Just cause he's not over the top about it, doesn't make him any less smug and superior in his thinking. He and his are--in his mind--out rightful masters.
Just cause he's not over the top about it, doesn't make him any less smug and superior in his thinking. He and his are--in his mind--out rightful masters.
But that's not the argument. The argument is that Robert Orci, Alex Kurtzman and Damon Lindelof believe both Khans' purposes was to kill anything and anyone they deemed inferior. Genocide. That's not the case with the original Khan because, well, he doesn't have any desire to really kill anyone in Space Seed. You bring up his threat of killing everyone in the chamber, but you also left out his deal sweetener.
Khan: If anyone of you joins me, ANYONE, I'll let him live. *no one answers* It's so useless!
Before it was Mr. Spock who had to join Khan in order to spare Kirk's life. Again, where is this "I will kill all of you for being inferior to me!" attitude that you think the original depiction of Khan has?
Okay, that was hyperboles. But the point still stand, she's arguing that brownface is indeed an acceptable way to portrait brown-skinned people. Let's just say I strongly disagree.
@Jeyl
You're naive if you believe Khan ruled a quarter of the planet with no massacres.
The whole fucking briefing room exchange makes it clear that they're only alive cause he needs their training. If they don't join him, they're fucked--training or not.
He's not got clean hands.
He's perfectly cool with killing people and making it clear "I'm better than you cause I"m superior".
You think Earth banned eugenics cause Khan and his people where happy fun guys?
@Jeyl
You're naive if you believe Khan ruled a quarter of the planet with no massacres.
If you're implying that he and his followers had to kill in order to seize power, that's certainly well within the realm of possibilities. But that was only to seize power. Once he had that power, there was no more need for massacring. If he did commit acts of mass murder, why didn't those who overthrew him make that point in the history books? Scotty himself had a sneaking admiration specifically for Khan. You think a man who massacred whole groups of people would earn the respect of Kirk and other members of the crew? I don't believe so. Besides, Khan wasn't the only superman to rule over parts of Earth.
SPOCK: In 1993, a group of these young supermen did seize power simultaneously in over forty nations.
KIRK: Well, they were hardly supermen. They were aggressive, arrogant. They began to battle among themselves.
When you take that exchange into account, you could conclude that Khan wasn't the merciless superman who ruled through massacres. Khan's ambition, which is stated again and again in this episode is to rule, not commit acts of genocide because he doesn't like having "inferior" beings around.
Bennet: I don't think so. Two hundred years ago, we tried to "improve" the species through DNA resequencing and what did we get for our trouble? The Eugenics Wars. For every Julian Bashir that can be created, there's a Khan Singh waiting in the wings --a "superhuman" whose ambition and thirst for power have been enhanced along with his intellect. The law against genetic engineering provides a firewall against such men and it's my job to keep that firewall intact.
Picard: I know, Professor, "What if one of those lives I save down there is a child who grows up to be the next Adolf Hitler or Khan Singh?
The whole fucking briefing room exchange makes it clear that they're only alive cause he needs their training. If they don't join him, they're fucked--training or not.
Tone the language down please.
The whole fucking briefing room exchange makes it clear that they're only alive cause he needs their training. If they don't join him, they're fucked--training or not. He's not got clean hands.
How about you just not assume things about my personal beliefs and character just because I don't think a particular actor is suited to a particular role?Okay, that was hyperboles. But the point still stand, she's arguing that brownface is indeed an acceptable way to portrait brown-skinned people. Let's just say I strongly disagree.Dude. W. The actual. F. Really?I guess all brown people look the same to you, including white people with dirt on their faces. I guess blackface works for playing African-Americans
Even before STID, Berman Era Trek had turned Khan into a Dictator on par with Hitler, a man so feared that Earth and Starfleet was terrified of there ever being another one like him. That's not the work of a skilled diplomat, that's someone that was racking and stacking bodies.
Even before STID, Berman Era Trek had turned Khan into a Dictator on par with Hitler, a man so feared that Earth and Starfleet was terrified of there ever being another one like him. That's not the work of a skilled diplomat, that's someone that was racking and stacking bodies.
Well it was called the Eugenics Wars, and it's unmistakable that Khan and his fellow tyrants didn't play nicely together and caused a lot of death in the process. Obviously nobody would want the return of that. The TOS assessment of Khan as a ruler is obviously not referring to the whole aspect of the world being at war but to his characteristics as a potentate within his own borders.
If the idea of departing from that was invented by some iteration of Berman Era Trek, again I don't think that's necessarily a huge endorsement of it (quintuply not, for my taste, if the Berman Era Trek you have in mind is Enterprise, with apologies to any fans of such here present)... though TBH I mostly remember the never-seen "Li Kuan" being pressed into service as Obligatory Future Dictator on lists involving Hitler.
Even before STID, Berman Era Trek had turned Khan into a Dictator on par with Hitler, a man so feared that Earth and Starfleet was terrified of there ever being another one like him. That's not the work of a skilled diplomat, that's someone that was racking and stacking bodies.
TOS said "Under his rule". Which tells his nothing of the nature of his rise to power.
TOS said "Under his rule". Which tells his nothing of the nature of his rise to power.
TOS said "Under his rule". Which tells his nothing of the nature of his rise to power.
Spock also says that records of the time were "fragmentary". Which means they would likely have an incomplete picture of Khan's rule.
TOS said "Under his rule". Which tells his nothing of the nature of his rise to power.
It was also stated that he wasn't the only one to rise to power.
Spock: In 1993, a group of these young supermen did seize power simultaneously in over forty nations.
McCoy: The last of the tyrants to be overthrown.
Kirk: He was the best of the tyrants, and the most dangerous.
Maybe all those deaths weren't caused by Khan, but the other tyrants.
we know Khan was all gumdrops and lollipops. He was a cuddly dictator.
[*]
TOS shows us that he had little use for people that don't join his cause.
There's a parody of Space Seed in one of the Best of Trek books called "Requiem for a Hack".* For comedic potential, though, I have to admit that the "cuddly dictator" notion does bring a rich trove of Khan parodies to mind. What if the shameful secrets of Khan's rule were Cuddly Secrets? His passion for fancy pastries, his love for unicorns and Pokemon, his top-secret Kitten Defense Fund... the Cuddly Khan Comic practically writes itself.![]()
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