Originally Posted by Lemur866
"My personal Star Trek fanwank, which I never tire of, is that due to Earth’s post-scarcity utopia 99.99% of all people are content to laze around watching holoporn.
Starfleet is regarded as a bunch of silly eccentrics who like to do dangerous stuff for no reason, like we regard people who climb Mt Everest."
Have you read Cory Doctorow’s “To Go Boldly”?
A very Enterpriseish ship meets a very powerful alien who initially thinks that the Captain and crew are “role players”, like today’s Civil War reenactors. He then explodes many of the plot fallacies that pepper Star Trek. Kills a crew member and is surprised to learn that they don’t have back-ups.
That’s also compatible with my theory that “Dutch Schaefer” is a cover identity the CIA created for John Matrix to cover up all the crimes he committed rescueing his kidnapped daughter from terrorists. (in Commando).
To add to that theory: that time machine Elroy made never really worked. It just teleported them to the surface. A surface where, when we did see it in the Jetsons had a some talking birds.
I think you’ve made that argument on the Dope before, just as I’ve disagreed before. Starfleet has the power of imprisonment (after court-martial conviction) and potential death (when ordered on dangerous missions) over its members, and enforces the law against Federation civilians (just ask Harry Mudd), as well as providing exploratory, diplomatic and military services. It answers to the President of the Federation. It clearly isn’t just a social club or bowling league.
The original Battlestar Galactica would have arrived at Earth only to find it was the original source of the Cylons. Knight Industries Two Thousand is the direct ancestor of the Cylons, hence the red glowing single eye.
The Roadrunner doesn’t exist. It is just a figment of the Coyote’s imagination designed to give his empty life meaning. Thus he can’t catch the Roadrunner and subconsciously sabotages his own efforts. This is my “Wile E. Coyote and the ACME of Being” paper that got me an ‘A’ in my philosophy class.
The Kessel Run is an endurance race, like the 24 hours of Le mans, so boasting about the distance covered rather than the time it took makes sense. Sort of.