It's feasible if the Yangs and the Kohms came from earth though isn't it? They must have been trapped in a time warp and landed on Omega IV in the stone age of our world perhaps!
JB
JB

It's feasible if the Yangs and the Kohms came from earth though isn't it? They must have been trapped in a time warp and landed on Omega IV in the stone age of our world perhaps!
JB![]()
I'm a lifelong original series fan, and this is absolutely my favorite episode of TOS. That is to say, I don't necessarily recognize it as the BEST original series episode, but it is my favorite. Screw the haters. They've always displayed a herd mentality in their hatred, never been able to cogently defend their hatred of this episode, anyway.
"Haters" is an easy way to trivialize other people's opinions. Cogent? Most people who decry this episode are very clear that it's the stars & stripes "E pleb nista" ending which is at fault. That's pretty to the point. If a story fails to satisfy in its climactic moment, it generally spoils the whole thing. If the ending were less American flag waving (a parallel rather than literally the US Constitution) I bet this episode would be much better regarded in general.
Frankly, it's not your place to tell people where they can post what.If you want to criticize the stars and stripes and what you think it represents there are plenty of other message boards to do that on.
Same thing here! I suppose the fact I didn't touch to Physics since High School and studied in History and now Political Science has an impact. I care more about "human" sense than "physical" sense. On the other hand, the story isn't about the "physical" thing, but the human one.Actually, people like Bill J and some others make me want to like this one, there's so much good in it, it's kind of like raining on my own parade to not like it because I can't quite accept the Absolutely Identical flag and Constitution that breaks it for me. It's just a matter of acceptance. Warp drive, transporters, artifical gravity are all things we just accept, but I have a hard time with identical documents.Sounds silly.
Criticizing the flag waving because is often because it feels like a lame and uncreative twist, not because people have problems with the US or its flag or what any of it represents
I can't imagine what international Star Trek fans think when they see Kirk practically worshiping the US flag and the preamble to the Constitution
and it's all the more wince-worthy given that Mr. Shatner is Canadian.
We, as Star Trek fans, can make all kinds of cool explanations, I just wish the show itself did.
I never really understood criticizing it on the presence of the Constitution or the Flag beyond the likelyhood of such a thing happening. But it is a sci-fi program, so I tend to give it some slack based on that criteria.
But people who criticize it because it somehow shows favoritism towards American values I think are way off base. It is no different than criticizing a British program for showing favoritism towards British way of life or a Japanese program that does the same thing. Star Trek was made primarily for American audiences, so people may as well let that criticism of it go.
And yet there's nothing in the episode that specifically disproves it being a lost colony thrown through a time warp.Unfortunately it wasn't revealed as an earth colony lost in time so we just have to assume it was a paralell world with a similar history to ours!
And yet there's nothing in the episode that specifically disproves it being a lost colony thrown through a time warp.Unfortunately it wasn't revealed as an earth colony lost in time so we just have to assume it was a paralell world with a similar history to ours!
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