^
Just a note: The Indian Presidency is also ceremonial and real power rests with the Indian Prime Minister (although the current administration is having its strings pulled by majority party (Congress) President Sonia Gandhi, but that's another debate entirely).
Indira Gandhi was not the Indian President, but Indian Prime Minister. When I listed India and Britain and Brazil, I was generically referring to female heads of government -- Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, President Dilma Vana Rousseff, etc.
Or, you know, they named the space station after the mountain. Biggest mountain in North America, massive imposing space station in orbit around Earth? Bit of a better connection don't you think than a fairly inconsequential turn of the century president?
But the mountain was (re)named after the president. So it's essentially a moot distinction.
Thank you. If there's no controversy over a space station named for a horrible imperialist, there's no reason for there to be controversy over a space station being named for a president who, whatever else his flaws may be, genuinely
has done something historic.
As for Bacco, we've had this discussion before, the fact that she's transparently based on liberal dream president Bartlet from The West Wing is abrasive to me. It's more of an irritation by association.
I think she's actually based mainly on Keith DeCandido's grandmother.
KRAD has indicated a number of times that Nan Bacco is primarily based on his grandmother, yes, with some additional influences from Molly Ivins, Anne Richardson, and the characters from
The West Wing. (And, hell, President Bartlet in
The West Wing is not himself an idealized figure, even from a liberal/progressive POV -- he's a guy who failed to disclose to the American people a
serious medical condition capable of disabling him with little notice, and who then ordered the assassination of a foreign ally's defense minister.)
In other words: No, she's not just some liberal wish fulfillment figure.
You're presuming they named it after Denali. What evidence do you have of this? It's far more probable that they named it after one of the most important American Presidents than a mountain in a remote corner of North America.
Or perhaps they named it after the great 23rd-century engineer Vanessa McKinley, or something.
I was referring to the writers when I said "they," not speaking in-universe.
I'd be far less impressed with a female President of Ireland, since the Irish Presidency is mostly ceremonial and it's the Taoseach (Prime Minister) who has real power.
I think the Germans have every right to gloat about our inability to elect a female President, though. So do the Brits and the Indians and the Brazilians and the....
Though the Sri Lankans get to gloat over all of us.
Better yet, let's not be gloating about that at all. It's not a race or a contest.
Nations should, and have every right to be, proud of their accomplishments when they do something good that no or that few other nations have done.
But the mountain was (re)named after the president. So it's essentially a moot distinction.
I don't agree. New York was named after the English Duke of York, but it's taken on its own identity. I don't think you need to identify all things by their name-origins, and Denali/McKinley is one of them; not unlike Everest.
The phrase "New York" has taken on its own identity because people care about the unique characters of the City of New York and the State of New York. Comparatively few people give a shit about an obscure mountain in a remote corner of Alaska. If you say "McKinley," most people will think of the President, not the mountain. (And, frankly, I reject the idea that the Federation or United Earth would adopt the name given to the mountain by white guys rather than its original name from Native Alaskans.)
It's a mountain named after an imperialist, and even IF the space station is named after the mountain, then you'd have a space station named after a mountain named after an imperialist. If that's not worthy of controversy, why is a space station named after a President who's done something truly historic?