And now we're back to the point I was making in the first place.But not the women?![]()

And now we're back to the point I was making in the first place.But not the women?![]()
Janeway knew how to use one. Pity the show forgot about that after the first episode.But not the women?![]()
Eh, she beat up a Borg Drone with a Bat'leth pretty good in Unimatrix Zero.Janeway knew how to use one. Pity the show forgot about that after the first episode.
And now we're back to the point I was making in the first place.![]()
Eh, she beat up a Borg Drone with a Bat'leth pretty good in Unimatrix Zero.
Nyotarules said:ITA the privilege portrayed in the Star Trek universe is not racial its speciest. The UFP and especially Starfleet is humancentric through and through.
That was the Klingon's assessment of the status quo in the late 23rd century anyway.....
If we follow this line of thinking it'll soon be the case that the Prime Directive is nothing but a mechanism of repression explicitly created by the elite classes to maintain power
Picard did everything he could reasonably do, and transported a hell of a lot of them already. The federation betrayed him and itself not the other way around. It doesnt make any sense to put everything on Picard to do more, more, more.
The federation and romulans screw up the rescue and he gets blamed
I didn't feel there was anything to that scene that said anything other than he was on the planet to visit some people he had become close to and was looking forward to seeing.Sci said:The flashback scenes where he literally shows up in a white suit and panama hat?Makarov said:I dont remember him soaking up admiration in the show or in the prequel novel either...
zenophite said:Sci said:How does he not? If Picard is gonna claim that the Federation as a society has a moral obligation to help the Romulans, surely that same obligation extends to him as an individual whether or not the government has agreed to it.
And what are the practical limits of that obligation? Is one expected to forgo their own welfare for such an ideal?
Forgive me but that seems to be an overly simplistic way to look at the issues raised here...just like anytime something nuanced and complex is boiled down to a "you're either with us or against us" sort of choice.
Few people will forgo their own welfare to benefit a complete stranger
- and in my opinion rightly so.
Sci said:zenophite said:Sci said:Marakov said:Starfleet is not meant to be sexist in TNG, the whole idea is absurd. He was following orders from female admirals all the time and there's female captains just as important as him.
And yet, women characters are constantly depicted in sexualized, objectified manners (Troi's costumes especially), and the two main female characters are depicted in traditionally female-gendered caregiver roles. Troi is often depicted as uncertain and questionably competent in command scenarios. Women characters like Troi and Luxana are depicted in ways that fulfill stereotypes of women (loving chocolate, being overbearing and controlling of children, being hedonistic). Ambitious or assertive women characters like Shelby or Nechayev are depicted in harsh, critical terms. Women characters like the title character of "The Perfect Mate" are literally depicted as beings that exist to fulfill men's desires, and it's depicted as a tragedy that Picard cannot possess her instead of it being a tragedy that she's not given agency over her own life. When Lal is created, she is told that she "must" assume a gender role, and then, after she assumes a female gender role and kisses Riker, Data asks Riker what his "intentions" are as though he has some sort of ownership of his daughter in a patriarchal society. When Leah Brahams sees that Geordi has cyberstalked her and created a holographic re-creation of her, she is depicted as being unreasonable and mean-spirited for reacting with anger to his creepy, possessive, boundary-crossing, and stalking behavior.
Sorry, but it's perfectly fair to complain that TNG is sexist even if the characters imagine in-universe that their society is egalitarian.
The problem with this sort of analysis is that it makes the assumption that these women were not behaving in accordance to their own volition and agency
They weren't, because they are not real people. They're fictional characters whose "decisions" were actually the choices of the men who wrote and produced the show.
Then aren't you essentially advocating that it doesn't really matter how they are portrayed because they are nothing but a male fantasy and therefore inconsequential?
I am very tired of people who respond to metatextual analysis of a work of art as perpetuating stereotypes or marginalized depictions by responding that, in-universe, the characters wanted to do those things, as though those characters were real people with agency. You can't excuse a work of fiction for depicting characters in an objectionable way by pretending those characters were real people who made real choices.
The basic conceit when we watch these shows is that somehow they are being portrayed as "real people" - a core elelment of getting absorbed into a story.
I don't think there is any excuse to be made because I simply don't see what was so objectionable about the characters
Why would anyone interpret having a profession in 'caregiving' as something to be ashamed of for example?
What I notice is this undercurrent of bias where any woman who does in fact willingly hold traditional roles and so forth simply must be characterized as either self-deluded at best or at worst under in thrall of some abusive male. Isn't making those assumptions the exercise of a sort of intellectual privilege?
Sarcasm? Really?
zenophite said:Sci said:zenophite said:As for Shelby and Necheyev I think it's all a matter of perspective...I mean personally I've encountered plenty of 'Assertive Ambitious' people in my life, both men and women, and most of them all seemed to be somewhere on the asshole spectrum regardless of their sex or gender....
Missing. The. Point.
Clever punctuation doesn't really do much to support an argument.
I would say the point is that those characters were written by men within a social and historical context. In some cases they were written as aliens to service a particular story. You find their characterization as objectionable for your own reasons
and I do not find them objectionable for my own reasons.
Also, Data aspires to be human, and has been created male, so he would tend towards a traditionalist, patriarchal, attitude to his child.
I would expect in a 24th century semi military organisation to teach all senior staff hand to hand combat training, whether you call it Kirk fu or something else, they should be as competent as Marvel's Black Widow.
Thankfully DISC corrected that helpless female who cannot fight nonsense
This cannot be overstated.No one is blaming Jean-Luc for the Federation's sins. But he chose the sin of omission, the sin of passivity once state action was rejected. He deserves to be called out for that. And he deserves to be called out for thinking he could just come back to Vashti and everyone would be happy to see him. There is a lot of sheer fucking hubris there.
Well, as people like to note, Picard has lots of connections due to his various missions. So, why not appeal to the Klingons, call in a favor with the Vulcans or help Spock?Exactly what resources does Picard have when he is isn't in Starfleet to mount some kind of personal rescue. One of the issues of being in a society without money is you got nothing to pay people with in terms of mounting any kind of individual rescue operation. Plus even if you did, do you think Starfleet would sit back and allow civilians to get involved in a political matter of that kind of scale. Picard's makeshift fleet would be intercepted by Starfleet vessels and be told to turn back or be arrested.
Jason
Exactly what resources does Picard have when he is isn't in Starfleet to mount some kind of personal rescue.
One of the issues of being in a society without money is you got nothing to pay people with in terms of mounting any kind of individual rescue operation.
Plus even if you did, do you think Starfleet would sit back and allow civilians to get involved in a political matter of that kind of scale. Picard's makeshift fleet would be intercepted by Starfleet vessels and be told to turn back or be arrested.
I'm not so sure the Klingons would want to help Romulans.
Worf is also likely back in Starfleet so he doesn't even have Gowron around anymore who he has worked with in the past.
Plus the same issue of him being a civilian come up. Those connections were created while he was a Starfleet officer. Without the uniform any dealings with other governments would be tricky because if they help Picard then that means they might be betraying a alley or business partner in the Federation.
Again, do something with this ability that you have. Going home is not the answer.
To start with, Jean-Luc is famous. He's the face of Starfleet! He saved Earth from Shinzon in 2379, he exposed the forced relocation of the Ba'ku in 2375, he saved the entire Federation from the Borg in 2373. He's so famous that when the Mars Attack happened, the Federation News Network was carrying his personal reaction to it. He's huge.
That means, he has political and social capital. One of the most basic things he could do is, arrange a press conference or exclusive interview -- go on the Federation News Service or whatever, denounce the decision to abandon the Romulans, and call on the owners of private ships throughout the Federation to join in a new rescue armada.
The canon has always been contradictory on this, but PIC makes it pretty clear that Jean-Luc is paying Rios for use of La Sirena. And we know from DS9's "Dr. Bashir, I Presume?" and "Little Green Men" that there's an industry of ships that provide interstellar transportation to paying customers. So clearly there is capital out there to compensate shipowners. Assuming, of course, that those ship owners even want to be compensated.
Why? Free societies aren't supposed to prevent that sort of thing, and there's no indication from PIC that the Federation's decision to abandon the rescue effort was accompanied by a ban on private travel to Romulan space if the Romulans were to grant access.
And even if that were the case -- that's not an argument not to do it. Civil disobedience is a thing.
Maybe but your still hoping people will go against the government which can easily be seen as treason.
Your also not just leading a march down some street but your putting civilians at risk by taking them into Romulan space and if they get killed then that is also something you have to consider as well.
Now, here is my thing. I completely understand that Picard would feel that way. I have no issue with how the show presented in the show. But, Picard is not right. He ignored the Romulans and hoped others would do it. Now, I am a huge champion of individual choices but there is an impact to others-consequences. And Picard certainly can be held responsible for inaction.I've kind of wondered if Picard was thinking Starfleet would come to him at some point and ask for help. People would be upset by the news and be won over by his resignation. If people felt Picard was forced out for taking a moral stand then they might get upset at the Federation and demand he be brought back and listened to. At some point that didn't happen. Time moved on and the rescue effort didn't happen at which point Picard went into bitter mode at his failure and self isolated for many years.
Jason
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