• Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Data was unique. There was no precedent there for how to relate to an android like Data. To the point that Starfleet literally had to have a legal case over whether or not he is sentient. She was a doctor. Her idea of sentience was biological. She did not have the framework to initially understand that an android can be sentient.

    I see your point, but counterpoint: based on the fact that he was a Starfleet officer, which only people are allowed to be, and just interacting with him, it’s pretty clear on an instinctive level that he has personality quirks, preferences, self awareness etc.

    What’s more, I could understand her initial doubts due to what you described, but even after getting to know him, she’d keep gainsaying his personhood for no apparent reason other than seemingly trying to convince HIM that he was nothing but a robot.

    It’s that stubbornness and lack of rationale that makes it feel like bigotry rather than just confusion and inquisitiveness to me.

    As for bigotry being rife in Star Trek, this sounds like a cop-out but it’s true: I haven’t seen much yet since I started with TNG and am only a few episodes into season 3 so far lol

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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      5 hours ago

      Even with what you have seen so far, think about how the bigotry is baked in when humans are super diverse but every alien in the show is part of a monoculture that has a bunch of very well-defined stereotypes. Worf is a Klingon so he acts like how any Klingon would act and it doesn’t matter if he was raised by humans because Klingons are Klingons and will always be Klingons.

      • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        In the case of Worf, though, he’s extra Klingon. Which isn’t all that unusual; second-generation immigrants sometimes lean extra hard into their perceived home culture despite the fact that they only know how their parents act and miss out on a lot of subtleties. I can imagine that even other Klingons think he’s weird for listening to nothing but Klingon opera.

        But yeah, in general Star Trek does simplify; species have one culture and planets have one biome. Then again, the narrative usually wouldn’t be helped by lines like “it’s a beautiful, verdant planet except for where you’ll beam down, which is an asbestos desert that looks like a bowl of used cat litter” or “we’re going to rendezvous with a Klingon ship but the crew are part of this subculture that doesn’t consider physical combat valid and exclusively dresses in yellow”.

        We do see more detail with cultures the story spend a lot of time around; e.g. the Bajorans are shown to be multi-faceted because those facets are relevant to the narrative.

        • marcos@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          a Klingon ship but the crew are part of this subculture that doesn’t consider physical combat valid

          ENT has an entire moon-sized prison full of those.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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          4 hours ago

          Bajorans are a lone exception. Virtually every Klingon is the same. Romulans, Andorians, Cardassians, all pretty much the same.

          • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Then again, humans are also pretty samey from an outside perspective. There aren’t many humans who openly reject the Federation’s ideals. A small number of exceptions does exist but other species get those as well. Even the Maquis still behave like Federation people; while they fight their own little war they generally do that while adhering to Federation standards.

      • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        True… Tbf though, most of the races seem to be more or less allegorical representatives of different aspects of human nature, so having too many pacifist Klingons or brave and selfless Ferengi or whatever would just muddle the narrative IMO…