I'm not going through anything. I was perfectly clear.
Great. Then why isn't it artistic licence? Why is it literal?
Sounds like CBS is trying to have their Cage and eat it, too.
Because it was a scene from an episode of TOS (literally, the pilot episode that takes place before DSC) which this show claims to be a prequel of. The entire scene was literally CBS's way of stating that both shows take place in the same universe. So the Xindi changing history 100 years before would have changed the events of 'The Cage.' How the two shows 'look' has no relevance. CBS does not care about visual continuity; therefore there's no reason to think that the Xindi changed anything. Don't blame the Xindi, blame CBS.
Mind you, I'm arguing here about something that I myself do not believe. I think DSC takes place in a different universe/continuity/timeline/whatever from TOS. But CBS says otherwise, even though the producers and writers of DSC seem to make little to no effort to adhere to continuity. So there you go.
Likewise, I can't stand ENT. So I don't really believe "the Xindi changed everything!" argument either. But it is interesting.
That killed some time.
That it did. BTW, I try not to take things personally here. If I came across like I was attacking you because you posted that video, I apologize.
Shit canon is still canonLikewise, I can't stand ENT. So I don't really believe "the Xindi changed everything!" argument either. But it is interesting.
Shit canon is still canon
(FWIW, I loved ENT season 3, not so much 1 or 2)
Shit canon is still canon![]()
Shit, canon is still canon![]()
I take the baby borg to be them assimilating even the babies they have captured or the babies from any pregnant women they assimilated.
They could just teleport them. Honestly that seems like all babies would get beamed out of the womb, in Star Trek, unless you're one of the Luddites or Vulcan or a Human living on Vulcan.They take the children and babies and place them in maturation tanks (that's how Seven of Nine was created -- she was assimilated when she was seven years old).
Pregnant women: they probably do C-sections and place the fetuses in maturation tanks.
They did that in Voyager when Naomi was born. She died, so it's a no-no.They could just teleport them. Honestly that seems like all babies would get beamed out of the womb, in Star Trek, unless you're one of the Luddites or Vulcan or a Human living on Vulcan.
I don't know if I saw that one. Voyager is the one series I am not sure I saw every episode of. But I probably forgot some of them. Star Trek, especially the Berman years was afraid sometimes to embrace just how different culture would be after a couple hundred years of the changes their universe had been through. Another reason I like TOS: It's weird, sometimes. As it ages, it gets stranger. VOY.. well they had the salamanders and Neelix lusting after someone who was less then a few years old, but ultimately they always tried to fall back on the comfortable.They did that in Voyager when Naomi was born. She died, so it's a no-no.
Luckily for them, they got an exact duplicate of her by the end of the episode and never mentioned it again.
Same with Harry Kim.They did that in Voyager when Naomi was born. She died, so it's a no-no.
Luckily for them, they got an exact duplicate of her by the end of the episode and never mentioned it again.
Alex Kurtzman on "Canon" ...
When I start to take the idea of canon too seriously, I like to remind myself that "Turnabout Intruder" is canon.
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