"North Star" was meant as an homage to all the parallel-Earth episodes TOS did. But yeah, it did turn out pretty well, didn't it?
Not necessarily. Many Native American cultures' lifestyles changed enormously after European contact. The Plains Indians as we know them couldn't get started as a culture until after horses were imported from Eurasia and enabled them to exploit the plains as a viable environment. So they hadn't been living that way much longer than the European settlers had.
Everybody comes to Earth. In the Marvel Universe, the excuse is that our system is at some sort of nexus of hyperspace routes. Maybe there's something similar going on in the Trek universe. There do seem to be quite a few spatial anomalies and rifts hovering around this vicinity.
There's an effort to justify the abduction of the original Humans by saying that they were chosen due to being well adapted to living in these conditions. Nice try, but I'm not buying it. First of all, there are far, far more suitable Human cultures to kidnap if that's the motive. Why not take a tribe or two from the Sahara or the Australian outback? On that note, the native Americans would presumably be a better choice than the colonists, since they've lived in the relevant area for longer. They'd all be better desert-dwelling slaves, I'm sure.
Not necessarily. Many Native American cultures' lifestyles changed enormously after European contact. The Plains Indians as we know them couldn't get started as a culture until after horses were imported from Eurasia and enabled them to exploit the plains as a viable environment. So they hadn't been living that way much longer than the European settlers had.
And that's assuming you even made it to Earth, and why you'd go there I don't know.
Everybody comes to Earth. In the Marvel Universe, the excuse is that our system is at some sort of nexus of hyperspace routes. Maybe there's something similar going on in the Trek universe. There do seem to be quite a few spatial anomalies and rifts hovering around this vicinity.
That said, it's another good character piece (this string of episodes is overall very strong). Not only is it a good outing for Phlox but in a way it's also in fact a legitimate vehicle for T'Pol. Yes, she's not real, but the fact that Phlox's mind is conjuring her as the voice of reason, calming his emotional excesses and serving as an anchor (including using her for an accurate self-diagnosis of what he's experiencing) is telling. Since this all stems from their actual relationship, it's yet another example of something that retains its legitimacy and interest even though much of it is not in fact genuine on the face of it. The show's been doing this a lot lately (The Andorians as friends, humanizing Degra), and it's worked every time - the writers finally have a strong grip on what they're doing with season three, with nothing being pointless of wasted anymore. 