What if every instance of time travel that we've seen in Trek, going all the way back to the TOS episode "The Naked Time", has actually resulted in a different timeline, and generally in our heroes being IN that different timeline? No predestination paradoxes, just things seeming to work out as they were supposed to in the end, because the characters check and everything seems fine and they didn't know enough about very specific details in the past of the timeline they were in before to notice the change.
The Enterprise that they returned to at the end of COTEOF wasn't the same, they just didn't see the very minor butterflies. The Earth they received a distress signal from got wrecked and never got help in Star Trek IV, but Kirk and crew saved the future of a different branch that had them in the past taking whales and eating Italian when their original timeline didn't. Worf never really got "home", he just ended up in a universe with a similar enough quantum frequency to his own that it looked right and the hopping stopped. Sisko wasn't predestined to be Gabriel Bell, he just did a good enough job of it that *he* didn't see any changes when he got back. And Voyager and Enterprise both messed with timelines so much that it's a wonder if they believed they were still in the same timeline at all in the end.
Discovery isn't really Prime, but Prime would no longer have any real meaning if the above is correct - save maybe the universe of TOS up until "The Naked Time", and probably not even that one since the Guardian of Forever is a thing that existed. But Discovery is more Prime-adjacent than Kelvin-adjacent or MU-adjacent, so good 'nuff.
The Enterprise that they returned to at the end of COTEOF wasn't the same, they just didn't see the very minor butterflies. The Earth they received a distress signal from got wrecked and never got help in Star Trek IV, but Kirk and crew saved the future of a different branch that had them in the past taking whales and eating Italian when their original timeline didn't. Worf never really got "home", he just ended up in a universe with a similar enough quantum frequency to his own that it looked right and the hopping stopped. Sisko wasn't predestined to be Gabriel Bell, he just did a good enough job of it that *he* didn't see any changes when he got back. And Voyager and Enterprise both messed with timelines so much that it's a wonder if they believed they were still in the same timeline at all in the end.
Discovery isn't really Prime, but Prime would no longer have any real meaning if the above is correct - save maybe the universe of TOS up until "The Naked Time", and probably not even that one since the Guardian of Forever is a thing that existed. But Discovery is more Prime-adjacent than Kelvin-adjacent or MU-adjacent, so good 'nuff.
