I admit this has gotten quite incoherent by now. My apologies.
I'll nevertheless try to clarify a few points if I can.
When I argue that "people" are predisposed to declare "random" factoids of STXI as incorrect or canon-violating, I mean that I have observed this sort of behavior in basically all the reviews I have read, and in some of your messages, Tranya. I do not mean to indicate that all the "offenders" would somehow be equally "offensive" in this respect, I just want to point out that IMHO everybody doing this predicting and interpreting business on STXI seems to be "guilty" of this to some degree. (Lots of quotation marks here, because I'm not really all that offended by these "offenses", nor do I think that anybody else should be.)
When I argue that this sort of predisposition happens, I speculate that it goes like this: people realize that STXI "resets" the Trek universe in many ways; they find some things not to their liking; and they then polarize into one of two camps: "None of it matters, because this is a complete reboot, a different Trek, and that's fine" and "It's offensive that Abrams makes all these mistakes and then tries to excuse it all by doing this reboot thing". Both camps are likely to pick an essentially random factoid that they think is in conflict with earlier Trek, and then list it as part of the perceived violations that prove their point: "This is a complete and good reboot" or "The guy has no idea what he is doing".
However, few people stop to think that the factoids of STXI aren't really that different from the factoids that we got from all the earlier Trek shows and movies that weren't explicitly "reboots". Some of them are moderately difficult fits, but they are fits nevertheless, like the inability of Kirk to drive a 1920s vehicle to Spock's liking, vs. his ability to drive a 1960s vehicle. Some are not in conflict with anything else but fan assumptions. Some may be actual "factoid mismatches", that is, cases where a factoid from earlier Trek is in unresolvable conflict with a STXI factoid. But people just don't stop to think, not when arguing about the factoids or conflicts. They argue about the factoids in terms of the more general issues they have with the movie. And that's what got me all excited in the first place, because I also care about the factoids and controversies an sich, and I would like to see them argued on their own merits. (In addition to all this other excitement about the movie, of course. I just happen to like arguing on factoids, in addition to being generally excited about the movie.)
Sure, when lots of "difficult fits" and things that are at odds with fan assumptions pile up, this sets a certain mood for the movie, and for the reviews. But when purely discussing continuity issues, the mood should not be an issue. Even if 90% of the factoids are controversial, that doesn't need to mean that they are errors, or that they support the claims of either of the two camps.
We could skip this phase of analysis and prediction, and we would probably have a less tense forum; once we get to see the entire movie, those controversial factoids will settle into their proper context, and some of the controversy is bound to disappear. But of course the analysis, prediction and controversy are all part of the fun.
You ask "what is this argument about?". For me, it's an argument about factoids, or at least originally was. I am interested in what the movie really has to say about the construction of the Enterprise, or the birth of Kirk, or the graduation of Chekov, or the death of Spock. And I am interested in concentrating on those particular issues, rather than "riding the mood" and trusting early impressions. So whenever I see an argument about a factoid being made on the basis of unconfirmed data, I balk.
We have gotten a lot of reviews. We have not gotten a transcript of dialogue. Ergo, it is IMHO bad form to make arguments that depend on the finer points of dialogue. Despite the massive amounts of spoiling we have already gotten, we still lack solid information on many key points of the movie. At this point, it is perfectly all right to state "the mood isn't right, I don't like this movie". But it's not all right to state "the factoids aren't right, I don't like this movie", not when the movie is such a fluid piece of time travel, time jumps, deliberate surprises and twists of tale, and just possibly a factoid error or two.
Put short, the main reason I argue here is my desire to find out what in STXI falls into categories #1, #2 and #3 of controversy, as outlined above. And the reason I get overtly excited is if and when a factoid is unjustly assigned into the #2 category.
So, essentially,
-I don't want to win anything here. So for my part, I'd like to bow out of this argument, and declare everybody else a winner.
-but I do want to find out if anybody here can come up with a real #2 type of controversy.
Timo Saloniemi