That's at the heart of the problem: "I can't see it - amazing!" is the repeated but inconsistent reaction to invisibility. If modern sensors can penetrate old cloaks, fine (but why aren't they shown doing so, making the old ships visible for the user?). But the correct reaction to modern sensors failing to penetrate what's ahead is not "Amazing!". It's "Mr Uhura, please crawl beneath Mr Spock's console to see if the wires haven't come loose again (and Mr Spock, please move aside so that I get a clear line of sight)".
I could easily accept Georgiou or Kirk or Harriman or Garrison or Picard personally only having to face invisibility once or twice in their careers. It must be an impressive sight and all. But they aren't entitled to amazement there if every immediate predecessor or successor of theirs encounters the phenomenon at the same frequency - and why wouldn't they?
It's like American pilots being constantly amazed at seeing an enemy jet aircraft. The one fighting in WWII, the one escorting the Berlin Airlift, the one fighting in Korea, the one over Vietnam... All can be amazed that the most recent enemy is flying jets. But only the first one is entitled to the exact sort of amazement we see in Trek.
Timo Saloniemi
I could easily accept Georgiou or Kirk or Harriman or Garrison or Picard personally only having to face invisibility once or twice in their careers. It must be an impressive sight and all. But they aren't entitled to amazement there if every immediate predecessor or successor of theirs encounters the phenomenon at the same frequency - and why wouldn't they?
It's like American pilots being constantly amazed at seeing an enemy jet aircraft. The one fighting in WWII, the one escorting the Berlin Airlift, the one fighting in Korea, the one over Vietnam... All can be amazed that the most recent enemy is flying jets. But only the first one is entitled to the exact sort of amazement we see in Trek.
Timo Saloniemi