Sorry, but years of trying to talk reasonably with these kinds of people gets to you. After a while you just figure "Hell with it, if they aren't going to treat people who try to rationally take and explain things like people then I'm not going to treat them with any real respect or consideration."
Fine, we both agree it wasn't an outright contradiction done deliberately.
Uh, what?
Yeah, well the "ENT is one giant plot hole" attitude is partly why I decided to stop treating the haters like people.
Well there's your problem right there.
Convenient, maybe. But a lot of stuff in all of Trek is. If it HAD been the Orion pirates and everything was the same, you'd have had no problems with the episode, even if Archer did let them go without asking who they were. This is merely double standard.
Actually I would have had a problem had Archer simply let them go, no matter who it was. They knocked the entire crew out, boarded the ship, attempted to steal equipment, and attempted to kidnap several female crewmembers, presumably to sell into the sex trade. Not exactly something you should just let the pirates go for after getting the upper hand on them.
Or the remaining tech in the borg remains (or tech in the Borg bodies themselves) kept them from getting too buried.
Uh, no, everything was dead, remember? And even if that was the case it would have been at the bottom of a giant hole.
And still not a real contradiction unless you're grasping for straws.
I'd say it's the other way around, with people grasping at straws to excuse it.
No point when you know the audience will hate everything you do no matter what, including if you just give into their inane demands.
Except that the people who did that weren't a part of the audience.
That they could have written episodes on par with "Balance of Terror", "Best of Both Worlds" or "Pale Moonlight" and they'd still be hated episodes.
No, if episodes were good, people would have watched, the same as any other series. There has been negativity around each new series since TNG, but TNG still remains the most popular of them, and IMO DS9 is the best of them. And with DS9 there were people claiming that since it was set on a station that the show would be boring and wouldn't go anywhere. They were wrong.
Not really, too much of what was stated in TOS no longer makes sense when you take real world advancements into consideration. A prequel is just a bad idea, period.
Not really. Granted I'm not a huge TOS fan due to the campy-ness, but a prequel series could have had a lot of potential. What spoiled it as that the producers and the studio suits tried to force it to be something else.
They would have hated it even without the twist. They hated that Orions being used in ENT at all (which makes the haters out to be massive hypocrites with endless double standards)
None of the people I've seen complain about that episode gave any such indication. When the Orions first showed up, it actually excited a lot of people because this was the first time since TOS that we got to see any, and it was the first time we got to see the men of their species.
They were, they made it clear that they hated ENT using TOS races and they hated the original species ENT created so they had no choice.
Most people I saw complaining complained about the lack of TOS aliens, and how continuing the old "alien of the week" style didn't really make all that much sense given the more limited nature of this show's premise. If there had been more focus on the "birth of the Federation" aspect of the show instead of doing more of the random episodic storytelling that VOY basically did, I have little doubt the show would have been better received. Even if I didn't care for the show's execution, I still saw the potential the show had.