Is everyone's character arc the same though? Michael Burnham changes both Spock and Sarek, much like Sybok did. Though this time they're trying to cram a character into an area it was never meant to be in.
I would say that this does indeed affect Spock and Sarek yes. Just because Spock never mentioned Michael doesn’t mean that she could have existed. It’s a change that didn’t need to be made and only serves to anchor DSC to a beloved character.
It was a simple disagreement that forced a wedge between father and son for many years, much like happens in real life
And - how come, when Sarek was breaking down in Picard’s mind in TNG (“Sarek”) that he didn’t mention Michael? He cried out for Amanda, Perrin, and Spock - saying how much he loved them in his compromised emotional state but there was never a “Michael” mentioned. And Sarek was thinking about Michael when he nearly died in that shuttle.
Maybe Sarek forgot her when he was 200 and odd years old.
Or maybe Michael Burnham is a poorly conceived character who contributes nothing to the history of those two characters.
I see it as prime because they say it is prime, and the story fits in prime.
It’s the “they say it is” that really unsettles me here. I don’t care what “they” say - it doesn’t make “them” right. There’s a very authoritarian vibe to that statement that is decidedly un-Star Trek.
The Genesis device was never mentioned again in any future production, but it existed.
It was mentioned in Star Trek III: The search for Spock, and the same video footage from that film was used again in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. I’m not sure what you’re getting at here. If this is supposed to be a defence of the spore drive, think about this:
Genesis may not have been discussed - but the effects of its existence were felt in every Trek film that followed Star Trek II
evidence?
In addition to the examples above and the entire plot of Star Trek III:
Bones: I liked him better before he died (TFF)
Spock: I’ve been dead before (TUC)
So the spore drive doesn’t fit into the existing continuity no matter how much we may wish it to. It was a bad idea for a prequel.