No, you're right, particularly as it really has very little to do with the topic... and it is, in a way, a continuation of a discussion from the "USS Cortez" thread. Threads in Trek BBS tend to naturally branch and develop in unexpected ways! Although this is nowhere near the epic "Anwar vs Niners" battle that sprung out of the Cirroc Lofton appreciation thread...Am I the only one thinking the Bajor/Cardassia vs. Jews/Nazi debate needs its own thread?
Perrin. I mean, seriously, all the woman does is whine.
Sarek went from a long-term relationship with Amanda to...this?
Oh, and Keiko O'Brien, one in a very long list of TV Wives Who Bitch about Their Husbands' Occupations, Even Though They Knew What the Guy Did for a Living Before They Married Him.
"Oh, honey, you never spend any time with your faaaamilyyyyy!!!!"
Well I like Keiko. Seriously, she was a pleasant woman who occasionally argued with her husband, but to listen to DS9 fans you'd think she was some sort of soul-destroying harpy!
...... Oh, and Keiko O'Brien, one in a very long list of TV Wives Who Bitch about Their Husbands' Occupations, Even Though They Knew What the Guy Did for a Living Before They Married Him.
"Oh, honey, you never spend any time with your faaaamilyyyyy!!!!"
Evil Ezri said:Even that Keiko was around all these years, there is very little that we really know about the woman as a woman. She is a good mother, and she had something to do that does not do anything to bother the Federation or the Bajorians. With Keiko on TNG and DS9, her position was to make sure nobody would have thought that Chief O’Brian was gay.
Pemmer Harge said:Well I like Keiko. Seriously, she was a pleasant woman who occasionally argued with her husband, but to listen to DS9 fans you'd think she was some sort of soul-destroying harpy!
Plus I find it hard to believe that anyone would have bothered to give Chief O'Brien a wife just so someone wouldn't think he was gay - on TNG, where he was just a recurring character. Surely if they were worried about people thinking that this or that character were gay, they'd rather be worried about the main characters - none of which were married.Evil Ezri said:Even that Keiko was around all these years, there is very little that we really know about the woman as a woman. She is a good mother, and she had something to do that does not do anything to bother the Federation or the Bajorians. With Keiko on TNG and DS9, her position was to make sure nobody would have thought that Chief O’Brian was gay.
I completely disagree. Keiko and the children were there so that we could sometimes see a family on that dang station. You know - a husband, a wife and their children? The kind of family that a lot of people have? The kind of family that we almost never see in Trek? I really liked that we finally got one.
I also never got the Keiko hate. Yes, sometimes she did indeed resent her husband's job. You'd think, based on the reaction of some DS9 fans, that this was, like so totally insane and out of leftfield! Unprecedented in marital history!
The plain fact is that this is, out here in the real world, something that a very large percentage of married people go through sooner or later. Those of you who have never been married really need to be aware of how common this actually is. Yes, that's right - sometimes your spouse will be illogical and unreasonable. And sometimes you will be. Welcome to Reality Land.
And the nice guy in Hellraiser.No, the one playing Garak was Scorpio.Mmmmmm.....Zombie Chic Goths.
Was the fellow playing Dukat the ame guy who was Scorpio in Dirty Harry?![]()
^ I suspect that you're overthinking it, Praxius. In every marriage (in, I'd guess, every long-term relationship, whether the couple is married or not), the couple has some dumb things that they fight/argue/consistently disagree about. This isn't the dumb thing that my husband and I fight, etc., about, and it's not the dumb thing that you and your wife fight, etc., about, but this is the dumb thing that Keiko and Miles fight about.
Yes, she knew he was in Starfleet when they got married, but she didn't know he'd end up on a backwater space station, did she? No, she did not. So there she is, trying to raise a kid and eventually two kids there. Give the poor woman a break.
I would say that Keiko is not a lot different from a lot of military spouses out there, who are proud of the service person that they're married to and dedicated to the service that they married into. But...
But raising a family on a base far from home can be a difficult life, and some people handle it better than others. And setting your own career on hold to help your spouse's career isn't easy, either. So Keiko didn't always handle these things that well. Why is this so hard to understand? I thought one of the things people like about DS9 is its realism.
I was annoyed with his character in Hellraiser for being so clueless and wimpy. Although he did have that great scene when he played the bad guy in the skin of the good guy (how does that work? Nevermind, I like Clive Barker so I don't ask those questionsAnd the nice guy in Hellraiser.No, the one playing Garak was Scorpio.Mmmmmm.....Zombie Chic Goths.
Was the fellow playing Dukat the ame guy who was Scorpio in Dirty Harry?![]()
You know, I hate crossovers, but they should've made a throwaway line somewhere in all that about "the trouble with Cenobites."
I'll be skipping over the rest of stj's posts which is 1) repetitive, 2) has already been proven wrong, 3) beside the point (mostly all three at the same time)...
At least you could have compared Dominion to the Third Reich - that might have made some sense (powerful, expansionist force bent on conquering the known world, and driven by paranoia and a belief in racial superiority).
Your problem is that you can't make any useful comparisons between Kira, her religion and her personal history with anything besides Nazis and Jews.
I don't know if your post was in direct response to me, but it appears so, and I'll operate under that assumption until you state otherwise.
As a point of fact, I stated early on that I didn't personally identify or relate with Kira. I find your persistent condescension that anyone who disagrees with you is engaging in self-denial in service of childish wish-fulfillment to be insulting.
What possible conversation could Kira and Sisko have beyond those depicted on screen?
So, stj, what d’ya got?
stj said:When people talk about a relatable character, they (mostly) mean someone they identify with, not because they're consistent or realistic, but because they embody their wish fulfilment self, or wish fulfilment friend, or wish fulfilment lover. And when they make such crazy arguments to supposedly show consistency and realism, they're exhibiting the symptoms of denial.
stj said:You don't seem to know the difference between a cross and a crucifix. So I'm pretty sure I have more to say in a discussion of religion. The idea that the earring isn't strongly reminiscent of tefillin is hard to believe, and far, far more embarrassing that remembering the word "phylactery" instead.
stj said:If first season Kira was truly devout, she could have started explaining Bajoran religion to Sisko, serenely confident that the Prophets had chosen their Emissary well. Or, she could have asked Sisko for guidance or explication, as the available voice of the Prophets.
stj said:You yourself are well aware that, as Kira is basically a Jew, that she would be in a quandary when confronted with a non-Jewish Messiah. That is why you accept that a supposedly devout person would act the way she does. Accepting the Bajoran=Jew increses understanding of the show. And this example shows why drivel about how Bajorans can't be equated with Jews is just a way of falsifying the series.
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