A discussion in Voyager forum might be of interest here.
In the Hands of the Prophets was not brilliant. In their version of reality, such bigotry is merely a scheme of a hypocrite. The good religious stand up to the evil hypocrite, and peace is restored.
Some years ago, some of your cothinkers in Kanawha County WV, enraged by liberal textbooks, indulged themselves in some Christian testimony with bombs. Formally, evolution is in the state's curriculum. But it is not really taught. This is a shame, because religious bigots will gladly grab on to Social Darwinist perversions of evolutionary theory. The Christians of Kanawha county achieved their fundamental goals. Indeed, one of their primary speakers, Debra Whanger, was elected to the school board.
In other words, In the Hands of the Prophets was simpleminded fantasy. The bigots don't go away when the nice religious stand up to the evil hypocrites. The idea that the hypocrites are responsible for the bigotry is ridiculous. True believers are the bigots, not the frauds.
Frankly, I see no more reason to respect the religious feelings of Christians than I do Muslims. The fatuous belief that it's okay to believe nonsense leaves you disarmed in the face of religious bigot, whether they are Christians who want to invade every Muslim country on Earth, or Muslim who want to strike back at the Christians.
In the Hand of the Prophets is dishonest.
Navaros said:
The funny thing is that DS9 also handled the issue of evolutionism vs. creationism in the episode "In the Hands of the Prophets". But DS9 did it in a classy way that respected both sides of the issue. Jake Sisko was telling his dad that the evolutionist position was the correct one, and mocking the other side. Then his dad told him that they can't afford to think in a mocking, condenscending way like that. Because thinking like that is being the exactly the same as the "evil religious side", only from the other side of the fence. The Sisko had it right with those comments and that very brilliant scene. Yet Voyager has come along with this terrible "Distant Origin" soapbox propaganda episode, and attempted to undo that good work that the Sisko's message about the same issue had intended to convey. On this issue DS9 has it right, Voyager has it terribly wrong.
In the Hands of the Prophets was not brilliant. In their version of reality, such bigotry is merely a scheme of a hypocrite. The good religious stand up to the evil hypocrite, and peace is restored.
Some years ago, some of your cothinkers in Kanawha County WV, enraged by liberal textbooks, indulged themselves in some Christian testimony with bombs. Formally, evolution is in the state's curriculum. But it is not really taught. This is a shame, because religious bigots will gladly grab on to Social Darwinist perversions of evolutionary theory. The Christians of Kanawha county achieved their fundamental goals. Indeed, one of their primary speakers, Debra Whanger, was elected to the school board.
In other words, In the Hands of the Prophets was simpleminded fantasy. The bigots don't go away when the nice religious stand up to the evil hypocrites. The idea that the hypocrites are responsible for the bigotry is ridiculous. True believers are the bigots, not the frauds.
Frankly, I see no more reason to respect the religious feelings of Christians than I do Muslims. The fatuous belief that it's okay to believe nonsense leaves you disarmed in the face of religious bigot, whether they are Christians who want to invade every Muslim country on Earth, or Muslim who want to strike back at the Christians.
In the Hand of the Prophets is dishonest.