCoy would obviously not use that particular slur. I'm sure he could come up with something, though.
Would they have been given an inferior grunt assignment due to prejudice?
I suppose having to deal with Humans would be a form of punishment.
It might also explain the title 'Dahar Master'. Only 3 Klingons we've seen have held that title... Kang, Koloth, and Kor. All had smooth heads in TOS. And at least one had a noble blood lineage (Kor). Given the reverence that title had, it's certainly possible that those Klingons with smooth heads commanded others so well and achieved so many greater victories (and quite possibly greatly expanded the Empire) because their thought processes were changed that they actually made ridge headed Klingons look bad in comparison. Hence the title 'Dahar Master'.
I'm a little surprised there's no onscreen slurs for Klingons, given how much screen time they have. Not even "Day of the Dove," in which hostilities are being artificially inflamed from without, gives any anti-Klingon slurs. Heck, Soock gets more verbal abuse than the Klingons do in that episode.As good as anything. It does feel alittle odd like, trying to make up racial slurs. But at the end of the day, it's a realistic thing that definitely would happen, and we know still DOES happen.
There's also the bit in "Tribbles" when Chekov implies that Klingons stink ("One parsec, sir. Close enough to smell them."). That's racist, but it's not a slur per se.Chekov calls them "Cossacks" (twice, Dove and Tribbles) and "filthy Klingon murderers", but nothing that couldn't just as easily be said about humans.
There's also the bit in "Tribbles" when Chekov implies that Klingons stink ("One parsec, sir. Close enough to smell them."). That's racist, but it's not a slur per se.
There's also the bit in "Tribbles" when Chekov implies that Klingons stink ("One parsec, sir. Close enough to smell them."). That's racist, but it's not a slur per se.
Troi falls apart in a minute in "The Loss."
I love this so muchThe Klingons are the enemy at this point in the timeline. Dehumanizing (de-Klingonizing?) your enemy is a time-honored wartime behavior. If for no other reason than that it makes it easier to kill them, when the time comes.
They had to take her through all the stages of grief in one episode, while balancing it with the 2-D lemming threat of the week. Even though TNG didn't dance on the Big Red Reset Button the way VOY did, they weren't going to have a character go through a multi-episode development arc.
Only good thing about that episode was that it showed that even if Troi went down, Enterprise would still have a great counselor. She was savvy, she was wise, she was a great listener... and if the ship's shuttlepads were ever out of commission, the shuttles could just land on her hat.
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