Star Trek Social Club
r/startrek: The Next Generation
Star Trek news and discussion. No slash fic...
Maybe a little slash fic.
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All posts/comments must be thoughtful and balanced.
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It is important that everyone from newbies to OG Trekkers feel welcome, no matter their gender, sexual orientation, religion or race.
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Utilize the spoiler system for any and all spoilers relating to the most recently-aired episode. There is no formal spoiler protection for episodes/films after they have been available for approximately one week.
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Upcoming Episodes
| Date | Episode | Title |
|---|---|---|
| 01-29 | SFA 1x04 | "Vox in Excelso" |
| 02-05 | SFA 1x05 | "Series Acclimation Mil" |
| 02-12 | SFA 1x06 | "Come Let's Away" |
| 02-19 | SFA 1x07 | TBA |
| 02-26 | SFA 1x08 | TBA |
In Production
Strange New Worlds (TBA)
In Development
Untitled comedy series
Wondering where to stream a series? Check here.
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Though they clearly haven't, even if they think so. For example, if you're not an organic humanoid, it's very much up in the air whether you'll be treated as a person, or as an inconvenience.
The Measure of a Man was constrained to apply to that one instance, in Data's case, and he had the Sutherland automatically assuming the worst of him and nearly comm itting mutiny. Both the ExoComps and the EMH suffer from people thinking they're malfunctioning and factory resetting/lobotomising them.
If you're in a war with the Federation, it's equally ambiguous whether they'll stick to their own rules of conflict. The moment they feel threatened, they'll do things like unleash a deadly bio-weapon/memetic-weapon against your species, start laying self-replicating mines, or just make plans to blow up your homeworld. At best, your fate is left to the whims of a handful of admirals and captains.
Even within the Federation, Admiral Satie was not a isolated instance. She only made two mistakes, in going up against an unusually accepting crew that would bat for one of their own, and losing her composure in front of another admiral. If she hadn't, her crusade against Romulans in Starfleet would have continued unabated.
The fact that she could start it would suggest that those attitudes exist and are underlying within Starfleet. At least, on a significant enough level that she wasn't treated as being unusually paranoid about a non-issue.
Also, – watching at the age I am now – it's hard for me to not notice how much carceral justice is taken as a given rather than anything remotely more restorative.
And treatment of mental disability still unfomfortably mirrors our current system than anything I'd hope for so far into the future.
I think we can accept that the premise is we've made astounding strides and there are still areas of improvement; I don't think that tarnishes the hopeful and utopian dream at the heart of Star Trek.
It doesn't, but it also shows that even in the future, they're not free from the foibles of being a person. Achieving and maintaining something like the Federation needs active, constant work. They can't just go bang, Federation, and be done with it for good. Constant vigilance is the price we must pay for our freedoms.
It's an angle that I'm honestly disappointed that hasn't been tackled yet, since it seems perfect for a Star Trek story. Early Picard seemed to be going that way, with former Borg drones being mistreated, and the Federation outlawing reproduction for inorganic beings, but then it veered off for the Season 3 plot.
There's a really juicy three-way conflict between people who think that the Federation is too soft to survive, those who think it's fine as it is, and those who think it doesn't go far enough, and should be expanded to cover more, that could easily come into play, and show how much work it took them to get and stay there.
Discovery went there in its first season, with the Federation prepared to sell its soul to win the war until they found another (problematic) way.
The post-Burn 32nd Century is coming at it from the other side, with SFA in particular reckoning with some of the choices that were made during the period when everything was falling apart.