Jun 172019
 

I’ve recently been watching (well, having it on as background noise) Star Trek: Voyager. Twenty years ago I kinda disliked the show due to a lot of the early-season writing, but as time has gone on – and as I’ve caught more and more of modern WokeTrek – the better Voyager seems. A few days ago I caught an episode that, it seemed to me, would be virtually impossible to write and air today without utterly flipping the script since it is utterly “problematic” and not at all woke. Looking back through season 4, it seems there are several episodes that have messages and outright plotlines that would cause untold online outrage among the purple-haired mental illness haircuts. There are also several other pints about the show that simply would not be allowed today:

1) Strong Female Characters: Captain Janeway, B’elanna Torres and Seven of Nine are all quality SFCs… *without* being screeching man-hating harpies. They are competent, reasonably well written (most of the time, anyway), don’t yammer on about oppression or patriarchy or whatever is outraging them today (well, except for B’elanna, but then, she’s a Klingon), and they’re all straight. The horror.

2) Seven of Nine. She was introduced for the shallowest of all possible reasons: the producers wanted to replace the character of Kes – a nothingburger of a dullsville female character – with someone who would bring adolescent male eyeballs to the show. So they brought in an unreasonable attractive actress to wear an unrealistically tight and form-fitting catsuit, complete with AHEM Borg Implants right up front, to serve as eye candy. And boy howdy did they succeed, something that would not be allowed today except – possibly – as a one-time thing in order to show just how awful men are for being interested in such things. But then… Jeri Ryan and the writers took this obvious bit of fan service and made her a damn compelling individual with an interesting personality, some substantial troubles and a lot of pathos.

3) Assimilation. No, not Borg assimilation, but aliens assimilating into the Voyager crew. Voyager, of course, does not let just anyone who wants to come aboard, come aboard and stay; the Captain picks and chooses who she allows to become a permanent resident. And those who do, assimilate. They become part of the dominant culture. They retain their own identities, of course, but they do not demand that everyone else adjust to accommodate them. And they do not demand to be catered to; but instead they all want to contribute, to earn their keep.

And then there are plot details and whole plotlines:

Season 3, Episode 24, “Displaced:” innocent aliens find themselves transported aboard Voyager, at the same time that crewmembers disappear. The migrants replace the natives, in the end completely taking over and turning the Voyager into their own property. What had seemed an innocent occurrence turns out to be a slow, subtle invasion.

Season 4, Episode 3, “Day of Honor:” The USS Voyager aids some refuges… and the moment Voyagers guard is down, the refugees come in far larger numbers demanding more resources, threatening theft and violence if they don’t get what they want. In the end, Voyager repels said refugees with force and provides a bit of aid, but only enough to get them to help themselves, away from Voyager.

Season 4, Episode 10, “Random Thoughts:” A society where wrongthink is literally a crime.

Season 4, Episode 17, “Retrospect:” Seven of Nine makes inaccurate accusations of assault against a man. As punishment is meted out without going to the bother of holding trials, the mans life and livelihood are ruined, and in the end he commits suicide. Seven of Nine goes on about her way with no punishment.

Season 4, Episode 23, “Living Witness:” Seven hundred years after the USS Voyager has gone by, an alien civilization has re-written their history to cast themselves as the innocent and in fact wholly virtuous victims of a technologically superior culture. They revel in their supposed oppression. Money quote: “It’s always about race!” Antifa/BLM riots and attacks a museum and causes substantial property damage when word gets out that someone is saying things that go against the narrative of oppression.

 

These are just a few off the top of my head. Imagine the people behind STD trying to do these things *now.*

 Posted by at 10:15 pm