Many of the truths we hold on to depend greatly on our own point of view.
I do not see destruction when I can watch Star Trek whenever I want and ignore what I don't like.
If you look at it that way, I can understand some of your points, even if I don't agree on them.
My problem is that i have got too much to ignore then in recent years.
What I have to look forward to when it comes to Star Trek is a new "Relaunch" of DS9 which I will start on Christmas Eve!
If the Star Trek books were canon, I wouldn't have cause for complaint about Harry anymore. He's received the promotion he deserved in several of them, and in none has he been kept at ensign after Voyager's return.
In that case, that would be something to be a bit happy for.
I actually appreaced the attempts to restore Kes in the
Dark Matter books written by Christie Golden and the
String Theory book
Evolution written by Heather Jarman, even if what was there were far away from what I really wish for the character.
Maybe there will be someone who dare to give Kim a promotion somewhere in some movie or series. Not so complicated as to come up with a decent restore of Kes which probably seems to be too hard and controversial to do.
But it makes happy endings.
Does it?
Becoming a boring old fart isn't exactly a happy ending, rather quite boring.
And who needs "endings" when it's possible to have more interesting stories about those characters?
My trouble with Insurrection is that I didn't agree with Picard's position. I'm like Spock; I tend to believe that the needs of the many DO outweigh the needs of the few.
My sincere apology here. It wasn't my intention to trash
Insurrection when I was thinking about
Nemesis which was really horrible!
I just mixed them up, most likely because I was tired when I replied to that previous post. There were a lot to reply to and at the end I just wanted to finish it so I probably lost concentration for a while.
Insurrection wasn't particularily good but it was ten times better than
Nemesis.
As for the quote from Spock, I rather agree with Neelix in the VOY episode
Learning Curve when he stated that "sometimes you have to bend the rules".
But if they had to make it, better to end TNG there and move on to the DS9 and VOY crews for ST X.
No it had been better to never come up with
Nemesis. That one was horrible!
And I'm happy that we never had to see the DS9 and VOY characters in that mess.
Especially since they really didn't. ENT had transporters, phasers, photon torpedoes... it was just more of the same.
It was just a step in the wrong direction, just like if the music industry should abandon the recording techniques we have today and go back to what they did in the 30's with an otrrchestra, a singer and a microphone in the middle of the room plus the kind of records which broke if you dropped them.
Plus how established Star Trek history was messed up which is always the danger with prequels.
Maybe... but I also dislike it when good characters get a raw deal. And quite a few of them did. I didn't read the book Lynx hates so much, but I agree with him about Gowron and Kes. And I think the Ferengi as a whole got screwed in the end, too.
In this I agree. Kes and Gowron were too great as characters to be treated like they were and the whole change of ferengi society was stupid.
As for the book, I found it so unnecessary and cruel to come up with a story where Garak is "revealed" as a war criminal (which he never was according to DS9 "canon") and then use it as a reason to humiliate, destroy and finally kill off the character, a character who could have been a prominent person in more books!
Not to mention that I did take it a bit personal since I actually had praised McCormack's earlier books about Cardassia in which Garak played a major part and written that her books had made me find new hope in TrekLit in a post written only a few days before I found out about the content in that book. It felt like I was stabbed in the back by someone I actually praised.
I just have a different mindset. Much of the stories I enjoyed as a child were Downers, even with Star Trek. I no longer go into the happily ever after premise of endings depending on the story told.
I get the passion to a degree; I don't care for Kirk or Data's death (and I don't even like Data). But I can appreciate the stories. The older I get the less I want characters to last for ever.
The contrary with me. The older I get, the more I want the characters to be around for further episodes.
I've always regarded aging as a curse!