Did we ever or not find out if there's a toilet on NCC-1701?
I doubt it. Fuller says it was mentioned on TOS so how could it be redacted/covered up?Unless it deals with a redacted bit of Starfleet/Federation history.
Of course. It's the whole reason that Khan "never forgets" Chekov's face in Wrath of Khan.
Heck, maybe the "event' is the conference on Babel itself?
No, they don't need to. But, what's the point of setting it in that time frame then?
We're still dealing with Russia (the heart of the old USSR) and the Roman Empire shaped a lot of our Western World to this day. But, these are human populations where, in some cases, just the ruling class changed. Very different than a belligerent alien species! And, we're only talking about 10 years!
We'll have to agree to disagree. And, as I've pointed out, this is not in the realm of fact. There's no correct or incorrect answer. It's a matter of personal preference. Some people care more about the larger context and having game changing possibilities at that level. Those people will tend to have more issues with a prequel. Others don't care as much about that larger context and they'll tend to have fewer issues with a prequel. There's no correct answer. It's just a preference.
All that being said, if it had to be a prequel, and I got to choose the time frame, I'd choose this exact time frame! So, there's definitely aspects to it that I'm really looking forward to. I like most everything I'm hearing from Fuller about the approach. So, I'm excited about this series and very much looking forward to it.
However, I'd be remiss to not notice that there are certain aspects of it being a prequel that impose restrictions that I care about. I get that you don't care about the same issues, but that's life. We just like different things. In the end, if they tell great stories, I'm sure I'll find the series to be enjoyable. I think we agree that is the most important aspect.
Mr Awe
Why couldn't there have been a short war with the Klingons in 2253ish? What canon evidence precludes this?And, here's the problem with a prequel. If it's set during the cold war, any plots that attempt to deal with the tensions and possibility of a hot war emerging won't work because we'll know that it can't.
I doubt it. Fuller says it was mentioned on TOS so how could it be redacted/covered up?
Except that didn't happen 10 years prior to Kirk's first 5 year mission. It happened during Kirk's command.
Good point!
But maybe the Coridian crisis had been brewing for a decade or so . ..?
What limit? Just make up a new race. It's not that hard. The Discovery meets the Newspecians and they don't get along. So they have an arc about the UFP and the Newspecians adversarial relationship, Maybe it last the whole series. Maybe towards the end they make nice and the Newspecians join the UFP. (to keep the folks who care about canon/continuiry happy)This highlights another drawback of it being a prequel. The fact that this is set in that time frame really limits the potential number of major hostile alien races. Sure, you can have one-off stories with the alien villain of the week. But, in terms of species that regularly affect the power dynamic in the region, you're very limited in this time frame. It pretty much has to be the Klingons. So, it makes sense they have cast these characters.
A continuation would not have this restriction. We saw that as the franchise moved forward in time they added new adversarial species to keep things fresh: Ferengi, Borg, Cardassians, Dominion, etc.
Mr Awe
I'm not sure why you keep assuming that the name 'vulcanian' automatically means it must be an expedition to Vulcan. It could be to anywhere for anything. As long as it in someway involves the Vulcans in large enough numbers or an important enough role to justify naming it after them.
Okay, but even then. How many were "recent" history. Only a dozen or so come to mind that were within the ten to twenty year time span. Others were decades in the past if not centuries in the past.
Why couldn't there have been a short war with the Klingons in 2253ish? What canon evidence precludes this?
The thing is, Kirk and his pal Timothy were on it, too. And yet in TOS, Kirk knows squat about Vulcans or Vulcan(ia).
Yeah, but, we already got tons of pills to take for prostate and bladder stuff. Did Khan pee on himself or something? I'm not sure I saw that.
Doesn't that prove that the Vulcanian Expedition wasn't on Vulcan?
Anyway, I'm betting the "event" has to do with Klingons.
But, for the record, the claim that new races can't be introduced because we 'should have' seen them before IS in the realm of fact, and it's completely false.
You're correct, they could introduce a major new alien species that disrupt the power dynamics in the region on an ongoing basis, but it won't ring true.
Mr Awe
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