Slightly off topic, but I was wondering for who the Robinson was named for.
I would have prefered something else though for a Galaxy-class ship. With except of Yamamoto and Galaxy, which at least implied something massive, the rest have been named after some kind of undertaking or journey.
I wouldn't be surprised if it was named after Jackie Robinson, the first black major league baseball player...Slightly off topic, but I was wondering for who the Robinson was named for.
I kind of figured, considering what happened to Sisko's dad in RBOE, the ship was named after Tom Robinson, Brock Peter's character in To Kill a Mockingbird.
I wouldn't be surprised if it was named after Jackie Robinson, the first black major league baseball player...Slightly off topic, but I was wondering for who the Robinson was named for.
I kind of figured, considering what happened to Sisko's dad in RBOE, the ship was named after Tom Robinson, Brock Peter's character in To Kill a Mockingbird.
As well as the baseball connection to Sisko. That's who I was going with.
It's nice to see a well-reasoned understanding of what happened with Sisko in RBoE. I don't like it either, I don't anyone would. But I respect the story that's going to be told. Let's not forget, people, this isn't exactly the end of it.
Even when Sisko was mourning Jennifer's death, he never turned away from Jake; similarly when Dax died, he went back home (now we can debate whether he was 'friendly' to his family or not), but his natural inclination seems to hold on to his family when he's in pain, to rely on them, to go back to them. With RoBE, Sisko did the opposite, something we never saw him do throughout the run of DS9, and that is out of character. And it is highly debatable that the actions he takes in RoBE would flow from the character as presented in DS9, because he openly defied the warnings of the Prophets to marry Kasidy. What I see this is is DRG taking the character in a direction, with a filmsy basis, if you are basing him on the DS9 canon Sisko.
I don't mind if Sisko is depressed or in pain, so long as he learns how to overcome it instead of running from it, instead of knuckling under. Some might see that as 'realistic', but we never see Picard in such deep doldrums that aren't resolved by the end of a film or novel. RoBE was a deconstruction of Sisko that 'certain sub-groups' of fans don't like just like other 'sub-groups' of fans support. Calling dissenters a sub-group doesn't delegitimize their point(s) of view.
It remains to be seen, at this point, whether or not Sisko's arc in RBoE will be incorporated into or referenced in the DS9-R going forward, because RBoE isn't, as far as I know, officially part of that continuity the way that ZSG is, at least at this juncture.
Except, as has been pointed out many times already, Sisko didn't abandon his family, he left them because he sincerely believed they'd be safer without him. If a man goes off to war in order to protect his family, is that abandoning them? He is taking responsibility for his family, not evading it. At least, that's what he believes. So it's really not fair to play the "deadbeat dad" card in judging this. One could argue that Kasidy and Rebecca wouldn't feel there was a difference, but Sisko's own intentions have nothing to do with shirking responsibility.
With respect, this is the excuse ("they're better off without me") that deadbeat dads use all the time. It's responsibility-shirking masked as nobility.
A lot of people grow up with parents who stay together for the sake of the child. If you really want to mess up your kid, that's a surefire way of doing it. Sisko realized that his marriage to Kass wasn't working out. Reasons aside, staying with her would have done both of them, and Rebecca, more harm then good.
So no, staying with his family might have done more harm, psyhollogically speaking, then it would have done them good.
And yes, it's easy to say that they should have worked it out, but I know someone very close to me who was in a similair situation, and she can now say, after all the hurt and pain, that the break up between her parents was ultimatly better for both of them.
Sorry guys, but just like in real life there isn't always a happy-ever-after.
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