^Yeah, I've always found it an interesting anomaly that TMP is the only Trek movie in which no phasers are fired. Even in The Voyage Home, the least violent of the Trek movies, Kirk uses his phaser to fuse a lock.
redshirts don't have relatives
redshirts aren't real people
redshirts are redshirts
I'm pretty sure I read somewhere the reason the guard zapping scene was cut was because if it wasn't, Kirk would have had to mention him in the last scene: "List as missing: Captain Decker, Navigator Ilia, and Ensign Redshirt".
redshirts don't have relatives
redshirts aren't real people
redshirts are redshirts
That is shirtcist. You offend me, sir!![]()
Well, at least nobody used "Redshirts" as the name of a sports team...
(That I know of.)
Perhaps.
I've always tried my best to live by my philosophy that words only last as long as they are spoken. As soon as they are spoken...poof...they vanish. They leave no physical scars or bruises. And only leave other bruises if you allow it.
Most of the time, it works for me. Most of the time.
Perhaps.
I've always tried my best to live by my philosophy that words only last as long as they are spoken. As soon as they are spoken...poof...they vanish. They leave no physical scars or bruises. And only leave other bruises if you allow it.
Most of the time, it works for me. Most of the time.
Not to drag things further off topic, but it's rather more complicated when it's an actual ethnic slur like "Redskins," say. Then there's a lot more behind it than just someone being hypersensitive, because in a case like that, the words are just a symptom of actual actions, beliefs, and policies that have harmful effects on a whole culture. One cannot dismiss the impact of hate speech as just a case of the victims being too thin-skinned.
Perhaps.
I've always tried my best to live by my philosophy that words only last as long as they are spoken. As soon as they are spoken...poof...they vanish. They leave no physical scars or bruises. And only leave other bruises if you allow it.
Most of the time, it works for me. Most of the time.
Not to drag things further off topic, but it's rather more complicated when it's an actual ethnic slur like "Redskins," say. Then there's a lot more behind it than just someone being hypersensitive, because in a case like that, the words are just a symptom of actual actions, beliefs, and policies that have harmful effects on a whole culture. One cannot dismiss the impact of hate speech as just a case of the victims being too thin-skinned.
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