Well some fans take a tv show a little too seriously. It's not a religion, a phiosophy or a blue print of the future. It's entertainment. Sure it can ask questions, enlighten and inform, but its still a tv show. And the people who watch are human beings who laugh and make jokes at tragedies both fictional and real. We can also separate the two. We can laugh at the constant redshirt deaths on a tv show and cry at the deaths of innocents in the real word. This doesn't make inhuman, inconsistent or unworthy.]
Yeah, again, I wasn't talking about in-universe.
That's fine if you don't see a problem with it. I do, and I find it contradicts all the 'we are the world' aspect of Star Trek that some fans try to put on the series when death is made light of - again 'out of universe.'
As aforementioned, if you don't find a problem with it, that's on you. You're free to have that opinion.![]()
To further add too, whatever power we may think we have on this board (LOL), I'd like to point out that none of us have served on a warp-capable starship, none of us have enlisted in Starfleet, none of us wear red shirts only to be turned into a cube of powder and disintegrated. In essence, whatever we do here on these boards really has no impact on the source material of the past -- just because we laugh doesn't mean Picard laughs (especially if we're laughing 20 years after Patrick Stewart filmed his scenes).
I'm sorry, Joel_Kirk, but you might want to take a step back from the franchise there. I'm betting you grew up with Trek like the rest of us, but being able to separate reality from fiction is a pretty important thing to do here.