Do so. This thread will go on without you.
The reason is literally in the pilot episode. It's one of the first things Bashir ever actually says on screen. Having him be genetically engineered doesn't alter that one bit and it's never even implied that that was at all a factor in him going to DS9.
Sorry, opinions aside, you're just dead wrong about that.
And I consider you the same. Augment Bashir for the win.
No hard feelings.
Do so. This thread will go on without you.
I don't care if you disagree with my opinion. It's all good.
But saying that Bashir's genetic engineering "explains" his desire to be on DS9 was never true, even retroactively.
I mean it did fit with his Season 1 characterization.Yes, its a better explanation than wanting to practice "frontier" medicine because he's racist against Bajorans and thinks they're the butt end of space (and remember they don't know about the wormhole yet).
Yes, its a better explanation than wanting to practice "frontier" medicine because he's racist against Bajorans and thinks they're the butt end of space (and remember they don't know about the wormhole yet).
He definitely has a kind of patronizing, "colonialist" attitude about the Bajorans, but he's supposed to be shallow and brash and looking for "adventure." Those negatively qualities when we first meet him are literally the point of the character. He starts off as a douche and he grows over the course of the series.
Your imaginary retcon is not a "better" idea at all, it's just another way that the genetic engineering reveal guts the character. Fortunately, that one is at least in your head.
Basically Bashir was a shallow uninterestijng mediocore character who couldn't compete with any of the other characters' epic backstories:
* Kira's resistance fighter days
* Odo as one of the Founders
* Sisko as Jesus
* Quark's weird relationship with the Nangus(es)
All of the characters got developed and better storylines that made them more awesome and gave them hefty arcs. In Bashir's case, it was that he became a spy and that he was Augmented. The ethics of genetically "fixing" a child are inherently interesting by themselves let alone the Federation's reaction to it as a post-abelism society. I grew up with epilepsy and other conditions so it's very interesting to me.
I'm also a huge Bond fan.
So I have yet to hear a single one of your justifications for "why" it was bad and you hate it. You have yet to give one other than you seemingly think being an ordinary human with nothing interesting about him is inherently superior. I'd love to hear your reasons.
Nothing of which is about Jadzia, who was absolutely blank slate as far as her backstory goes...and really, Klingons were over-done at the time, so I wouldn't call that a plus.Eh, Dax is always having some epic Curzon moment due to being a Trill.
* Serial killer past life
* Klingon Blood Oath
* First Scifi lesbian on television backstory
Didn’t do much?
O’Brien spent time in engineering,security and at the helm before settling in as transporter chief.
Granted though,standing in transporter room one all day must’ve gotten real old real quick.![]()
Eh, Dax is always having some epic Curzon moment due to being a Trill.
* Serial killer past life
* Klingon Blood Oath
* First Scifi lesbian on television backstory.
Nothing of which is about Jadzia, who was absolutely blank slate as far as her backstory goes...and really, Klingons were over-done at the time, so I wouldn't call that a plus.
And the Serial Killer past life was just as much a later retcon as Bashir being augmented.
PFFFFFFFFFFT!
A kiss between to perfectly feminine, conventionally beautiful young, heterosexual women who " don't worry, male audience, they aren't really lesbian because of some alien scifi reason"
That wasn't brave or ground breaking or anything, and I wager it happened chiefly for the titillation of their target audience.
For the record, the second episode with a cloaked ship (or, more precisely, a ship capable of cloaking that in any case appears out of nowhere) is "The Deadly Years." The first is "Balance of Terror," of course. "The Enterprise Incident" is the third.I've named the episode already - The Enterprise Incident. You chose to handwave it away, so either go watch it yourself or keep up your headcanon. I'm done caring.
The writers thought they were being "brave", but went about it in the safest, blandest, most mealy-mouthed way possible. It was barely a step up after the dreadful "The Outcast."
By 20's standards, it wasn't all that brave. When we have a married same-sex couple in the cast of "Discovery", a mere kiss is nothing. Things were different in the '80's and '90's, especially with the adolescent and young male demographic Trek was targeting.
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