In today's world, we have "Black Neighborhoods", because of their history in the United States, and their Social Status, they are not so much Black Neighborhoods, as they are Poor Neighborhoods (No, I'm not gonna debate, why they are poor, or who's fault it is, or what the solutions are, wrong forum for that). Because there are a larger percentage of poor blacks, the poor neighborhoods are going to be populated heavier with Blacks. The reason you have Mexican, or Chinese or whatever other Ethnicity Neighborhoods of a common language, is due to Immigrants who flock to places where their First languages is spoken, and they help their families come to the US to live in that same area, plus English Speaking people have difficulty getting by in that neighborhood, because everything is in a language they don't understand.Yeah, I know about the Xindi, Andorrians, etc. But I'm talking about the almost-human species. Why are there no black Bajoran neighborhoods? And if there are alien species that look pretty much like white people, why are there no alien species that look pretty much like black people, yellow people, brown people, etc?
But I guess "why are there no black Andorrians, red reptilian Xindi, etc" is a natural follow-on question here, given some of the assumptions being exposed.
Huh? Then how do we have movies with all-black casts, for example? Shouldn't Tyler Perry's casts be 90/5/5 then?Aliens are played by human actors so of course they'll reflect the races amongst humans.
Maybe Bajor, never had those issues, or has grown beyond those circumstances. Maybe on Bajor, they never had predjudices based upon skin color being brown, white, yellow, etc, maybe the only Prejudice was against Grey Skinned Cardasians.
Again, why just because Earth has it's history of judging each other based upon skin color, do you expect Alien Cultures, with different histories to judge each other based upon the color of their skin? Going back to Bajor, they were occupied for 50 years by ruthless Cardassians, starving, toturing, raping, imprisoning the people, the resources and the Planet. I'll betcha Dollars to Doughnuts if that happened to us here on Earth, you'd see KKK members snuggle up to Blacks and forget all about their Racism for Blacks, because they'd have the Alien Conquerors to aim their hatred at, after all, the Black guy is Human at least, who cares what color his skin is, now that we have these giant Cockroaches torturing and starving us.Maybe Bajor, never had those issues, or has grown beyond those circumstances. Maybe on Bajor, they never had predjudices based upon skin color being brown, white, yellow, etc, maybe the only Prejudice was against Grey Skinned Cardasians.
But I was just using Bajor as an example. Apparently, everybody that looks mostly-human has race, but nobody has race-problems, or even, race-sympathy (e.g., nobody forces people to segregate by race in school lunch rooms, but they tend to do so more often than not). Or even race-families. I can't recall ever seeing a black Bajoran (or any other species) family, for example.
Race just seems to be used in a very specific way in Trek, IMO.
I get where you're coming from OP, it doesn't make sense for most alien races to have the same racial groups we do. I mean black Vulcans were just silly.
I get where you're coming from OP, it doesn't make sense for most alien races to have the same racial groups we do.
given the hot, desert environment of Vulcan, there should actually be MORE black Vulcans, cuz surely they'd have dark skins like black people living in African do?
i don't want to sound racist, but isn't it something to do with the hot evironment and skin pigmentation that black people are black?
What was so very, very badly wrong about them?Well...there was an attempt that went very, very badly wrong.
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Code_of_Honor
Yikes.
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Background Information
In this episode, the entire humanoid population of the planet is portrayed by African-American performers. In the teleplay, however, only Lutan's guards were specifically written as being African. It was director Russ Mayberry's idea to make all the planet's occupants African. Disgusted by this decision and Mayberry's attitude towards the performers, Gene Roddenberry fired Mayberry late in production. The remainder of the episode was directed by an uncredited Les Landau.
Reception
Jonathan Frakes referred to the episode as a "racist piece of shit". At a 2007 science fiction convention in Toronto, Canada, he told the audience, "The worst and most embarrassing and one that even Gene would have been embarrassed by was that horrible racist episode from the first season... Code of Honor, oh my God in heaven!"
In a 2012 interview with TrekMovie.com, Brent Spiner recalled, "It ["Code of Honor"] was just a racist episode. Maybe not intentionally but it felt that way and looked that way. It was the third episode so it was fortuitous that we did our worst that early on and it never got quite that bad again."
According to Wil Wheaton, 'if the cast wasn't arbitrarily decided to be African-American,' the idea of the episode being racist or non-racist wouldn't have been an issue.
Star Trek: Voyager actor Garrett Wang said this episode "stinks" to which LeVar Burton agreed, adding "without question", at a Star Trek panel at DragonCon 2010.
I get where you're coming from OP, it doesn't make sense for most alien races to have the same racial groups we do.
It makes the same amount of sense that aliens having five fingers, hair and other such features does.
The only reason fans can be so easily convinced that there's something especially functional about specific human adaptations as distinct from the myriad other ways that life can evolve is their lack of imagination.
What makes considerably less sense, BTW, was the universe full of humanoid aliens who all evolved to look like Europeans that Star Trek basically portrayed with a few exceptions until the early 1990s.
given the hot, desert environment of Vulcan, there should actually be MORE black Vulcans, cuz surely they'd have dark skins like black people living in African do?
i don't want to sound racist, but isn't it something to do with the hot evironment and skin pigmentation that black people are black?
That supposedly racial variation has any real functionality (rather than simply being a happenstance of genetic variation resulting from the partial isolation of populations) is arguable
given the hot, desert environment of Vulcan, there should actually be MORE black Vulcans, cuz surely they'd have dark skins like black people living in African do?
i don't want to sound racist, but isn't it something to do with the hot evironment and skin pigmentation that black people are black?
I don't know - I'm just glad to know the environment in America is such that people are so terrified of the racial Inquisition that they have to prefix a perfectly natural supposition with "I don't want to sound racist, but." Warms the heart.
Everything's arguable. Big whoop. Of course it has functionality - hence racial differences.
\The poster in question is British so there goes your assumption, I guess.
Nope. You're getting into a very common, popular type of speculation here that has nothing to do with actual science. And that's unnecessary - it's really easy to find out what the actual range of scientific research and thinking about "race" is, and you're nowhere near it.
Andorians have four genders? I’m not up on a lot of the post-TOS canon. How does that work, exactly? Does it take four to tango?. . . And then theres the sexual dimorphism of the Andorians 4 genders, the Hydrans 3 genders, some asexual races and so on.
Its from the books. Never really touched upon in any series.Andorians have four genders? I’m not up on a lot of the post-TOS canon. How does that work, exactly? Does it take four to tango?. . . And then theres the sexual dimorphism of the Andorians 4 genders, the Hydrans 3 genders, some asexual races and so on.
They considered it bad because there weren't any token white characters among the aliens? That's got more to do with the personal sentiment regarding casting, because if the episode required all the aliens to be green or blue, it wouldn't have been an issue if only white actors were cast to play them.What was so very, very badly wrong about them?Well...there was an attempt that went very, very badly wrong.
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Code_of_Honor
Yikes.
![]()
Excerpt from Memory-Alpha (from the link above):
Background Information
In this episode, the entire humanoid population of the planet is portrayed by African-American performers. In the teleplay, however, only Lutan's guards were specifically written as being African. It was director Russ Mayberry's idea to make all the planet's occupants African. Disgusted by this decision and Mayberry's attitude towards the performers, Gene Roddenberry fired Mayberry late in production. The remainder of the episode was directed by an uncredited Les Landau.
Reception
Jonathan Frakes referred to the episode as a "racist piece of shit". At a 2007 science fiction convention in Toronto, Canada, he told the audience, "The worst and most embarrassing and one that even Gene would have been embarrassed by was that horrible racist episode from the first season... Code of Honor, oh my God in heaven!"
In a 2012 interview with TrekMovie.com, Brent Spiner recalled, "It ["Code of Honor"] was just a racist episode. Maybe not intentionally but it felt that way and looked that way. It was the third episode so it was fortuitous that we did our worst that early on and it never got quite that bad again."
According to Wil Wheaton, 'if the cast wasn't arbitrarily decided to be African-American,' the idea of the episode being racist or non-racist wouldn't have been an issue.
Star Trek: Voyager actor Garrett Wang said this episode "stinks" to which LeVar Burton agreed, adding "without question", at a Star Trek panel at DragonCon 2010.
I get where you're coming from OP, it doesn't make sense for most alien races to have the same racial groups we do.
It makes the same amount of sense that aliens having five fingers, hair and other such features does.
Ten fingers is common to all races, so I don't know what your point is here.
Oh, yes, the poor white man, being oppressed by the "Racial Inquisition."I don't know - I'm just glad to know the environment in America is such that people are so terrified of the racial Inquisition that they have to prefix a perfectly natural supposition with "I don't want to sound racist, but." Warms the heart.i don't want to sound racist, but isn't it something to do with the hot evironment and skin pigmentation that black people are black?
One of the things you seem to be forgetting here is that the concept of "race" -- as opposed to the concept of "skin tone" -- is a folk taxonomy without scientific validity. There are more genetic differences between blood types than between "races."Everything's arguable. Big whoop. Of course it has functionality - hence racial differences.That supposedly racial variation has any real functionality (rather than simply being a happenstance of genetic variation resulting from the partial isolation of populations) is arguable
Andorians have four genders? I’m not up on a lot of the post-TOS canon. How does that work, exactly? Does it take four to tango?. . . And then theres the sexual dimorphism of the Andorians 4 genders, the Hydrans 3 genders, some asexual races and so on.
They considered it bad because there weren't any token white characters among the aliens? That's got more to do with the personal sentiment regarding casting, because if the episode required all the aliens to be green or blue, it wouldn't have been an issue if only white actors were cast to play them.
"Cloud Minders" "Patterns of Force"Maybe Bajor, never had those issues, or has grown beyond those circumstances. Maybe on Bajor, they never had predjudices based upon skin color being brown, white, yellow, etc, maybe the only Prejudice was against Grey Skinned Cardasians.
But I was just using Bajor as an example. Apparently, everybody that looks mostly-human has race, but nobody has race-problems, or even, race-sympathy (e.g., nobody forces people to segregate by race in school lunch rooms, but they tend to do so more often than not). Or even race-families. I can't recall ever seeing a black Bajoran (or any other species) family, for example.
Race just seems to be used in a very specific way in Trek, IMO.
Oh, you mean like Kivas Fajo, the guy who kidnapped Data because he wanted the most toys?It would be the equivalent of having a script about an alien species whose culture embodies stereotypes about Jews, and then casting all Jewish actors to play the part.
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