Nothing nostalgic about them.
And yet, after travelling hundreds of years into the future to a distant region of the galaxy, the first person they meet is a black man named Cleveland.
Hmmm... Nah. I'm not gonna go there.

Nothing nostalgic about them.
And yet, after travelling hundreds of years into the future to a distant region of the galaxy, the first person they meet is a black man named Cleveland.
Yeah, they just go rolling along.It's totally time to revisit the Kazon.![]()
Nothing nostalgic about them.
And yet, after travelling hundreds of years into the future to a distant region of the galaxy, the first person they meet is a black man named Cleveland.
Nothing nostalgic about new aliensNothing nostalgic about who ?
Cleveland Book, the guy Michael meets in the trailer who comments that she must believe in ghosts upon seeing her Starfleet insignia.And who is Cleveland ?
Just a joke about nostalgia being Disco's raison detre.Ok, was nostalgia a parameter on who people wanted to see ?
I just wonder...if the Federation in the 29th to 31st century had time travel...how did they not see their demise coming...???
Because the future isn't written and once you know the future, you can change it. Or, to quote Picard, "I don't give a damn about your past because your past is my future and as far as I'm concerned it hasn't been written yet!"
Until there's a series focused on it, I only treat a future as a possible future instead of the "real" future. So, likewise, that's why Picard's depiction of the 24th/25th Century cusp will overrule what we saw from "All Good Things" and "Endgame". At least in my mind. So I treat the 29th/31st Centuries in VOY/ENT as a possible future but the 32nd Century in DSC will be the "real" 32nd Century.
It's also possible that besides their Temporal Prime Directive to not interfere with the past, they might have a Secondary Directive to not seek information about the future. The risk of someone trying manipulate what they know will happen to their advantage is too great. It's even brought up in Star Trek's first true time travel episode, "Tomorrow Is Yesterday". It wouldn't stop a future version of Section 31 from trying to know, but once they start trying to change what will happen, then they run the risk of changing it to something that doesn't favor them if they make a mistake, putting them in an even worse situation than they were before. Time travel. Fun stuff, tricky stuff, and frustrating stuff all at the same time.
It may be possible that this is a potential future that will be changed when Discovery gets back to it's own time.
I've always kinda-sorta thought that the "God-being" in ST-V:TFF was Gary Mitchell."God" from STV, who didn't die.
"Oh hi Michael. I knew Spock's other long-lost sibling."
Oh, I thought you meant the character Cleveland from The Family Guy. Too bad.Cleveland Book
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