I know what it means. Enola Gay was named after Paul Tibbet's mom, whom I am sure was a very nice lady. But the most famous objects to bear the names were engaged in activities usually categorized as "unpleasant."Yamato, though, is also the poetic name for Japan, like Columbia for the United States, but more widely used.
But like I said, I find the rehabilitative effect of a few centuries interesting. As you alluded to, few today mind that Coumbia OV-102 or the fictional NX-02 are named after a rock-stupid atrocity-monger, who would measure the distance to Alpha Centauri in light-years but use Pluto to measure the year, and when and if he got there be unable to be convinced that it wasn't India. The name sounds pretty, and the OV-102 is still sorta pretty cool, in a smaller-than-life sort of way.
So, with that in mind, where the heck is the USS Bismarck? I'll even take a Tirpitz. (But of course we can hypothesize about their absence--Trek writers were either not familiar with Japanese atrocities, or believed their audience was not, and so considered IJN boats "safe," while DKM vessels were smeared with the far more famous crimes of Nazism.)
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