While I hear what you're saying, do we really have to turn this into my race suffered more or worse than your race did?As an African American male, I thank you for this.It makes perfect sense. Sisko saw the program as inaccurate and felt that it diminished the struggles of people of that era. He's right. If you read TheGodBen's review of Voyager, you see that he had the same reaction to the depiction of Fair Haven. He's Irish, and long removed from that period, but took issue with the depiction (and rightly so).
Some people take history much more seriously than others. Sisko is one of those people. In fact that is a consistent character trait for him. He collects authentic african art. He built an authentic recreation of a Bajoran light sail ship etc.
This is dead on.![]()
As a Hispanic male of Mexican descent, I do oppose the view you praise.
We Mexicans in Texas were here before the American who brought slavery to us. Going further back in time, I hold no hate or contempt of Columbus, the first slave trader in the New World, or the Conquistadors that followed him. I pity them for their greed and disregard for human life.
The lynchings of my people rivaled those of blacks throughout the southwestern United States. And that happened after we became a part of the United States. Land that legally, by treaty, was to remain in the property of those who owned it before Texas became independent of Mexico was taken from them. Those who were able to keep their land lost it when Texas became a state, despite the treaties and guarantees made for the annexation of Texas.
My parents couldn't speak Spanish on school grounds, even outside of class or before or after school without receiving disciplinary action.
We too couldn't use the front door, we too we barred from many places except as janitors. There were signs that said "No dog or Mexicans allowed" on many establishments. Hispanics couldn't vote, my grandparents couldn't vote, and never did because they still feared the repercussions of exorcising their hard fought for right.
I do look back on those times not long removed from me, and do feel not hate but pity for those ignorant people who committed the atrocities.
The only time I do get mad is when people try to reinstate those policies, under different names, and try to make it sound like they are helping us or the country. Things like voter ID here in Texas or the blatant gerrymandering of districts. Arizona's batshit crazy governor and that states laws. The GOP candidates each trying to out do each other by proposing a bigger more dangerous wall along the US Mexico boarder. Those things made me make me mad because it does show the prejudice that is still here in the United States.
But once these things have passed, and they will, I or the children of my nieces on and nephews will see this all as a time of idiocy and pity these people doing these things.
I would gladly and happily go into a holodeck simulation that showed things as they should have been. I would know it's not historically correct, and I'd be okay with that. It's not a whitewash of history, but a playground. A man as smart as Sisko should have realized that.
Doesn't the Federation determine if you can join based upon if you live up to their standards? Aren't they prejudice toward those that don't?
Picard was prejudice toward Q.
He looked down on Q because Q didn't share human values and never once took the time to even understand the culture of Q.
Wasn't O'Brian prejudice again Cardassian's?
He referred to them by using a racial slur.
Didn't we see prejudice against Odo by the Federation?
There was prejudice against Ferengi
Kirk was prejudice toward Klingons.
So that fact that Sisko isn't exposed to prejudice in the Federation is a farce. Prejudice still exists in the 24th century.
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