Star Trek has always been about social commentary and allegory, so why should this be any different?
No a portion of
Star Trek was about social commentary and allegory, not the whole thing. It was also about comedy, space adventures, and ect.
And
Titan is a portion of the Trek publishing line, so why shouldn't it choose to be about social commentary? This objection makes no damn sense whatsoever. You're using "it was only a portion" to claim that it's somehow wrong for
any Trek novel to embrace it. The point is, it's included and permissible, and I did it and I'm damn well proud of it.
Did I say they shouldn't imbrace social comentry or have a very diverse crew.
All I meant by pointing out that Star Trek was many things is that one shouldn't try to play the Star Trek is x card that some fans usually use just to complain about how a Star Trek prodoucton becuase it wasn't x.
Plus I actually like the Titan crew beng diverse I just think its annoying when someone in trek feels the need to point to something that was pretty much ignored under suspension of disbelief and decide that its instead some major thing that must be addressed and then do so in what feels an awful lot like a fix fic.
Especially since it takes something that might be somewhay minor and blow it out proportion to unbelievable levels. Much like Trip Tucker's annoying death being reconted into a galaxy spaning conspiracy to cover up him being a secret major player in galactic history.
Now while I admit the whole Star Trek not showing many aliens in Starfleet (likely due to budget not moral failings) being because Starfleet is unconsciously racist as hell (yeah that kind of is what it feels like the explaination is) isn't on that level it is irksome that its basically calling attention to a limit of the shows and making a bigger deal about than it probably would be probably ignore/retcont it the moment they got pased this limitation.
Aka why it seems the amount of alien looking aliens tends to increases when ever Star Trek gets more money along with designs improvements and special effects improvements and alien make up changes/improvements.
And the big reason this is bothersome is it makes me wonder where it ends. I mean are we due for a trilogy explaining the changes in Worf's ridges over the years, or a book covering the shrinking of Starfleet vessles from 2233-2254?
Or hell a book about how Janeway was supposed to do her necessary save the universe thing in the original timeline like Eternal Tide says she did despite said event being in the Delta Quadrant while Endgame's map in Astrometrics clearly showing Voyager and the Borg Transwarp hub being at the Delta/Beta border meaning Voyager would be in the Beta Qudrant at the time in question.
Not to mention that it seems the later novels have treated the federaton as one big happy familiy with many people having spouses and inlaws from different races from themsleves, so Starfleet not being ver diverse at the same time dispite being part of said open and tolerant federtion kind of seems kind of odd.
It's easy to lie with statistics if you don't apply them properly, true, but that's exactly what you're doing -- misunderstanding how statistics work and using your own ignorance as a basis for twisting them to mean whatever you want them to mean.
Says the guy trying to aply statistics just by counting "humans" in Star Trek episodes and saying this means Starfleet is human dominated despite A) this being a tiny portion of every crew of every Starfleet starship, space station, and planetary instillation within and around an orgnaizaion of 150 member planets, uncounted colonies, space stations and starships over an 8000 lightyear distance and likely beyond and B) assuming there all atually human based on looking at them despite the number of alien races that look astonishingly like humans.
So excuse me for questioning how accuracy of a process that is largely based on assumption of a fictional universe that can be changed at the whim of the owners of it.
Not to mention one that if applied to real life like say watching abunch of shows set in the US would basically be used to say the vast majority of Americans look like televsion and movie stars.
Again which is based on assuming things based on a small sample size.
Again you prove you don't understand statistics. It's not about the size of the sample, it's about the
representativeness of the sample, whether it's biased in a particular direction or more randomly drawn from the whole population. You're positing an extreme sampling bias while offering no justification for why that would be the case.
Okay here is some reasons its probably biased
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Ba'ku
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Deltan
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Gideon
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Iotian
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Elasian
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/El-Aurian
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Capellan
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Argelian
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Betazoid
Basically just becuase they LOOK human doesn't necessariliy mean they ARE human. Kind of makes your sample questionable if you can't even say for certain they aren't a nonhuman species.
Assuming the money fairy comes by to give them money of more masks and face appliances.
As I said, they were able to spend the money almost every week on DS9 to populate Quark's and the Promenade with alien faces. So there's no reason a typical TNG or
Voyager episode, with a comparable budget, couldn't have done the same.
For that matter, TNG and VGR often did episodes where most of the guest characters were Klingons or Romulans or Hirogen or what-have-you. It wouldn't have killed their budget to pick out two or three Starfleet extras in a crowd scene and put Bajoran noses or Trill spots or Vulcan ears on them.
Who knows maybe they though it was too much effort for some extras maybe they had to choose between more diverse new aliens and more diverse starfleet personale.
I do know whatever reaon probably wasn't becuase they were lazy or whatever other moral failing you might want to assign to the guys making Star Trek episodes.