Two things:
1. They went SEVEN season without developing Picard, so that dog don't hunt.
Coming from an anti-TNG fan, your comments are unvalid and biased (like your personality.).
You could have done better than that?
Deanna Troi, Katharine Pulaski, and Tasha Yar being better examples of non-character development.
On the contrary, Picard, Data, Worf, and early-Riker were actually among the main characters who actually received significant character development on TNG.
2. If you do not stop using this forum to find any excuse possible spew your political crap about Obama, it will be a warning for spamming. For the SECOND time, Obama does not have one damn thing to do with DS9. So knock it off.
Georgia is one of the "red states," ain't it?
Figures.
For the most part, I'd agree with you there (except I agree with PKTrekGirl's point about Picard), but as I said before, I'm much more concerned with how much you distorted the intent of the episode from one end of the spectrum to a completely different end, especially without taking into account the intent of a minority director.
If a DS9 classic like "Far Beyond the Stars" can still open up a discussion and debate on race and racism over 10 years after its initial broadcast, then it has done the job that it set out to do all along...marvelously.
Good job, Mr. Brooks. I hope today's societies around the world understood the issues presented in your episode, because we still have a lot to improve in real life in regards to racism, race issues, and race relations around the world.
And also... I'd hardly call 50 Cent a bastion of racial tolerance. I expect doors for black, asian, latino, etc. actors to open up, but I don't expect his "acting" skills (or his ability to add to social topic discourse) to improve.
It is almost better to have Hollywood hire more Asian American, Indian American, and African American writers and producers who understand their communities better in the United States than writers who are unfamiliar with the insights and sociodynamics of our multi-ethnic American communities, who may write stereotypical and potentially offensive materials about them.
Hollywood, like virtually anywhere in the United States, is run by white CEOs. It is more about who is in power and who they like to see as the majority in charge. With the demographics of North America (United States, Canada, Mexico) becoming more-and-more like a true "melting pot" and a true multi-ethnic society today, we will see more multi-ethnic representation in films, television, radio, and the news media real soon and in the decades to come.
Also funny: how no one really mentions minority-on-minority racism, either. My Asian aunt is very suspicious of Blacks and West Asians, for no other good reason than, really, what other people tell her. That in itself is disturbing, but that also tells me that I myself have to be vigilant that racism crosses all kinds of streets.
The way you word it like that, you may give off the erroneous impression that all Asians are racist against other races, which is not true.
You do realize that Anglospheric societies (United States, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, United Kingdom) as well as many European nations generally do not distinguish between "Asians from the East" and "Asian Americans" (Asian Brits, Asian Canadians, Asian Australians, Asian Kiwis, Asian South Africans, etc.) like you and me.
So, if the "Asians from the East" generally have this reputation of being racist against other cultures, that does not apply to Asian Americans like you and me who grew up in the United States and are just as "American" as everyone else who were born here (Although, I am sick and tired of some members of other race communities in the United States who still do not understand the concept of "Asian Americans" as being "Americans of Asian descent" who grew up in the United States, rather than being stereotyped with offensive racist slurs like "chop suey" or the ever offensive "ching, ching, chong, chong, chong!" when
they fucking know Asia is on the cutting edge of the latest advances in technology thus living in a modernized, westernized world with high rise buildings and modern-day cars, rather than some rice paddy out in the middle of nowhere with some old skinny man in oriental clothes pulling a rickshaw! That's like saying all Scots still live in castles and wear kilts, when we know that they produced Sean Connery, and that all Irish dress like leprachans when we know they are advanced enough to afford a project like the now defunct (due to expenses) like the U2 building! Give me a break...
I personally hate racism in all forms, but what I find more offensive is being targeted and put under a microscope and being asked what I think of "rice" and "kimchi" looking at me under a condescending "oriental lens" when I fucking grew up in the United States - Southern Fucking California, bitch! (Not you, those ignorant fucks out there who want to "pull the chink out of you!"). My parents are "the immigrants" and they don't care when people condescend them about their English, their food, their apperance, their customs, and their traditions,
but I do because I am "American" who speak English 100% of the time, and immersed in American media all the time, and grew up reading American textbooks while having a lot of caucasian, latino, black, and Asian American friends around him.
There are too many, ignorant, racist airheads in this country who need to read up on "real American history" for a change from President Barack Obama, Asian American Professor Frank H. Wu, and Caesar Chavez rather than the censored US history textbooks that were taught to us from Grades K-12 (The G-rated and "whitewashed version" of American history.).