(Finally trying to get caught up here, before I fall hopelessly behind. I know it's long AF, but please bear with me, all.)
A reboot by a thousand retcons!
...the
right kind of "reboot" for
Trek, in my book!
No need

you know your onions when it comes to TOS and I like your interpretations - I should get better acquainted with TOS - a rewatch is in order I think!
Why, thank you very much! I would highly recommend it. (I prefer production order over airdate order and the original versions over the "remastered" ones, but YMMV, and I think it's the remastered ones that are up for streaming, without checking just now. I stick with my DVDs mainly.) It's still a great show in spite of its unevenness in places—a feature (or rather bug) pretty much ubiquitous among
Trek series—and some
very dated elements (also not unique to TOS). I re-watched it in its entirety for the first time in a number of years in between the first and second halves of DSC's first season, and in stark contrast to what others have alleged here, I certainly did
not experience glaring discontinuities. I actually think they complement and inform each other well. One simply has to keep in mind (as if it were possible to forget!) that TOS was made more than half a century ago, with production values of that time, and with the intent of being seen on consumer equipment of the day, and fill in what's consequently "missing" with one's imagination.
It would have seemed more logical for Sarek to encourage Spock to join starfleet - until you know what happened in “Lethe” of course...
Yep, that's it exactly. To the top of the class you go, my padawan.
Which is an odd trait of Vulcans - prejudice is illogical (doesn’t Saavik make this point?)
I don't recall Saavik ever saying that. I
do recall her complaining to Spock that Kirk was "so human" though.
Whether it's true or not depends, as do so many things, on one's point of view. In the interest of preventing this post from becoming even more overly lengthy than it already is—and at the same time spare myself the effort of trying to paraphrase it all over again (some of it I already did, earlier)—I'll refer you
this post that I wrote for a thread about the "logic extremists" back when "Lethe" (DSC) was first released...
TALLERA: Very well. To answer your question, for several years, there has been a small, but growing movement of extreme isolationists on Vulcan... a group that believes contact with alien races has "polluted" our culture... and is destroying Vulcan purity. This group advocates the total isolation of Vulcan from the rest of the galaxy and the eradication of all alien influences from our planet.
PICARD: It sounds like a very... illogical philosophy.
TALLERA: Agreed. But extremists often have a logic all their own.
Like their violent impulses, xenophobic sentiments have always been present among Vulcans. Over the centuries they have risen and fallen in their prevalence and influence on the culture; at times they have ascended into common currency and executive authority, yeilding in the 22nd century militarism and intense micro-management of neighboring "protectorate" worlds' affairs, then secretive isolationism in the 23rd, while at others they have been reduced to the acts of fringe extremists, but nonetheless they always waits to crop up again, as at this moment in the 24th. I don't find that dynamic at all unrealistic.
Like
@Greg Cox said above, interaction with other species (particularly openly emotional ones like humans) challenges Vulcans' views of themselves and confronts them with uncomfortable realizations about the limits of their logic. It's a natural reflex to want to avoid that unpleasant self-examination, a defense mechanism. It's that basic fear of "the other" that blindly focuses on how
different they are from you in order to avoid the deeper insecurities that arise out of a nagging consciousness of how
alike you actually are. Is it not logical, if something or someone is perceived as being the source of discomfort, to seek to "eliminate the destructive element," either by removing it or removing oneself
from it?
Sarek goes very much against this grain, both personally and professionally. This is a distinctive element of his character that is now being built upon further in DSC. Spock was always dead
wrong in his deep-seated insecurity that Sarek felt
disappointment at finding him "so human" rather than the love, pride, admiration, perhaps even envy for his son that were later revealed to Picard. That much is no new revelation here. Sarek thinks it's perfectly logical and agreeable to embrace humans, on
all levels. Just look at his choice of wives, and his devotion to Michael. It's no coincidence that she, Spock, and Sybok are all
his children. None of them are typical Vulcans; perhaps what some of us, like some of them, need to realize is that this is may be more
because of their father's influence than
despite it.
Suffice it to say, in all things, it must
always be borne in mind that the very reason Vulcans are so obsessed with logic as a cultural philosophy in the first place is because they
aren't naturally logical. Quite the opposite. It's all too easy sometimes for them to blurr the line between
controlling their innate irrationality and
denying it—and denial actually
defeats control. This is one of the central lessons Sarek sought to impart to Spock as a child; see "Yesteryear" (TAS), and again ST'09, which largely coincides with its depiction on this particular point...
SAREK: Emotions run deep within our race. In many ways, more deeply than in humans. Logic offers a serenity humans seldom experience. The control of feelings, so that they do not control you.
I've collated more quotes on this subject from all series
here and
here. Recall also what Spock tells Valeris (who was in fact originally supposed to be Saavik, and who too believed her own prejudices to be perfectly logical) in TUC:
"Logic is the beginning of wisdom...not the end." It took Spock a long time and multiple lives to understand this, and his troubled relationship with both his father and other Vulcans in his formative years was a hindrance to this end, causing him to overcompensate. That's a thread which runs through "Journey To Babel" (TOS) as well:
SPOCK: Sarek understands my reason.
AMANDA: Well, I don't. It's not human. That's not a dirty word. You're human, too. Let that part of you come through. Your father's dying.
SPOCK: Mother, how can you have lived on Vulcan so long, married a Vulcan, raised a son on Vulcan, without understanding what it means to be a Vulcan?
AMANDA: Well, if this is what it means, I don't want to know.
SPOCK: It means to adopt a philosophy, a way of life, which is logical and beneficial. We cannot disregard that philosophy merely for personal gain, no matter how important that gain might be.
AMANDA: Nothing is as important as your father's life.
SPOCK: Can you imagine what my father would say if I were to agree, if I were to give up command of this vessel, jeopardize hundreds of lives, risk interplanetary war, all for the life of one person?
AMANDA: When you were five years old and came home stiff-lipped, anguished, because the other boys tormented you, saying that you weren't really Vulcan, I watched you, knowing that inside the human part of you was crying, and I cried, too. There must be some part of me in you, some part that I still can reach. If being Vulcan is more important to you, then you'll stand there, speaking rules and regulations from Starfleet and Vulcan philosophy, and let your father die...and I'll hate you for the rest of my life.
SPOCK: Mother
AMANDA: Oh, go to him. Now. Please.
SPOCK: I cannot.
There is certainly an
ostensibly "logical and beneficial" rationale to Spock's stubbornness there, but as McCoy pointed out, he could just as easily have turned command over to Scotty, and we ultimately saw that Kirk himself would have fully supported such action. Spock's own
professed rationality was clouded by his denial of his deeper emotional conflicts...much as Michael's was in "The Vulcan Hello" (DSC).
Now that point has me interested in seeing what happened with Sybok. I didn’t really care about him up to now (I treat Star Trek V as an extended dream sequence) but in the context of this point, it’d be very interesting to see how Sarek drove Sybok away - a point the latter may well have yelled at his father...
I agree that it could be very interesting indeed to explore Sybok's background and his relationship to both Sarek and Spock further, although it's probably doubtful that they will. Speculating on the matter, any number of very different tacts could be taken, as it's all left very open by the film. Perhaps Sarek's failure there was that his attempts to impart to Sybok similar lessons were taken
too much to heart, leading Sybok to misguidedly reject logic altogether. Or perhaps it was more the opposite, and it was seeing his "exceptionally gifted" eldest son rejected and "banished" by his own culture for questioning it that led Sarek to re-evaluate his own support of their dogmatic attitudes in the first place. Or something somewhere in between.
We don't know the nature of Sarek's relations with Sybok's mother, referred to only as "a Vulcan princess," nor whether they predated or postdated his meeting of Amanda. Was his liaison with either of them perhaps an affair whilst married to the other, or a triangle of some other sort? Entirely unknown. A
deleted scene suggests that Spock was a child when Sybok was exiled, and that he initially wished to join him, but ultimately all that's established in the film as released is that Sybok at one time knew Spock as an "outcast boy." For all we know, he was
already an exile from polite society before Spock was even born, and only ever met him without Sarek's knowledge during one of Spock's frequent secretive excursions as described in "Unification" (TNG):
SAREK: I never knew what Spock was doing. When he was a boy, he would disappear for days into the mountains. I would ask him where he had gone, what he had done. He refused to tell me. I insisted that he tell me. He would not. I forbade him to go. He ignored me. I punished him. He endured it, silently, but always he returned to the mountains. One might as well ask the river not to run. But secretly I admired him, that proud core of him that would not yield.
It's a very open field, and potentially quite a fertile one, IMO. And as for how Michael might fit in with that part of the picture, if at all, the possibilities are equally open. She was born in 2226 per her personnel file as examined by Voq in "The Butcher's Knife Cares Not For The Lamb's Cry" (DSC), but I don't recall it being established exactly how old she was when she was orphaned, nor precisely how long after that she became Sarek's ward, although we do know per "Lethe" (DSC) that Amanda took her to a book exchange on the seventh moon of Eridani D for her tenth birthday, which would have been in 2236. Spock was born in 2230 per
Star Trek Beyond, when she would have been around four. (It's possible I'm overlooking some other references in the first season that might clarify...I'll have to pay particular attention to that when next re-watching, and going forward.)
I actually think
The Final Frontier gets a bad rap from too many. Sure, it has issues, but for the most part it really serves the Kirk/Spock/McCoy triumvirate well, and overall somehow manages to recapture the "feel" of the original show better than any of the other films for me,
including the goofiness (and, again, the unevenness). It's not the best, nor my favorite, but it's a worthy entry in the set, with some truly great moments.
Wow - imagine the emotional impact of Michael (inadvertently) causing Sarek’s predisposition to Bandaii syndrome - he could have a doctor inform him of this at some point. Even Sarek may struggle to contain his emotions at that news... and it would give more depth to the events we see in TNG
Personally, I would rather they didn't take it quite
that far, as it might come off a little
too pat and on-the-nose. I tend toward preferring it as something we can
wonder about implicitly without it necessarily having to be so explicit. But that's me.
This is the only bugbear I have with all this - the “classified”, record expunged thing seemed like a cop out to me (I’m too harsh on DSC!). I’d have preferred they didn’t go near those topics at all, but ENT introduced cloaks etc so the door was opened long before DSC turned up
I think her record being expunged was an eminently logical way of handling it, and
thought so from the very beginning of the show, before it ever came to pass. I quite
enjoy how it takes Spock's line in "The Tholian Web" (TOS) and turns it into a deft deflection that falls perfectly in line with his numerous other "embracings of technicality" as depicted both before and after, a clever way of preserving both the original text
and his character as established, while still allowing DSC to tell the story it wanted to tell. I totally support
that sort of alteration.
I can understand feeling the classification of the MU being a cop-out, but really it's quite believable that Kirk and his crew (except perhaps pokerfaced Spock?) wouldn't be privy to everything...more believable than if they were, actually. I doubt the captain of
any present or past naval vessel knows the
full breadth of secrets, great or small, that his or her government is sitting on...not even close to it, I'd guess. So why should we think a future one would?
-
MMoM