The show that gave us the first interracial kiss on TV while american cities were being torn apart by race riots...
So, the kiss in "Rejoined," with two women who remembered each other as opposite-sex, was a cop-out, but the kiss in "Plato's Stepchildren," where the white man and the black girl were being
mind-controlled by evil space aliens was somehow
not a cop-out?
I, too, am sick of the GLBTQ-bashing against
Trek. Yes, it's a trailblazing show, but this contingent seems to be expecting something of the show that simply isn't in
Star Trek's DNA.
Trek is progressive, but has not
ever deliberately sought to be a lightning rod of controversy. It's a family TV show, something everyone ages zero and up can gather 'round and watch on Wednesday night. It's
Doctor Who, not
Torchwood. The people with an agenda need to find another show to foist it on. </rant>
Ding, Ding! Somebody finally gets it. Trek is a family show, no matter what incarnation of it, first and foremost.
There is absolutely nothing for Trek to gain
still, to this day by portraying homosexual relationships and don't expect it ever, because it's not going to happen. Like or not, even though society has become far more tolerant of homosexuality, there is certainly no desire by the public to have it forced upon them when they are watching TV with their kids. The problem that the homosexual crowd can't get past with middle America is that generally speaking they don't want their children exposed to any kind of sexuality, never mind homosexuality. Now, I know I'm about to hear the dopey arguments about how Trek shows heterosexual relationships and intimate activities all of the time and of course there's a big difference: parents don't have to explain why Miles and Keiko are kissing each other.
Another thing homosexuals can't get past is the fact that they're not a minority in the traditional sense in that they're not defined by their race, gender, age or physical impairment. They're simply defined by who they're fucking and who they want to fuck. Whether you want to admit it or not that's the sum of it. Putting that distinguishing factor on the same level of race, age, gender or handicap is disingenuous and no matter how much the radical homosexual movement tries to make the American public buy that premise, they don't. Comparing the Kirk/Uhura kiss to the Jadzia semi-lesbian kiss is as equally disingenuous.
Americans simply don't want sexuality flaunted and most homosexuals understand that. We don't like overt PDA's from heterosexuals so the same with homosexuals can be that much more uncomfortable. My brother-in-law is gay and has lived with his partner for four years. I visit them with my wife and daughter and stay over at their condo on a regular basis (they live near Disney) and they have enough respect for us (and others in the family that they around) to not flaunt their sexuality. We know they're gay, we don't need to be reminded of it. They know I'm straight, they don't need to be reminded of it. So that being said, if the American public, like myself, in general has become pretty tolerant of homosexuality but really aren't overly comfortable with it being flaunted around us (again, we really don't like it from heterosexuals, either) why in the Hell would we want to see it during family programming on TV?
Furthermore, homosexuality is a biological abberation, being of a particular race isn't, so the Kirk/Uhura comparison doesn't hold up. It is the ultimate goal of every living creature whether it be amoeba, microbe, plant, fish, mammal, or whatever it may be, to continue the species. That is the only reason sexual desire exists in homosapiens. Now, before anyone goes ahead and says something stupid in response to that statement like, "What about men and women who don't want children but still want to have sex," that's what separates human beings from golden retrievers: we have sentience and free will and although in their minds they may not want children, their biology does want offspring whether they like it or not. The reason sex feels so good is because if it didn't human beings wouldn't "choose" to reproduce. That's the price of free will. Homosexuality upsets nature's apple cart in this regard and goes against the fundamental nature of our existence (and no, I'm not talking about metaphysics, I'm talking about biology). Now, I'm not suggesting that it's a choice or that it's not natural (you're attracted to who you're attracted to... you can't help that.), but it
is an abberation.
Your average viewer has a visceral response to sexuality and sex for a variety of reasons, some on religious and moral grounds and some based upon their feelings that these are intimate issues and should remain private, snd some just simply on the fact that they feel that it's their responsibilty to bring these issues up in their family and not TV's. Regardless of the reasons, to deny that they exist for the average family on a Wednesday night and to try to force an agenda down their throat will only cause you to lose viewers and TPTB have known this. Yes, Trek has mildly flirted with the subject of sexual orientation and the time they've attempted it they've done it in a sci-fi way to make it almost completely unidentifiable and when all came down to it in the end, the deeper message was nothing more than a message of tolerance and individuality and the discussion of sexual orientation was completetly lost (see: TNG:
The Outcast). The fact is that they've realized that they can't do a homosexual character or a homosexual storyline without alienating 95% of their audience.
So speaking of alienation, let the bashing and flaming begin.
As for the episode at hand, unless you've completely missed all of the prior seasons and the explanation of the Trill symbiotic realtionship, you'd know as I know that this episode has nothing to do with sexuality whatsoever. Your symbionts aren't heterosexual or homosexual... their omnisexual. A symbiont and host become one when joined, they are no longer separate individuals. Jadzia (whatever her last name was) ceased being that person when she joined with Dax and Dax ceased being Dax when it joined with Jadzia. Jadzia Dax is a completely new person having both of the memories and personalities of Jadzia and the other six hosts (Seriously, this is all explained pretty well in the eighth episode of the series,
Dax). This has nothing to do with sexuality, this has to do with being reunited with a long lost love and how circumstances beyond the former lovers control keep them apart. The male personality of the prior host Dax host was still in love with his wife, the female personality of the Kahn host and vice versa. This isn't very complicated. This has nothing to do with the Jadzia host, per se.
-Shawn
