Okay, so the UN-like arrowhead was the 21st century UESPA logo. All right then. It would be interesting to know why and how the rough design came under Starfleet's usage, but okay.
Again -- UESPA was first introduced in TOS as the organization that the Enterprise answered to, before the writers came up with Starfleet. That used to be seen as just a continuity error, but the canonical use of UESPA in VGR and ENT (and in the Enterprise-B dedication plaque) suggests that UESPA is a division of Starfleet.
The interpretation I've used in my Rise of the Federation novels, which is what I've been describing here, is that UESPA is the organization that operated the United Earth Starfleet as seen in ENT. (Makes sense to me -- United Earth Space Probe Agency, United Earth Starfleet.) This is suggested by the combined UESPA/Starfleet Command logo seen in "Demons"/"Terra Prime." In the books, as I believe I already stated earlier in this thread, the Federation Starfleet begins as the merger of the founder worlds' respective space services, and the various ship logos seen in TOS represent those various services. I assume that over time, Starfleet becomes more unified, and what started out as separate planets' space agencies become merely administrative subdivisions within Starfleet, thus allowing us to reconcile Kirk's Enterprise answering to UESPA as well as Starfleet.
No, it's neither a race or an election. I'm only making the point that one model is better supported than the other by the evidence.
I disagree. You're accepting the evidence that fits your prejudice and dismissing the evidence that doesn't. I'm trying to construct a model that fairly encompasses all the evidence without bias.
Also, I seem to recall you telling me to ignore the "Matter of Time" (TNG) episode in regards to the phaser/laser/phase weapon question, despite the episode offering relevant evidence to the discussion. How come applying the same reasoning here, is suddenly wrong? How was that not "ignoring data that doesn't fit your preferred model"?
Because it's not the same reasoning. As I explained to you at the time, Worf's statement that phasers didn't exist in the 22nd century is hearsay, and hearsay is not evidence of anything beyond what the speaker believes to be the case. There is no way of assessing its accuracy without additional, objective data. The presence of the arrowhead insignia on non-Enterprise personnel in "Court-Martial" and "The Menagerie" and its pre-TOS appearances in later canon are firsthand, objective visual evidence.
Okay, first of all, it really sounds like your using a double standard. Look, I'm 100% percent sure it's not intentional, but I know we've swapped posts about continuity and how much leeway the creators should have regarding retcons. As I noted above, it feels like you're suddenly arguing the opposite and dismissing your previous position of more flexibility in continuity. Again, I'm not accusing you, I'm just saying how it's coming across here.
And that's a bizarre way of looking at it. What I'm proposing is itself a retcon. It's a reinterpretation that isn't at all what the creators at the various times intended, since those different creators obviously had different, contradictory intentions. Which is the whole reason we need a novel interpretation that can reconcile those contradictory approaches.
It seems overly complex for something that's would be simpler to just explain away as a filming error.
If it were only one instance, I'd agree. But my model is based on multiple data points -- "Friendship One," the ENT enlisted patches, the Kelvin, "Court-Martial," etc. -- that collectively lend themselves to a model where the arrowhead is the UESPA emblem and UESPA is a subdivision of Starfleet. This is what I tend to do in my Trek fiction -- to take various, often conflicting data points from across Trek history and postulate a global model that reconciles them.
Also, it feels like we're trying to twist the franchise to fit the memo
Please stop accusing me of that. I already explained to you once -- my model is based on the visual evidence. I merely cited the memo to contextualize it.
Also, the fact that we suddenly didn't realize it was wrong until the memo showed up doesn't really speak too well for the theory, if the evidence was that obscure. Honestly, would you be advocating this model without the memo?
Yes, I would, because I adopted the model years before I even heard of the damn memo. The memo was first posted here on the TrekBBS in January 2013. But here's a post from 2010 in which I mention the idea that the insignia could be for "subfleets" instead of individual ships. And I wrote the first Rise of the Federation novel in 2012. The memo simply confirmed and clarified what I and others had already concluded based on the onscreen evidence.