I know. It always astounds me as to how many people are just POSITIVE they know exactly what 'Roddenberry's vision of what Trek should be' actually is.
Look....I started watching Star Trek when your grandfather was in diapers!
While I (barely) remember TOS when it first came out, I "grew up" on the re-runs in the 70's. From the books of those times as well as the interviews (in print and on screen) with Gene (and his wife) it was EASY to get an idea what his vision for Trek was. Humanity had outgrown it's ugly past (war, disease, greed) and the Star Trek universe showed that there was hope for our future, one where we don't obliterate ourselves over petty issues. We evolved into great explorers, filled with insatiable curiousity, searching for new life and new civilizations, you know the whole bit. While still less than perfect, we had taken a giant leap in evolution, at least in the spiritual sense. That's my take on it.
I don't believe he would ever want to take us in the direction that DS9 went. A Trek series with war as it's overall theme isn't something that Roddenberry would ever have approved.
Don't take my word for it, though. Gene's wife, Majel pretty much said the exact same thing in interviews that I've seen and out of anyone alive today, she would be the one to say what "Gene's vision" actually was.
"Obliterate ourselves over petty issues"? So what you are saying is that at no time in the rest of the Trek shows was there ANY fighting or conflict? No one defending what what right, but just a bunch of pacifists? No 'bad guys' who needed to be defeated? No one at all, in the entire universe, who wasn't willing to buy into the TNG-esque PC 'program'? No one at all, in the entire Trek Universe, who didn't willingly drink the I-Want-To-Teach-The-World-To-Sing Kool-aid?
Not what I remember.
I remember ALOT of bad guys getting into conflicts...and even getting killed by Starfleet personnel in the other shows.
And yes - there WERE bad guys - plenty of them. Starting in TOS and going forward. The Romulans, the Klingons, the Cardassians, the Borg, the Ferengi - all of them were 'unenlightened' and often-times violent bad guys, long before DS9 aired it's first episode. Did you think the conflict with the Borg was a 'petty issue'? Did you think Wolf 359 was 'petty'? I mean, it didn't happen on DS9, but it was most certainly a huge conflict - a life or death conflict, in fact.
If you don't think Wolf 359 was petty, why was it that that was not 'petty', but the issues that were at stake in the Dominion War WERE 'petty'? After all, there were the SAME issues at stake in both cases - another race wanting to conquer the AQ and enslave the people, right? I'd love for you to list all the reasons why you think the Borg were a legitimate enemy to fight, and the Dominion were not.
And how, exactly, is it petty to want to fight back? To defend the AQ from being taken over by oppressive races?
Please explain to me how that is petty.
My guess? You simply don't like DS9 and are willing to overlook the exact same things in other shows that you claim to dislike in DS9 - a show, not at all incidentally, which you yourself admit freely that you didn't even watch. Or at least you admit you didn't watch the parts that you claim to hate most.
You stopped watching when the Dominion War started - you said that yourself. And yet you profess to hate the Dominion War and call it a 'petty' conflict.
I'm sorry...but I really don't take very seriously the complaints of someone who, by his own admission, didn't even WATCH the very thing he is complaining about.
As for Majel...if she was that positive that Gene would have hated DS9, then why the HELL did she participate in the show herself? And not once, but on a few separate occasions over more than one season?
Or did Roddenberry's so-called 'vision' mean so little to his
own widow, that she would sell it out for a few dollars made from guest spots on DS9?
I mean, I know every man has his price...but my, my, my, Majel's price must have been pretty damn low.
Could it be, perhaps that she herself knew that Roddenberry had long ago sold out his own vision (if he ever had one, aside of making a crapload of money), when he created TNG and infused it with some of the most absurd PC preaching ever slapped up on a screen, when TOS wasn't like that at all?
Oh...and by the way, you have no idea whatever how old I am and when I started watching Star Trek. And you know what they say about making assumptions, don't you?
