You're suggesting all time travel episodes in "Star Trek" are part of a predestination paradox. But you're overlooking ALL of the episodes in which new, alternate timelines were created, with a history completely DIFFERENT from the original timeline.All of which were part of what was supposed to happen, all along. You can't prove they weren't, anyway.
Relax guys, they'll resolve this mess with an inevitable Crisis on Infinite Enterprises crossover.
Wouldn't have it any other way.Dibs on the novelization!
The notion that Nero and Leonard Nimoy's Spock didn't come from the timeline comprising Enterprise through to Nemesis is pure bullshit.
That's my point -- "Enterprise" through to "Nemesis" was made up of multiple alternate timelines. We saw Admiral Janeway on Earth in "Nemesis," so clearly that movie was already set in the alternate timeline created in "Endgame." So, if we assume that Nero and Spock came from the same timeline depicted in "Nemesis" (let's call that the "Prime" timeline), then we know for a fact that this isn't the "original" timeline, where the Voyager spent decades in the Delta Quadrant (the Janeway of the original timeline couldn't possibly be on Earth during the events of "Nemesis").The notion that Nero and Leonard Nimoy's Spock didn't come from the timeline comprising Enterprise through to Nemesis is pure bullshit.
Many here see these Star Trek time periods almost like historical period dramas.
So establishing the setting of Discovery needs to get the period interiors, costumes, right.
The biggest issue is firmly setting things 10 years before. The Cage, and The Menagerie are the closest canon to that period, and it doesn't seem to have played any part in the design inspiration.
And Endgame. And except when they were expressly trying to alter the timeline for their own needs, as in Star Trek IV and Generations.The only time that didn't happen was in ST'09.
Time Squared, Cause and Effect, Timescape, The Visitor, Children of Time, Timeless, all deal with scenarios in which the timeline is changed as a result of prior knowledge of events and the change is not reversed. Usually our heroes want that change to happen. In the unaltered 'prime timeline' the Enterprise D never made it to the end of its second season, and Sisko died in an accident on the Defiant....and probably more. I forget
No. VOY's "Future's End has t he MAJOR issue of effectively stating showing the Eugenics Wars (referenced in TOS - "Space Seed" and again in Star Trek II: TWoK; and even in Enterprise - and the Wars were worldwide and lasted from 1992-1996) NEVER OCCURRED - but sorry, they were a major part of the Star Trek timeline. They wern't a group of 'small wars' either:Or was part of that history from the get-go. (Indeed, in that scene where Janeway is sneaking around Starling's office, she wonders if the Federation's entire technological base might be derived from Starling's advancements.) Again, you can't prove this wasn't the case.Then there was the "Voyager" episode "Future's End," in which Henry Starling found future technology from a crashed timeship, altering much of the late 20th century's history.
SPOCK: Your Earth was on the verge of a dark ages. Whole populations were being bombed out of existence. A group of criminals could have been dealt with far more efficiently than wasting one of their most advanced spaceships.
KIRK: This Khan is not what I expected of a twentieth century man.
SPOCK: I note he's making considerable use of our technical library.
KIRK: Common courtesy, Mister Spock. He'll spend the rest of his days in our time. It's only decent to help him catch up. Would you estimate him to be a product of selective breeding?
SPOCK: There is that possibility, Captain. His age would be correct. In 1993, a group of these young supermen did seize power simultaneously in over forty nations.
KIRK: Well, they were hardly supermen. They were aggressive, arrogant. They began to battle among themselves.
SPOCK: Because the scientists overlooked one fact. Superior ability breeds superior ambition.
KIRK: Interesting, if true. They created a group of Alexanders, Napoleons.
SPOCK: I have collected some names and made some counts. By my estimate, there were some eighty or ninety of these young supermen unaccounted for when they were finally defeated.
KIRK: That fact isn't in the history texts.
SPOCK: Would you reveal to war-weary populations that some eighty Napoleons might still be alive?
Rain Robinson had a model of the Botany Bay with booster rockets in her office:No. VOY's "Future's End has the MAJOR issue of effectively stating showing the Eugenics Wars (referenced in TOS - "Space Seed" and again in Star Trek II: TWoK; and even in Enterprise - and the Wars were worldwide and lasted from 1992-1996) NEVER OCCURRED - but sorry, they were a major part of the Star Trek timeline. They wern't a group of 'small wars' either:
From TOS - "Space Seed" (showing how major the Eugenics Wars were in the Prime Star Trek Timeline:
SPOCK: Your Earth was on the verge of a dark ages. Whole populations were being bombed out of existence. A group of criminals could have been dealt with far more efficiently than wasting one of their most advanced spaceships.
SPOCK: Would you reveal to war-weary populations that some eighty Napoleons might still be alive?
So, yeah - the world as depicted in VOY's "Future's End" SHOULDN'T EXIST AS SHOWN had the events in "Future's End" been part of the Prime Star Trek Timeline discussed in TOS, STII:TWoK or ENT. (Of course maybe that just means Star Trek: Voyager may just be in it's own 'pocket timeline' and not a part of the Star Trek Prime timeline.![]()
Or, if you are so inclined, you can go the route offered up by Greg Cox's Eugenics Wars books which depicted them as a series of secret wars that the majority of the people of Earth were unaware of the full extent of, or that certain natural and manmade disasters were actually salvos in that war. Certain populations could experience localized "dark ages" as a result of these disasters while bigger countries were able to largely maintain stability.
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