Slide 4

Slide 4

Slide 3

Slide 3

First slide

First slide

Second image

Second image

Monday, June 20, 2016

Respect The Trek.




It is only logical that I begin this blog with a discussion about the splendor of Star Trek.

Gene Roddenberry, Awesome Genius, created the Star Trek vision in the 1960s both in hopes of inspiring humanity and offering a possible technological evolution.

Without Roddenberry, without Star Trek, you and I wouldn't be "here" right now.

Why, you ask?  Well, you poor, sheltered soul, because almost every convenience you use (although I wonder if you live in a cave...?) owes its creation to Star Trek.

Even blogging. That's right.

Blogging 
Began life as daily audio logs (i.e., "captain's logs").

Cell Phones
See "subspace communicators", circa 1966.

PDAs
This one's a no-brainer. Clearly.

Sliding Doors
The Trek made us lazy and snobby with the sliding door concept.  Until then, grocery stores, office buildings, hospitals...they used handled doors.

Robots? 
Lieutenant Commander Data. Duh.

Leadership
There's no greater example of true leadership than demonstrated by the captains of the Enterprise and Voyager. (This excludes Captain Sisko, since I refuse to acknowledge DS9 as a Star Trek series.)

Captain Jean Luc Picard (TNG) inspires confidence, equality, unity, vision and integrity.  Every TNG episode is a lesson in leading a unit, even under stressful circumstances.

Social Consciousness
It's no secret. The resolution to every ST plot is to acknowledge and better appreciate the other guy's culture.  Even episodes with heavy emphasis on the half computer drone Borg are resolved with ways to better understand (and/or stay the eff away from ) them.

Our desire to help one another is one of our basest instincts. Roddenberry injected this idea into every plot. Romulans trying to kill us? Let's find out what they want and help them get it.  Species 8472 (fluidic space creatures) tearing my ship apart?  Let's try to understand why, even if it means killing us.

Roddenberry patterned the original characters in the 1960s, just as race relations, feminism and nationalism where under a magnifying glass.  It's said that he created the various "races" in close alignment with social stereotypes of that time. (He never confirmed this.)

That two seemingly-opposite species could learn each other's languages, visit the other's planets, participate in their traditions and shake hands at the end of each episode meant that perhaps we could, too.

So show a little respect for Star Trek. Without it, you probably wouldn't have that computer on your desk, with the monitor you're looking at, reading my words and snickering.  You wouldn't be sitting right there today.

That's right. I said it.


No comments :