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[I know what the writers were going for with Tom-lady killer jokester knows all the 80s/90s references-but I feel like they relied on him way too much to be the “relatable” character for the audience when they could’ve spent more time on any of the other men of color in the main cast]

Looking back, Tom Paris and Holodoc were good cases of fandom fixating on white characters to the exclusion of characters of color.

abydosarchives:

70thousandlightyearsfromhome:

iquitelikeditactually:

Never forget that Tuvok’s reaction to being trapped in a years-long starless void was to make terrible puns.

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Who says Vulcans don’t have a sense of humor?

Tuvok’s bone dry sass gives me life. Like, sure Spock’s sass was more overt, and T’Pol could out-sass everyone with just a look, but with Tuvok, you get the feeling his bad puns and veiled sarcasm are the Vulcan equivalent of dad-jokes. At home, his kids would be completely unimpressed at his humor, but on Voyager, he can be HILARIOUS all he wants, and most everyone misses the joke, and I think he likes it like that.

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[The fans of Voyager could have wrote a better show than the writers.]

In fact they have! Macedon and Peg’s Talking Stick/Circle series, which started with Macedon’s annoyance at Chakotay’s generic medicine man portrayal in the show, grew into an EPIC novel. Well worth checking out if you want a story that explores Chakotay’s spirituality and identity, Janeway and Chakotay’s relationship, and what it actually means for Starfleet and Maquis to be one crew.

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[I cannot understand J/C shippers. Captain/Admiral Janeway is so clearly gay and in love with Seven that it insults me that somebody does not see it.]

She’s engaged to a guy at the beginning of the series, and fuck us for being excited about a potential relationship with a Native man who went from a principled enemy to Janeway’s second-in-command and friend, right?

Just what level of “don’t ever fuck with us” is Starfleet? I mean I used to think Jem Hadar and Klingons being these fierce warrior races was something of an Informed Trait when they kept losing in face-to-face fights with mild-mannered Starfleet officers. But then I realized… it’s actually because Starfleet officers are just that tough.

Just how motivated and ambitious you have to be, as someone coming from a post-scarcity society, to sign up for such arduous training and potential danger? I have to wonder kind of people decide to go through years of rigorous education, constant work and travel, and the possibility of a nasty death when they are guaranteed lives without fear or want right on their home planets.

Could it be that Starfleet may, in fact, be a place for malcontents? Not the kind of small-time malcontent that turns to destruction and exploitation, but the kind of malcontent that is stifled on some level by the cushy existence of their home planet (even while being willing to die to protect it) and wants something more. Something out there and anywhere but here.

Such people are dangerous to the preexisting system unless they have an outlet for their energies. Just to name a few headliner captains, leave the James Kirks, the Jean-Luc Picards, the Kathryn Janeways, the Benjamin Siskos, the Philippa Georgious with nothing to do but enjoy life, and chances are they’d get restless. You can see their innate drive in the paths they didn’t take and in alternate universes: Picard has a brother who was perfectly content to run a vineyard at home, living a comfortable rural existence. Picard could have had that or any of a million other career paths, but he still chose the uncertainty of the stars. The 20th-century version of Benjamin Sisko had a burning ambition to write groundbreaking science fiction despite being struck down over and over again by racism. Georgiou was goddamned Emperor in the Mirror Universe, and Burnham and Lorcas wanted her throne. Clearly these are not people who can sit content and let the world be; they shift the very earth they stand on and reach for the stars any way they can.

So what do you do with world-shakers in paradise? You could choose to kill them or lock them up and “reeducate” them, but that goes against the Federation’s ideals. You could let them live free and potentially climb to the top, but they might make too many changes and disrupt the whole comfortable arrangement.

Or, you could give them a way out–infinite ways out, in fact, into space. Their boundless energy would be structured and channeled in morally acceptable directions by the strict rules and directives of Starfleet, and their ambition to be better than others and be judged by their abilities would find expression in rank and promotions.

These are, of course, the same individuals who would die to protect the Federation when it is threatened by a race of fierce warriors, a mechanical collective, or vast theocratic empire. The same people who would have felt stifled in civilian life and could have threatened the whole system become its fiercest defenders. It’s a brilliant system, really, that meets everyone’s interests and turns a society’s potential threats into its greatest assets.

I don’t think it’s any wonder, looking at these incredibly trained and driven people who can take down Klingons in single combat and engineer their way out of alternate timelines, that non-Federation worlds–and maybe more than a few Federation ones–hover somewhere between suspicious and outright terrified of the Federation’s intentions. Starfleet is one of the major reasons one can make a case for the Federation being a “soft” empire, and I can see why peoples ranging from the Ferengi to the Klingons are so suspicious of them. Because you do not ever fuck with Starfleet.