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+description: """
[Welcome to Daystrom Institute!](https://startrek.website/post/73)\n
\n
Serious, in-depth discussion about *Star Trek* from both in-universe and real world perspectives.\n
\n
Read more about [how to comment at Daystrom](https://startrek.website/post/175954).\n
\n
##### **Rules**\n
\n
**1. Explain your reasoning**\n
\n
All threads and comments submitted to the Daystrom Institute must contain an explanation of the reasoning put forth.\n
\n
**2. No whinging, jokes, memes, and other shallow content.**\n
\n
This entire community has a “serious tag” on it. Shitposts are encouraged in [Risa](https://startrek.website/c/risa).\n
\n
**3. Be diplomatic.**\n
\n
Participate in a courteous, objective, and open-minded fashion. Be nice to other posters and the people who make *Star Trek.* Disagree respectfully and don’t gatekeep.\n
\n
**4. Assume good faith.**\n
\n
Assume good faith. Give other posters the benefit of the doubt, but report them if you genuinely believe they are trolling. Don’t whine about “politics.”\n
\n
**5. Tag spoilers.**\n
\n
Historically Daystrom has not had a spoiler policy, so you may encounter untagged spoilers here. Ultimately, avoiding online discussion until you are caught up is the only certain way to avoid spoilers.\n
\n
**6. Stay on-topic.**\n
\n
Threads must discuss Star Trek. Comments must discuss the topic raised in the original post.\n
\n
#### **Episode Guides**\n
\n
The /r/DaystromInstitute wiki held a number of popular Star Trek watch guides. We have rehosted them here:\n
\n
- [Kraetos’ guide to Star Trek (the original series)](https://startrek.website/post/760)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Animated Series](https://startrek.website/post/765)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Next Generation](https://startrek.website/post/768)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/776)\n
- [Darth_Rasputin32898’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/772)\n
- [OpticalData’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/780)\n
- [petrus4’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/781)
"""
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+slug: "Annotations-for-Star-Trek-Strange-New-Worlds-2x07-Those-Old"
+title: "Annotations for *Star Trek: Strange New Worlds* 2x07: “Those Old Scientists” (SPOILERS)"
+url: null
+body: """
The title comes from LD’s 1st Season finale, “No Small Parts”, when CMDR Jack Ransom, XO of the USS *Cerritos*, refers to the TOS era as “Those Old Scientists”.\n
\n
We start on Stardate 58460.1 in an animated segment. This places it in 2381, and sometime between LD 3x06: “Hear All, Trust Nothing” (58456.2) and LD 3x09: “Trusted Sources” (58496.1). 3x07 and 3x08 don’t have stardate references. The ship is doing a check on the Krulmuth-B portal, which has been dormant for 120 years - and if you do the calculations you can see where this is going.\n
\n
Boimler says the portal was discovered by Pike and the “second” *Enterprise* and refers to Una as “Numero Una” to Mariner’s annoyance. Rutherford talks about teleron radiation. I’m assuming it’s not a CC typo and it’s distinct from “thalaron radiation” (*Nemesis*).\n
\n
Tendi’s great-grandmother was on an Orion science vessel, and she claims the Orions were the ones who actually discovered the portal (which looks vaguely *Stargate*-like). Rutherford is wearing a holographic imager around his neck (last seen in LD: “Veritas” and of the type first seen in VOY: “Latent Image”).\n
\n
Rutherford picks up traces of horonium. Hōra is the Greek word for “time”, from which we get the word horology, the art of making clocks. Boimler says Starfleet used horonium in NX-class ships, because it was lightweight, durable and was the right shade of grey (Mariner refers to the Starfleet History Museum - it’s not clear if this is the same as the Fleet Museum from PIC).\n
\n
Boimler screams “Remember me!” as he gets sucked into the portal, in the way that Beverly Crusher is also almost sucked into one in TNG: “Remember Me”. The phrase is originally from Shakespeare, specifically *Hamlet* Act I, sc v when the Ghost says: “Adieu, adieu, adieu. Remember me,” as he exits. The line is repeated by Hamlet later in the scene.\n
\n
The title sequence for this episode is animated in the LD style, with the space beast from the LD titles now suckling on the back of the *Enterprise*. Now I want an animated model of the *Enterprise* to match my *Titan*. At the end when the title card comes up we see the outline of the cosmic koala next to the planet (LD: “Moist Vessel”).\n
\n
Pike’s log is stardated 2291.6. *Enterprise* is delivering a shipment of grain to a colony on Setlik II. In the future (c. 2347), the Setlik *III* colony would be the site of an infamous massacre during the Cardassian wars with the Federation (TNG: “The Wounded”).\n
\n
Una reports that Boimler’s delta is also a communicator, confirming once and for all that SNW’s deltas are not. Boimler has purple hair, like he does when animated. On awakening he calls out, “Computer end program,” thinking he’s on a holodeck. He refers to the ship’s S/COMS operating system as opposed to LCARS in his era.\n
\n
La’An is uniquely qualified to lecture on temporal protocols as she’s gone through the same experience (SNW: “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow”). She talks about not making any attachments owing to the trauma she underwent when the alternate Jim Kirk died in her arms in the past. Boimler accidentally lets slip Worf’s name.\n
\n
Boimler waits in Pike’s office, as evidenced by the presence of the saddle and he calls out “Riker” as he mounts it with the Riker Maneuver (the popular explanation for the move is that Frakes suffered a back injury but although that injury did result in him doing the “Riker lean”, Frakes said in an interview that the chair maneuver was that he felt it was a cocky move suited to Riker, and no one stopped him so it stuck).\n
\n
Boimler asks if M’Benga is holding a classic TS-122 tricorder and M’Benga says it’s a TS-120. In the 24th Century, tricorders are of the TR series. Boimler theorizes that radioisotopes from the holographic imager set the portal off. Boimler is startled when Spock laughs.\n
\n
The ship is an Orion scout ship, technically first appearing in TOS: “Journey to Babel” as just a glowing blob, but redesigned as a more detailed CGI model for the remastered episode by Michael Okuda. A slight continuity contradiction arises: in “Babel” Spock doesn’t recognize the configuration of the scout ship when they encounter it then.\n
\n
Boimler says “NCC-1701 dash nothing,” referring to the future ships’ names in homage to the original and of course puzzling Una and La’An. He identifies Ortegas as a war hero, referring to her service in the Klingon War. Captain Harr Caras commands the Orion science vessel *D’Var*.\n
\n
I can’t feel that sorry for Boims having his chops busted, because I’d just love being paid attention to like that by Jess Bush and Melissa Navia. He says this is the “golden age of exploration”, echoing Pike’s words from the previous episode. He lets slip that Pike’s birthday is on Friday (on movie night) and is a holiday in the 24th Century.\n
\n
Chapel is rather devastated to learn that she’s not mentioned in books on Spock in the future. Boimler refers to Spock’s pet *sehlat* (TAS: “Yesteryear”). Ortegas calls Boimler “Future Boy”, a nickname Doc Brown applied to Marty McFly in *Back to the Future*.\n
\n
Turns out the grain Pike is carrying is trititicale. Its variant, quadrotriticale, would be central to the Federation’s efforts on Sherman’s Planet in TOS: “The Trouble with Tribbles”. Presumably it’s a three-lobed version as opposed to the four-lobed quadrotriticale. Triticale is a real life grain that writer David Gerrold based quadrotriticale on in “Tribbles”.\n
\n
Mariner uses up the last of the horonium in the portal, and Una says there’s hasn’t been a supply for a hundred years. Mariner says for all she knew Boimler could have been “stuck in a dystopian San Francisco in the middle of a riot”, referring to the Bell Riots of DS9: “Past Tense”. She finds young Spock hot, much like Jazdia Dax did to his slightly older counterpart in DS9: “Trials and Tribble-lations”.\n
\n
Boimler does the “Section 31 speed walk” when walking away from Mariner down the corridors (LD: “Envoys”), which he claimed conserved energy. Una wonders if Boimler’s poster is a “pin-up” poster, of which there are very many of Rebecca Romijn.\n
\n
Uhura says she’s 22 (the same age as Celia Rose Golding), which immediately makes this old chronologist’s mind start doing calculations. The official *Star Trek* website places her birth year as 2239, which would make the present year 2261, which sort of tracks (my estimate is between 2260-61).\n
\n
Mariner quotes Starfleet labor codes: section 48-Alpha-7: “Officers must take meal breaks at regular intervals”. She claims that she knows those that help her slack off. She makes Orion Hurricanes for Uhura and Ortegas, although they don’t have Orion *delaq*, which she says will mess them up. Uhura’s PADD shows her comparing the inscriptions on the portal to Bajoran and Cardassian script.\n
\n
Ortegas refers to Starbase Earhart, probably best remembered as housing the Bonestell Entertainment Facility where Jean-Luc Picard was stabbed by Nausicaans in 2337 (TNG: “Tapestry”). It also had a *dom-jot* table. Mariner and Tendi visited it in LD: “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”. Mariner says Nausicaans are terrible at *dom-jot*, a billiard-type game, but still love to bet on it. Ortegas’ recognition of the letters leads Uhura to discover the language is a thousands-years old ancient Nausicaan dialect.\n
\n
Boimler seeks solace in Engineering. Pelia says there is nothing quite so soothing as a properly calibrated warp core, which Boimler would agree with as he’s often said in LD that warp cores are cool. Pelia’s quote is from Cary Grant, which implies she knew him.\n
\n
Mariner chides Boimler for shouting “Holy Q” because they hadn’t met him yet in the 23rd Century but qualifies it with “they had kind of a Trelane thing going on.” Fanon often states that Trelane (TOS: “The Squire of Gothos”) and Q are related because their MO is remarkably similar. This link was made explicit in the novels (*Q-Squared*). Mariner has met Q before (LD: “Veritas”).\n
\n
Boimler remarks how slow and quietly everyone talks in this era, in stark contrast to the high-speed and intense dialogue they use on the half-hour animated *Lower Decks*.\n
\n
Boimler once dressed up as Pike for Halloween, and had to contour his chin to fit. Pike confesses he and his father never got along, and that was never resolved. This year is the first year he’s older than his father when he died. He planned to fish on Setlik II’s ice moon with a bottle of whiskey and have an imaginary talk with his father.\n
\n
Pike refers to Archer’s *Enterprise*, the NX-01, which reminds Boimler that horonium was used in its construction (a little over a hundred years ago). Boimler talks about the NX-01’s grapplers (which La’An loves), the precursor to a ship’s tractor beam. Grapplers were also seen in SNW: “Life Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach”.\n
\n
Starfleet tradition is that every time a new ship is commissioned, construction starts with an old piece of the last ship that bore the name (which explains why Boimler called this the “second” *Enterprise*). Which means there’s a piece of horonium on the ship.\n
\n
The piece in question appears to be a gas cylinder. Ortegas says she’s a fan of Travis Mayweather, first pilot of the NX-01, and her middle school gym was named after him. Uhura mentions Hoshi Sato, who spoke 86 languages - Uhura wrote 3 papers on her at the Academy. I’m happy to see the NX-01 crew get the love they never quite got when the series was around.\n
\n
Mariner tells Una that Boimler’s pin-up of her is a recruitment poster and inspired Boimler to join Starfleet. Una is moved that they put “ad astra per aspera” on the poster, the Starfleet motto she quoted during her trial (SNW: “Ad Astra Per Aspera”).\n
\n
Captain Caras recognizes Tendi’s title “Mistress of the Winter Constellations” (“We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”) and says that he has an Astrea Tendi on his ship. Pike’s offer to give the Orion scientists credit also explains why Tendi tells Boimler that Orions discovered the portal. I wish we could have seen Nöel Wells in live action, though.\n
\n
Ransom calls “Numero Una” the hottest first officer in Starfleet history. Ransom is voiced by Jerry O’Connell, who is married to Rebecca Romijn. Mariner says Ransom sleeps face down “like a baby”.\n
\n
We are rewarded with an animated SNW epilogue, which is explained by them hallucinating after imbibing Orion Hurricanes with real *delaq*.
"""
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[Welcome to Daystrom Institute!](https://startrek.website/post/73)\n
\n
Serious, in-depth discussion about *Star Trek* from both in-universe and real world perspectives.\n
\n
Read more about [how to comment at Daystrom](https://startrek.website/post/175954).\n
\n
##### **Rules**\n
\n
**1. Explain your reasoning**\n
\n
All threads and comments submitted to the Daystrom Institute must contain an explanation of the reasoning put forth.\n
\n
**2. No whinging, jokes, memes, and other shallow content.**\n
\n
This entire community has a “serious tag” on it. Shitposts are encouraged in [Risa](https://startrek.website/c/risa).\n
\n
**3. Be diplomatic.**\n
\n
Participate in a courteous, objective, and open-minded fashion. Be nice to other posters and the people who make *Star Trek.* Disagree respectfully and don’t gatekeep.\n
\n
**4. Assume good faith.**\n
\n
Assume good faith. Give other posters the benefit of the doubt, but report them if you genuinely believe they are trolling. Don’t whine about “politics.”\n
\n
**5. Tag spoilers.**\n
\n
Historically Daystrom has not had a spoiler policy, so you may encounter untagged spoilers here. Ultimately, avoiding online discussion until you are caught up is the only certain way to avoid spoilers.\n
\n
**6. Stay on-topic.**\n
\n
Threads must discuss Star Trek. Comments must discuss the topic raised in the original post.\n
\n
#### **Episode Guides**\n
\n
The /r/DaystromInstitute wiki held a number of popular Star Trek watch guides. We have rehosted them here:\n
\n
- [Kraetos’ guide to Star Trek (the original series)](https://startrek.website/post/760)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Animated Series](https://startrek.website/post/765)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Next Generation](https://startrek.website/post/768)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/776)\n
- [Darth_Rasputin32898’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/772)\n
- [OpticalData’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/780)\n
- [petrus4’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/781)
"""
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+slug: "Annotations-for-Star-Trek-Strange-New-Worlds-2x07-Those-Old"
+title: "Annotations for *Star Trek: Strange New Worlds* 2x07: “Those Old Scientists” (SPOILERS)"
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+body: """
The title comes from LD’s 1st Season finale, “No Small Parts”, when CMDR Jack Ransom, XO of the USS *Cerritos*, refers to the TOS era as “Those Old Scientists”.\n
\n
We start on Stardate 58460.1 in an animated segment. This places it in 2381, and sometime between LD 3x06: “Hear All, Trust Nothing” (58456.2) and LD 3x09: “Trusted Sources” (58496.1). 3x07 and 3x08 don’t have stardate references. The ship is doing a check on the Krulmuth-B portal, which has been dormant for 120 years - and if you do the calculations you can see where this is going.\n
\n
Boimler says the portal was discovered by Pike and the “second” *Enterprise* and refers to Una as “Numero Una” to Mariner’s annoyance. Rutherford talks about teleron radiation. I’m assuming it’s not a CC typo and it’s distinct from “thalaron radiation” (*Nemesis*).\n
\n
Tendi’s great-grandmother was on an Orion science vessel, and she claims the Orions were the ones who actually discovered the portal (which looks vaguely *Stargate*-like). Rutherford is wearing a holographic imager around his neck (last seen in LD: “Veritas” and of the type first seen in VOY: “Latent Image”).\n
\n
Rutherford picks up traces of horonium. Hōra is the Greek word for “time”, from which we get the word horology, the art of making clocks. Boimler says Starfleet used horonium in NX-class ships, because it was lightweight, durable and was the right shade of grey (Mariner refers to the Starfleet History Museum - it’s not clear if this is the same as the Fleet Museum from PIC).\n
\n
Boimler screams “Remember me!” as he gets sucked into the portal, in the way that Beverly Crusher is also almost sucked into one in TNG: “Remember Me”. The phrase is originally from Shakespeare, specifically *Hamlet* Act I, sc v when the Ghost says: “Adieu, adieu, adieu. Remember me,” as he exits. The line is repeated by Hamlet later in the scene.\n
\n
The title sequence for this episode is animated in the LD style, with the space beast from the LD titles now suckling on the back of the *Enterprise*. Now I want an animated model of the *Enterprise* to match my *Titan*. At the end when the title card comes up we see the outline of the cosmic koala next to the planet (LD: “Moist Vessel”).\n
\n
Pike’s log is stardated 2291.6. *Enterprise* is delivering a shipment of grain to a colony on Setlik II. In the future (c. 2347), the Setlik *III* colony would be the site of an infamous massacre during the Cardassian wars with the Federation (TNG: “The Wounded”).\n
\n
Una reports that Boimler’s delta is also a communicator, confirming once and for all that SNW’s deltas are not. Boimler has purple hair, like he does when animated. On awakening he calls out, “Computer end program,” thinking he’s on a holodeck. He refers to the ship’s S/COMS operating system as opposed to LCARS in his era.\n
\n
La’An is uniquely qualified to lecture on temporal protocols as she’s gone through the same experience (SNW: “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow”). She talks about not making any attachments owing to the trauma she underwent when the alternate Jim Kirk died in her arms in the past. Boimler accidentally lets slip Worf’s name.\n
\n
Boimler waits in Pike’s office, as evidenced by the presence of the saddle and he calls out “Riker” as he mounts it with the Riker Maneuver (the popular explanation for the move is that Frakes suffered a back injury but although that injury did result in him doing the “Riker lean”, Frakes said in an interview that the chair maneuver was that he felt it was a cocky move suited to Riker, and no one stopped him so it stuck).\n
\n
Boimler asks if M’Benga is holding a classic TS-122 tricorder and M’Benga says it’s a TS-120. In the 24th Century, tricorders are of the TR series. Boimler theorizes that radioisotopes from the holographic imager set the portal off. Boimler is startled when Spock laughs.\n
\n
The ship is an Orion scout ship, technically first appearing in TOS: “Journey to Babel” as just a glowing blob, but redesigned as a more detailed CGI model for the remastered episode by Michael Okuda. A slight continuity contradiction arises: in “Babel” Spock doesn’t recognize the configuration of the scout ship when they encounter it then.\n
\n
Boimler says “NCC-1701 dash nothing,” referring to the future ships’ names in homage to the original and of course puzzling Una and La’An. He identifies Ortegas as a war hero, referring to her service in the Klingon War. Captain Harr Caras commands the Orion science vessel *D’Var*.\n
\n
I can’t feel that sorry for Boims having his chops busted, because I’d just love being paid attention to like that by Jess Bush and Melissa Navia. He says this is the “golden age of exploration”, echoing Pike’s words from the previous episode. He lets slip that Pike’s birthday is on Friday (on movie night) and is a holiday in the 24th Century.\n
\n
Chapel is rather devastated to learn that she’s not mentioned in books on Spock in the future. Boimler refers to Spock’s pet *sehlat* (TAS: “Yesteryear”). Ortegas calls Boimler “Future Boy”, a nickname Doc Brown applied to Marty McFly in *Back to the Future*.\n
\n
Turns out the grain Pike is carrying is trititicale. Its variant, quadrotriticale, would be central to the Federation’s efforts on Sherman’s Planet in TOS: “The Trouble with Tribbles”. Presumably it’s a three-lobed version as opposed to the four-lobed quadrotriticale. Triticale is a real life grain that writer David Gerrold based quadrotriticale on in “Tribbles”.\n
\n
Mariner uses up the last of the horonium in the portal, and Una says there’s hasn’t been a supply for a hundred years. Mariner says for all she knew Boimler could have been “stuck in a dystopian San Francisco in the middle of a riot”, referring to the Bell Riots of DS9: “Past Tense”. She finds young Spock hot, much like Jazdia Dax did to his slightly older counterpart in DS9: “Trials and Tribble-lations”.\n
\n
Boimler does the “Section 31 speed walk” when walking away from Mariner down the corridors (LD: “Envoys”), which he claimed conserved energy. Una wonders if Boimler’s poster is a “pin-up” poster, of which there are very many of Rebecca Romijn.\n
\n
Uhura says she’s 22 (the same age as Celia Rose Golding), which immediately makes this old chronologist’s mind start doing calculations. The official *Star Trek* website places her birth year as 2239, which would make the present year 2261, which sort of tracks (my estimate is between 2260-61).\n
\n
Mariner quotes Starfleet labor codes: section 48-Alpha-7: “Officers must take meal breaks at regular intervals”. She claims that she knows those that help her slack off. She makes Orion Hurricanes for Uhura and Ortegas, although they don’t have Orion *delaq*, which she says will mess them up. Uhura’s PADD shows her comparing the inscriptions on the portal to Bajoran and Cardassian script.\n
\n
Ortegas refers to Starbase Earhart, probably best remembered as housing the Bonestell Entertainment Facility where Jean-Luc Picard was stabbed by Nausicaans in 2337 (TNG: “Tapestry”). It also had a *dom-jot* table. Mariner and Tendi visited it in LD: “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”. Mariner says Nausicaans are terrible at *dom-jot*, a billiard-type game, but still love to bet on it. Ortegas’ recognition of the letters leads Uhura to discover the language is a thousands-years old ancient Nausicaan dialect.\n
\n
Boimler seeks solace in Engineering. Pelia says there is nothing quite so soothing as a properly calibrated warp core, which Boimler would agree with as he’s often said in LD that warp cores are cool. Pelia’s quote is from Cary Grant, which implies she knew him.\n
\n
Mariner chides Boimler for shouting “Holy Q” because they hadn’t met him yet in the 23rd Century but qualifies it with “they had kind of a Trelane thing going on.” Fanon often states that Trelane (TOS: “The Squire of Gothos”) and Q are related because their MO is remarkably similar. This link was made explicit in the novels (*Q-Squared*). Mariner has met Q before (LD: “Veritas”).\n
\n
Boimler remarks how slow and quietly everyone talks in this era, in stark contrast to the high-speed and intense dialogue they use on the half-hour animated *Lower Decks*.\n
\n
Boimler once dressed up as Pike for Halloween, and had to contour his chin to fit. Pike confesses he and his father never got along, and that was never resolved. This year is the first year he’s older than his father when he died. He planned to fish on Setlik II’s ice moon with a bottle of whiskey and have an imaginary talk with his father.\n
\n
Pike refers to Archer’s *Enterprise*, the NX-01, which reminds Boimler that horonium was used in its construction (a little over a hundred years ago). Boimler talks about the NX-01’s grapplers (which La’An loves), the precursor to a ship’s tractor beam. Grapplers were also seen in SNW: “Life Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach”.\n
\n
Starfleet tradition is that every time a new ship is commissioned, construction starts with an old piece of the last ship that bore the name (which explains why Boimler called this the “second” *Enterprise*). Which means there’s a piece of horonium on the ship.\n
\n
The piece in question appears to be a gas cylinder. Ortegas says she’s a fan of Travis Mayweather, first pilot of the NX-01, and her middle school gym was named after him. Uhura mentions Hoshi Sato, who spoke 86 languages - Uhura wrote 3 papers on her at the Academy. I’m happy to see the NX-01 crew get the love they never quite got when the series was around.\n
\n
Mariner tells Una that Boimler’s pin-up of her is a recruitment poster and inspired Boimler to join Starfleet. Una is moved that they put “ad astra per aspera” on the poster, the Starfleet motto she quoted during her trial (SNW: “Ad Astra Per Aspera”).\n
\n
Captain Caras recognizes Tendi’s title “Mistress of the Winter Constellations” (“We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”) and says that he has an Astrea Tendi on his ship. Pike’s offer to give the Orion scientists credit also explains why Tendi tells Boimler that Orions discovered the portal. I wish we could have seen Nöel Wells in live action, though.\n
\n
Ransom calls “Numero Una” the hottest first officer in Starfleet history. Ransom is voiced by Jerry O’Connell, who is married to Rebecca Romijn. Mariner says Ransom sleeps face down “like a baby”.\n
\n
We are rewarded with an animated SNW epilogue, which is explained by them hallucinating after imbibing Orion Hurricanes with real *delaq*.
"""
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+title: "daystrominstitute"
+description: """
[Welcome to Daystrom Institute!](https://startrek.website/post/73)\n
\n
Serious, in-depth discussion about *Star Trek* from both in-universe and real world perspectives.\n
\n
Read more about [how to comment at Daystrom](https://startrek.website/post/175954).\n
\n
##### **Rules**\n
\n
**1. Explain your reasoning**\n
\n
All threads and comments submitted to the Daystrom Institute must contain an explanation of the reasoning put forth.\n
\n
**2. No whinging, jokes, memes, and other shallow content.**\n
\n
This entire community has a “serious tag” on it. Shitposts are encouraged in [Risa](https://startrek.website/c/risa).\n
\n
**3. Be diplomatic.**\n
\n
Participate in a courteous, objective, and open-minded fashion. Be nice to other posters and the people who make *Star Trek.* Disagree respectfully and don’t gatekeep.\n
\n
**4. Assume good faith.**\n
\n
Assume good faith. Give other posters the benefit of the doubt, but report them if you genuinely believe they are trolling. Don’t whine about “politics.”\n
\n
**5. Tag spoilers.**\n
\n
Historically Daystrom has not had a spoiler policy, so you may encounter untagged spoilers here. Ultimately, avoiding online discussion until you are caught up is the only certain way to avoid spoilers.\n
\n
**6. Stay on-topic.**\n
\n
Threads must discuss Star Trek. Comments must discuss the topic raised in the original post.\n
\n
#### **Episode Guides**\n
\n
The /r/DaystromInstitute wiki held a number of popular Star Trek watch guides. We have rehosted them here:\n
\n
- [Kraetos’ guide to Star Trek (the original series)](https://startrek.website/post/760)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Animated Series](https://startrek.website/post/765)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Next Generation](https://startrek.website/post/768)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/776)\n
- [Darth_Rasputin32898’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/772)\n
- [OpticalData’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/780)\n
- [petrus4’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/781)
"""
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+slug: "Annotations-for-Star-Trek-Strange-New-Worlds-2x07-Those-Old"
+title: "Annotations for *Star Trek: Strange New Worlds* 2x07: “Those Old Scientists” (SPOILERS)"
+url: null
+body: """
The title comes from LD’s 1st Season finale, “No Small Parts”, when CMDR Jack Ransom, XO of the USS *Cerritos*, refers to the TOS era as “Those Old Scientists”.\n
\n
We start on Stardate 58460.1 in an animated segment. This places it in 2381, and sometime between LD 3x06: “Hear All, Trust Nothing” (58456.2) and LD 3x09: “Trusted Sources” (58496.1). 3x07 and 3x08 don’t have stardate references. The ship is doing a check on the Krulmuth-B portal, which has been dormant for 120 years - and if you do the calculations you can see where this is going.\n
\n
Boimler says the portal was discovered by Pike and the “second” *Enterprise* and refers to Una as “Numero Una” to Mariner’s annoyance. Rutherford talks about teleron radiation. I’m assuming it’s not a CC typo and it’s distinct from “thalaron radiation” (*Nemesis*).\n
\n
Tendi’s great-grandmother was on an Orion science vessel, and she claims the Orions were the ones who actually discovered the portal (which looks vaguely *Stargate*-like). Rutherford is wearing a holographic imager around his neck (last seen in LD: “Veritas” and of the type first seen in VOY: “Latent Image”).\n
\n
Rutherford picks up traces of horonium. Hōra is the Greek word for “time”, from which we get the word horology, the art of making clocks. Boimler says Starfleet used horonium in NX-class ships, because it was lightweight, durable and was the right shade of grey (Mariner refers to the Starfleet History Museum - it’s not clear if this is the same as the Fleet Museum from PIC).\n
\n
Boimler screams “Remember me!” as he gets sucked into the portal, in the way that Beverly Crusher is also almost sucked into one in TNG: “Remember Me”. The phrase is originally from Shakespeare, specifically *Hamlet* Act I, sc v when the Ghost says: “Adieu, adieu, adieu. Remember me,” as he exits. The line is repeated by Hamlet later in the scene.\n
\n
The title sequence for this episode is animated in the LD style, with the space beast from the LD titles now suckling on the back of the *Enterprise*. Now I want an animated model of the *Enterprise* to match my *Titan*. At the end when the title card comes up we see the outline of the cosmic koala next to the planet (LD: “Moist Vessel”).\n
\n
Pike’s log is stardated 2291.6. *Enterprise* is delivering a shipment of grain to a colony on Setlik II. In the future (c. 2347), the Setlik *III* colony would be the site of an infamous massacre during the Cardassian wars with the Federation (TNG: “The Wounded”).\n
\n
Una reports that Boimler’s delta is also a communicator, confirming once and for all that SNW’s deltas are not. Boimler has purple hair, like he does when animated. On awakening he calls out, “Computer end program,” thinking he’s on a holodeck. He refers to the ship’s S/COMS operating system as opposed to LCARS in his era.\n
\n
La’An is uniquely qualified to lecture on temporal protocols as she’s gone through the same experience (SNW: “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow”). She talks about not making any attachments owing to the trauma she underwent when the alternate Jim Kirk died in her arms in the past. Boimler accidentally lets slip Worf’s name.\n
\n
Boimler waits in Pike’s office, as evidenced by the presence of the saddle and he calls out “Riker” as he mounts it with the Riker Maneuver (the popular explanation for the move is that Frakes suffered a back injury but although that injury did result in him doing the “Riker lean”, Frakes said in an interview that the chair maneuver was that he felt it was a cocky move suited to Riker, and no one stopped him so it stuck).\n
\n
Boimler asks if M’Benga is holding a classic TS-122 tricorder and M’Benga says it’s a TS-120. In the 24th Century, tricorders are of the TR series. Boimler theorizes that radioisotopes from the holographic imager set the portal off. Boimler is startled when Spock laughs.\n
\n
The ship is an Orion scout ship, technically first appearing in TOS: “Journey to Babel” as just a glowing blob, but redesigned as a more detailed CGI model for the remastered episode by Michael Okuda. A slight continuity contradiction arises: in “Babel” Spock doesn’t recognize the configuration of the scout ship when they encounter it then.\n
\n
Boimler says “NCC-1701 dash nothing,” referring to the future ships’ names in homage to the original and of course puzzling Una and La’An. He identifies Ortegas as a war hero, referring to her service in the Klingon War. Captain Harr Caras commands the Orion science vessel *D’Var*.\n
\n
I can’t feel that sorry for Boims having his chops busted, because I’d just love being paid attention to like that by Jess Bush and Melissa Navia. He says this is the “golden age of exploration”, echoing Pike’s words from the previous episode. He lets slip that Pike’s birthday is on Friday (on movie night) and is a holiday in the 24th Century.\n
\n
Chapel is rather devastated to learn that she’s not mentioned in books on Spock in the future. Boimler refers to Spock’s pet *sehlat* (TAS: “Yesteryear”). Ortegas calls Boimler “Future Boy”, a nickname Doc Brown applied to Marty McFly in *Back to the Future*.\n
\n
Turns out the grain Pike is carrying is trititicale. Its variant, quadrotriticale, would be central to the Federation’s efforts on Sherman’s Planet in TOS: “The Trouble with Tribbles”. Presumably it’s a three-lobed version as opposed to the four-lobed quadrotriticale. Triticale is a real life grain that writer David Gerrold based quadrotriticale on in “Tribbles”.\n
\n
Mariner uses up the last of the horonium in the portal, and Una says there’s hasn’t been a supply for a hundred years. Mariner says for all she knew Boimler could have been “stuck in a dystopian San Francisco in the middle of a riot”, referring to the Bell Riots of DS9: “Past Tense”. She finds young Spock hot, much like Jazdia Dax did to his slightly older counterpart in DS9: “Trials and Tribble-lations”.\n
\n
Boimler does the “Section 31 speed walk” when walking away from Mariner down the corridors (LD: “Envoys”), which he claimed conserved energy. Una wonders if Boimler’s poster is a “pin-up” poster, of which there are very many of Rebecca Romijn.\n
\n
Uhura says she’s 22 (the same age as Celia Rose Golding), which immediately makes this old chronologist’s mind start doing calculations. The official *Star Trek* website places her birth year as 2239, which would make the present year 2261, which sort of tracks (my estimate is between 2260-61).\n
\n
Mariner quotes Starfleet labor codes: section 48-Alpha-7: “Officers must take meal breaks at regular intervals”. She claims that she knows those that help her slack off. She makes Orion Hurricanes for Uhura and Ortegas, although they don’t have Orion *delaq*, which she says will mess them up. Uhura’s PADD shows her comparing the inscriptions on the portal to Bajoran and Cardassian script.\n
\n
Ortegas refers to Starbase Earhart, probably best remembered as housing the Bonestell Entertainment Facility where Jean-Luc Picard was stabbed by Nausicaans in 2337 (TNG: “Tapestry”). It also had a *dom-jot* table. Mariner and Tendi visited it in LD: “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”. Mariner says Nausicaans are terrible at *dom-jot*, a billiard-type game, but still love to bet on it. Ortegas’ recognition of the letters leads Uhura to discover the language is a thousands-years old ancient Nausicaan dialect.\n
\n
Boimler seeks solace in Engineering. Pelia says there is nothing quite so soothing as a properly calibrated warp core, which Boimler would agree with as he’s often said in LD that warp cores are cool. Pelia’s quote is from Cary Grant, which implies she knew him.\n
\n
Mariner chides Boimler for shouting “Holy Q” because they hadn’t met him yet in the 23rd Century but qualifies it with “they had kind of a Trelane thing going on.” Fanon often states that Trelane (TOS: “The Squire of Gothos”) and Q are related because their MO is remarkably similar. This link was made explicit in the novels (*Q-Squared*). Mariner has met Q before (LD: “Veritas”).\n
\n
Boimler remarks how slow and quietly everyone talks in this era, in stark contrast to the high-speed and intense dialogue they use on the half-hour animated *Lower Decks*.\n
\n
Boimler once dressed up as Pike for Halloween, and had to contour his chin to fit. Pike confesses he and his father never got along, and that was never resolved. This year is the first year he’s older than his father when he died. He planned to fish on Setlik II’s ice moon with a bottle of whiskey and have an imaginary talk with his father.\n
\n
Pike refers to Archer’s *Enterprise*, the NX-01, which reminds Boimler that horonium was used in its construction (a little over a hundred years ago). Boimler talks about the NX-01’s grapplers (which La’An loves), the precursor to a ship’s tractor beam. Grapplers were also seen in SNW: “Life Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach”.\n
\n
Starfleet tradition is that every time a new ship is commissioned, construction starts with an old piece of the last ship that bore the name (which explains why Boimler called this the “second” *Enterprise*). Which means there’s a piece of horonium on the ship.\n
\n
The piece in question appears to be a gas cylinder. Ortegas says she’s a fan of Travis Mayweather, first pilot of the NX-01, and her middle school gym was named after him. Uhura mentions Hoshi Sato, who spoke 86 languages - Uhura wrote 3 papers on her at the Academy. I’m happy to see the NX-01 crew get the love they never quite got when the series was around.\n
\n
Mariner tells Una that Boimler’s pin-up of her is a recruitment poster and inspired Boimler to join Starfleet. Una is moved that they put “ad astra per aspera” on the poster, the Starfleet motto she quoted during her trial (SNW: “Ad Astra Per Aspera”).\n
\n
Captain Caras recognizes Tendi’s title “Mistress of the Winter Constellations” (“We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”) and says that he has an Astrea Tendi on his ship. Pike’s offer to give the Orion scientists credit also explains why Tendi tells Boimler that Orions discovered the portal. I wish we could have seen Nöel Wells in live action, though.\n
\n
Ransom calls “Numero Una” the hottest first officer in Starfleet history. Ransom is voiced by Jerry O’Connell, who is married to Rebecca Romijn. Mariner says Ransom sleeps face down “like a baby”.\n
\n
We are rewarded with an animated SNW epilogue, which is explained by them hallucinating after imbibing Orion Hurricanes with real *delaq*.
"""
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+title: "daystrominstitute"
+description: """
[Welcome to Daystrom Institute!](https://startrek.website/post/73)\n
\n
Serious, in-depth discussion about *Star Trek* from both in-universe and real world perspectives.\n
\n
Read more about [how to comment at Daystrom](https://startrek.website/post/175954).\n
\n
##### **Rules**\n
\n
**1. Explain your reasoning**\n
\n
All threads and comments submitted to the Daystrom Institute must contain an explanation of the reasoning put forth.\n
\n
**2. No whinging, jokes, memes, and other shallow content.**\n
\n
This entire community has a “serious tag” on it. Shitposts are encouraged in [Risa](https://startrek.website/c/risa).\n
\n
**3. Be diplomatic.**\n
\n
Participate in a courteous, objective, and open-minded fashion. Be nice to other posters and the people who make *Star Trek.* Disagree respectfully and don’t gatekeep.\n
\n
**4. Assume good faith.**\n
\n
Assume good faith. Give other posters the benefit of the doubt, but report them if you genuinely believe they are trolling. Don’t whine about “politics.”\n
\n
**5. Tag spoilers.**\n
\n
Historically Daystrom has not had a spoiler policy, so you may encounter untagged spoilers here. Ultimately, avoiding online discussion until you are caught up is the only certain way to avoid spoilers.\n
\n
**6. Stay on-topic.**\n
\n
Threads must discuss Star Trek. Comments must discuss the topic raised in the original post.\n
\n
#### **Episode Guides**\n
\n
The /r/DaystromInstitute wiki held a number of popular Star Trek watch guides. We have rehosted them here:\n
\n
- [Kraetos’ guide to Star Trek (the original series)](https://startrek.website/post/760)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Animated Series](https://startrek.website/post/765)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Next Generation](https://startrek.website/post/768)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/776)\n
- [Darth_Rasputin32898’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/772)\n
- [OpticalData’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/780)\n
- [petrus4’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/781)
"""
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+slug: "What-are-the-progressive-social-issues-of-the-24th-Century"
+title: "What are the progressive social issues of the 24th Century?"
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+body: """
While some may argue in transparently bad faith that it isn’t so, it’s obvious to even a casual observer that Star Trek’s setting depicts in the Federation a vision of society in which the goals of both the social and economic left wing have largely won out and largely been attained. The people of the Federation have relatively complete equality of race, gender, sexuality, and even species. Resources are abundant and housing, food, shelter, healthcare, education, and beyond even the necessities even most of the pleasures of life are provided to virtually all. The environment is protected and even controlled on many populated planets to protect the ecosystem.\n
\n
What, then, is at the cutting edge of politics for the Federation? In the interests of disclosure, I have identified as an anarcha-feminist and a pacifist for more than a decade (albeit not a tremendously intellectual one), and my analysis here is based in large part on the issues I believe that, as a civilian living in Star Trek’s universe, I would likely have strong positions on.\n
\n
A few candidates immediately present themselves:\n
\n
- AI rights. A major theme of 24th-century Star Trek, from the beginning of TNG right up to Picard, is the debate over the rights of artificial intelligences, whether in the form of androids and synths like Data and Soji or photonics like the Doctor, Vic, and Moriarty. Less attention is given to less anthropomorphic forms of artificial intelligence. As we see in Lower Decks, Starfleet and the Daystrom Institute keep rogue AIs such as AGIMUS, Peanut Hamper, and 10111, with no evidence that they received any kind of trial or evaluation. The tragedy of 2385 became a major impediment to AI rights, but after the events of season 1 of Picard they seem to be back on track, at least for Synths. The personhood of photonics and non-anthropomorphic AIs remains up in the air.\n
- Augment rights. This may be an internally contentious issue. on the one hand, it is clear that genetically-altered individuals are marginalized as of the Dominion War. It is by the narrowest of margins that Bashir avoids being drummed out of Starfleet for being the recipient of a medical procedure he had no ability to consent to or refuse, and the Jack Pack are in some ways treated more like inmates than patients. Less than a century and a half before, Illyrians were persecuted and La’an Noonien Singh faced bullying as a child for being the distant descendant of Khan. However the memory of the Eugenics Wars looms large in the human imagination and genetic augmentation may still be viewed by some as inherently hierarchical.\n
- Humanocentrism and Vulcan Supremacy. Azetbur’s remarks on the Federation as a “Homo sapiens-only” club are not strictly true, but they’re not strictly unfounded either. The Federation’s capital has always been Earth, Starfleet’s headquarters are on Earth, Earth seems to have more colonies than any other member world (and stay tuned while we discuss that further), Humans make up the bulk of Starfleet (even on the Cerritos, by far the most species-diverse ship shown in Trek canon, the majority of the crew seem to be human), Federation Standard is closely descended from English, and four out of six Federation Presidents named or depicted across Star Trek canon are either human or of partial human ancestry. Vulcans, meanwhile, are frequently openly prejudiced against other species and seem to face little opprobrium for being so. This is more prominent in the 22nd and 23rd century, with anti-human terrorism on Vulcan, Spock’s childhood bullying, and Starfleet even declaring entire vessels (such as the Intrepid) Vulcan-only; but it still seems to be present in the 24th and even, in some respects, as far ahead as the 32nd century.\n
- Seceding worlds (and the Maquis.) Unlike the United States of America, which had a whole civil war over the matter, Federation member worlds, and even colonies, appear to have the right to withdraw Federation membership. Aside from the Cardassian Border colonies that produced the Maquis rebellion, Turkana IV is perhaps the most prominent example in the 24th century. We know later in history most of the Federation’s worlds, including Earth, Ni’Var, and Andoria, will secede as well in the aftermath of the Burn, and there are some indications that M’Talas Prime may be ex-Federation by the time of Picard. Turkana IV and M’Talas prime serve as an effective demonstration of exactly why this might become a progressive issue: neither seems to have thrived without the Federation, and the Maquis secession resulted in years of violence ending in mass murder on the part of the Dominion. On the other hand making Federation membership irrevocable is not exactly respectful of the sovereignty of those worlds’ people. This is likely an issue that sees divided perspectives.\n
- Expansionism and Imperialism. This may be another controversial one. It is undeniable that the Federation is expansionist, always settling new worlds, welcoming new members, and pushing its borders outwards. As an organization Boldly Going Where No Man Has Gone Before is a central element of Starfleet’s mission. However it is clear that one of the key goals of the Prime Directive^1^ is in ensuring that this expansion does not come at the expense of sovereign indigenous civilizations. Nevertheless, we often see the citizens of other polities feel their people are pressured, or even subtly coerced, to join the Federation, especially in DS9. It is not hard to believe that these concerns are shared by at least some Federation citizens.\n
- Social issues in neighboring societies. It is clear that many of the Federation’s neighbors do not place as high a value on the rights of the individual or of the people as do the Federation, from Ferengi misogyny to Klingon classism to Cardassian totalitarianism. This is the opposite side of the coin from the prior issue, and it seems like the dominant strain of thought in the Federation is to pursue a policy of not intervening even in other advanced societies in the name of inalienable rights, or even providing more than token support to internal resistance movements much of the time (witness the struggles of Bajor, for instance.)\n
- Section 31. It remains unclear how much of the existence of Section 31, particularly in its modern form, is known to the public. However if it is known, an organization willing to violate the Federation’s every high-minded principle in the ruthless pursuit of protecting its interests is doubtless a fraught subject. If their existence only *became* public knowledge after the fact of their indiscretions, one could easily imagine it being a scandal that tarnishes entire governments.\n
- Criminal Justice. While crime is no longer as widespread as it is in our own time due to lack of deprivation, the Federation still practices a form of carceral justice. Better minds than I discuss elsewhere the matters of police and prison abolition. Here is one 21st-century left-wing cause that hasn’t yet become obsolete.\n
- Militarism. A common criticism of Star Trek is that everything in the Federation seems to revolve around Starfleet. While that’s partly a limitation of the nature of the show, it raises the question: how true is it really? And how true do the people of the 24th century perceive it to be? How comfortable are civilians with the prominence of Starfleet?\n
\n
Please use the comments to offer your own insights, or to suggest any issues I may have overlooked.\n
\n
^A subject about which liberal and left-wing arguments both for and against are so played out as to be not worth any further mention.
"""
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[Welcome to Daystrom Institute!](https://startrek.website/post/73)\n
\n
Serious, in-depth discussion about *Star Trek* from both in-universe and real world perspectives.\n
\n
Read more about [how to comment at Daystrom](https://startrek.website/post/175954).\n
\n
##### **Rules**\n
\n
**1. Explain your reasoning**\n
\n
All threads and comments submitted to the Daystrom Institute must contain an explanation of the reasoning put forth.\n
\n
**2. No whinging, jokes, memes, and other shallow content.**\n
\n
This entire community has a “serious tag” on it. Shitposts are encouraged in [Risa](https://startrek.website/c/risa).\n
\n
**3. Be diplomatic.**\n
\n
Participate in a courteous, objective, and open-minded fashion. Be nice to other posters and the people who make *Star Trek.* Disagree respectfully and don’t gatekeep.\n
\n
**4. Assume good faith.**\n
\n
Assume good faith. Give other posters the benefit of the doubt, but report them if you genuinely believe they are trolling. Don’t whine about “politics.”\n
\n
**5. Tag spoilers.**\n
\n
Historically Daystrom has not had a spoiler policy, so you may encounter untagged spoilers here. Ultimately, avoiding online discussion until you are caught up is the only certain way to avoid spoilers.\n
\n
**6. Stay on-topic.**\n
\n
Threads must discuss Star Trek. Comments must discuss the topic raised in the original post.\n
\n
#### **Episode Guides**\n
\n
The /r/DaystromInstitute wiki held a number of popular Star Trek watch guides. We have rehosted them here:\n
\n
- [Kraetos’ guide to Star Trek (the original series)](https://startrek.website/post/760)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Animated Series](https://startrek.website/post/765)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Next Generation](https://startrek.website/post/768)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/776)\n
- [Darth_Rasputin32898’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/772)\n
- [OpticalData’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/780)\n
- [petrus4’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/781)
"""
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+slug: "What-are-the-progressive-social-issues-of-the-24th-Century"
+title: "What are the progressive social issues of the 24th Century?"
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+body: """
While some may argue in transparently bad faith that it isn’t so, it’s obvious to even a casual observer that Star Trek’s setting depicts in the Federation a vision of society in which the goals of both the social and economic left wing have largely won out and largely been attained. The people of the Federation have relatively complete equality of race, gender, sexuality, and even species. Resources are abundant and housing, food, shelter, healthcare, education, and beyond even the necessities even most of the pleasures of life are provided to virtually all. The environment is protected and even controlled on many populated planets to protect the ecosystem.\n
\n
What, then, is at the cutting edge of politics for the Federation? In the interests of disclosure, I have identified as an anarcha-feminist and a pacifist for more than a decade (albeit not a tremendously intellectual one), and my analysis here is based in large part on the issues I believe that, as a civilian living in Star Trek’s universe, I would likely have strong positions on.\n
\n
A few candidates immediately present themselves:\n
\n
- AI rights. A major theme of 24th-century Star Trek, from the beginning of TNG right up to Picard, is the debate over the rights of artificial intelligences, whether in the form of androids and synths like Data and Soji or photonics like the Doctor, Vic, and Moriarty. Less attention is given to less anthropomorphic forms of artificial intelligence. As we see in Lower Decks, Starfleet and the Daystrom Institute keep rogue AIs such as AGIMUS, Peanut Hamper, and 10111, with no evidence that they received any kind of trial or evaluation. The tragedy of 2385 became a major impediment to AI rights, but after the events of season 1 of Picard they seem to be back on track, at least for Synths. The personhood of photonics and non-anthropomorphic AIs remains up in the air.\n
- Augment rights. This may be an internally contentious issue. on the one hand, it is clear that genetically-altered individuals are marginalized as of the Dominion War. It is by the narrowest of margins that Bashir avoids being drummed out of Starfleet for being the recipient of a medical procedure he had no ability to consent to or refuse, and the Jack Pack are in some ways treated more like inmates than patients. Less than a century and a half before, Illyrians were persecuted and La’an Noonien Singh faced bullying as a child for being the distant descendant of Khan. However the memory of the Eugenics Wars looms large in the human imagination and genetic augmentation may still be viewed by some as inherently hierarchical.\n
- Humanocentrism and Vulcan Supremacy. Azetbur’s remarks on the Federation as a “Homo sapiens-only” club are not strictly true, but they’re not strictly unfounded either. The Federation’s capital has always been Earth, Starfleet’s headquarters are on Earth, Earth seems to have more colonies than any other member world (and stay tuned while we discuss that further), Humans make up the bulk of Starfleet (even on the Cerritos, by far the most species-diverse ship shown in Trek canon, the majority of the crew seem to be human), Federation Standard is closely descended from English, and four out of six Federation Presidents named or depicted across Star Trek canon are either human or of partial human ancestry. Vulcans, meanwhile, are frequently openly prejudiced against other species and seem to face little opprobrium for being so. This is more prominent in the 22nd and 23rd century, with anti-human terrorism on Vulcan, Spock’s childhood bullying, and Starfleet even declaring entire vessels (such as the Intrepid) Vulcan-only; but it still seems to be present in the 24th and even, in some respects, as far ahead as the 32nd century.\n
- Seceding worlds (and the Maquis.) Unlike the United States of America, which had a whole civil war over the matter, Federation member worlds, and even colonies, appear to have the right to withdraw Federation membership. Aside from the Cardassian Border colonies that produced the Maquis rebellion, Turkana IV is perhaps the most prominent example in the 24th century. We know later in history most of the Federation’s worlds, including Earth, Ni’Var, and Andoria, will secede as well in the aftermath of the Burn, and there are some indications that M’Talas Prime may be ex-Federation by the time of Picard. Turkana IV and M’Talas prime serve as an effective demonstration of exactly why this might become a progressive issue: neither seems to have thrived without the Federation, and the Maquis secession resulted in years of violence ending in mass murder on the part of the Dominion. On the other hand making Federation membership irrevocable is not exactly respectful of the sovereignty of those worlds’ people. This is likely an issue that sees divided perspectives.\n
- Expansionism and Imperialism. This may be another controversial one. It is undeniable that the Federation is expansionist, always settling new worlds, welcoming new members, and pushing its borders outwards. As an organization Boldly Going Where No Man Has Gone Before is a central element of Starfleet’s mission. However it is clear that one of the key goals of the Prime Directive^1^ is in ensuring that this expansion does not come at the expense of sovereign indigenous civilizations. Nevertheless, we often see the citizens of other polities feel their people are pressured, or even subtly coerced, to join the Federation, especially in DS9. It is not hard to believe that these concerns are shared by at least some Federation citizens.\n
- Social issues in neighboring societies. It is clear that many of the Federation’s neighbors do not place as high a value on the rights of the individual or of the people as do the Federation, from Ferengi misogyny to Klingon classism to Cardassian totalitarianism. This is the opposite side of the coin from the prior issue, and it seems like the dominant strain of thought in the Federation is to pursue a policy of not intervening even in other advanced societies in the name of inalienable rights, or even providing more than token support to internal resistance movements much of the time (witness the struggles of Bajor, for instance.)\n
- Section 31. It remains unclear how much of the existence of Section 31, particularly in its modern form, is known to the public. However if it is known, an organization willing to violate the Federation’s every high-minded principle in the ruthless pursuit of protecting its interests is doubtless a fraught subject. If their existence only *became* public knowledge after the fact of their indiscretions, one could easily imagine it being a scandal that tarnishes entire governments.\n
- Criminal Justice. While crime is no longer as widespread as it is in our own time due to lack of deprivation, the Federation still practices a form of carceral justice. Better minds than I discuss elsewhere the matters of police and prison abolition. Here is one 21st-century left-wing cause that hasn’t yet become obsolete.\n
- Militarism. A common criticism of Star Trek is that everything in the Federation seems to revolve around Starfleet. While that’s partly a limitation of the nature of the show, it raises the question: how true is it really? And how true do the people of the 24th century perceive it to be? How comfortable are civilians with the prominence of Starfleet?\n
\n
Please use the comments to offer your own insights, or to suggest any issues I may have overlooked.\n
\n
^A subject about which liberal and left-wing arguments both for and against are so played out as to be not worth any further mention.
"""
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+title: "daystrominstitute"
+description: """
[Welcome to Daystrom Institute!](https://startrek.website/post/73)\n
\n
Serious, in-depth discussion about *Star Trek* from both in-universe and real world perspectives.\n
\n
Read more about [how to comment at Daystrom](https://startrek.website/post/175954).\n
\n
##### **Rules**\n
\n
**1. Explain your reasoning**\n
\n
All threads and comments submitted to the Daystrom Institute must contain an explanation of the reasoning put forth.\n
\n
**2. No whinging, jokes, memes, and other shallow content.**\n
\n
This entire community has a “serious tag” on it. Shitposts are encouraged in [Risa](https://startrek.website/c/risa).\n
\n
**3. Be diplomatic.**\n
\n
Participate in a courteous, objective, and open-minded fashion. Be nice to other posters and the people who make *Star Trek.* Disagree respectfully and don’t gatekeep.\n
\n
**4. Assume good faith.**\n
\n
Assume good faith. Give other posters the benefit of the doubt, but report them if you genuinely believe they are trolling. Don’t whine about “politics.”\n
\n
**5. Tag spoilers.**\n
\n
Historically Daystrom has not had a spoiler policy, so you may encounter untagged spoilers here. Ultimately, avoiding online discussion until you are caught up is the only certain way to avoid spoilers.\n
\n
**6. Stay on-topic.**\n
\n
Threads must discuss Star Trek. Comments must discuss the topic raised in the original post.\n
\n
#### **Episode Guides**\n
\n
The /r/DaystromInstitute wiki held a number of popular Star Trek watch guides. We have rehosted them here:\n
\n
- [Kraetos’ guide to Star Trek (the original series)](https://startrek.website/post/760)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Animated Series](https://startrek.website/post/765)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Next Generation](https://startrek.website/post/768)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/776)\n
- [Darth_Rasputin32898’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/772)\n
- [OpticalData’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/780)\n
- [petrus4’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/781)
"""
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+slug: "What-are-the-progressive-social-issues-of-the-24th-Century"
+title: "What are the progressive social issues of the 24th Century?"
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+body: """
While some may argue in transparently bad faith that it isn’t so, it’s obvious to even a casual observer that Star Trek’s setting depicts in the Federation a vision of society in which the goals of both the social and economic left wing have largely won out and largely been attained. The people of the Federation have relatively complete equality of race, gender, sexuality, and even species. Resources are abundant and housing, food, shelter, healthcare, education, and beyond even the necessities even most of the pleasures of life are provided to virtually all. The environment is protected and even controlled on many populated planets to protect the ecosystem.\n
\n
What, then, is at the cutting edge of politics for the Federation? In the interests of disclosure, I have identified as an anarcha-feminist and a pacifist for more than a decade (albeit not a tremendously intellectual one), and my analysis here is based in large part on the issues I believe that, as a civilian living in Star Trek’s universe, I would likely have strong positions on.\n
\n
A few candidates immediately present themselves:\n
\n
- AI rights. A major theme of 24th-century Star Trek, from the beginning of TNG right up to Picard, is the debate over the rights of artificial intelligences, whether in the form of androids and synths like Data and Soji or photonics like the Doctor, Vic, and Moriarty. Less attention is given to less anthropomorphic forms of artificial intelligence. As we see in Lower Decks, Starfleet and the Daystrom Institute keep rogue AIs such as AGIMUS, Peanut Hamper, and 10111, with no evidence that they received any kind of trial or evaluation. The tragedy of 2385 became a major impediment to AI rights, but after the events of season 1 of Picard they seem to be back on track, at least for Synths. The personhood of photonics and non-anthropomorphic AIs remains up in the air.\n
- Augment rights. This may be an internally contentious issue. on the one hand, it is clear that genetically-altered individuals are marginalized as of the Dominion War. It is by the narrowest of margins that Bashir avoids being drummed out of Starfleet for being the recipient of a medical procedure he had no ability to consent to or refuse, and the Jack Pack are in some ways treated more like inmates than patients. Less than a century and a half before, Illyrians were persecuted and La’an Noonien Singh faced bullying as a child for being the distant descendant of Khan. However the memory of the Eugenics Wars looms large in the human imagination and genetic augmentation may still be viewed by some as inherently hierarchical.\n
- Humanocentrism and Vulcan Supremacy. Azetbur’s remarks on the Federation as a “Homo sapiens-only” club are not strictly true, but they’re not strictly unfounded either. The Federation’s capital has always been Earth, Starfleet’s headquarters are on Earth, Earth seems to have more colonies than any other member world (and stay tuned while we discuss that further), Humans make up the bulk of Starfleet (even on the Cerritos, by far the most species-diverse ship shown in Trek canon, the majority of the crew seem to be human), Federation Standard is closely descended from English, and four out of six Federation Presidents named or depicted across Star Trek canon are either human or of partial human ancestry. Vulcans, meanwhile, are frequently openly prejudiced against other species and seem to face little opprobrium for being so. This is more prominent in the 22nd and 23rd century, with anti-human terrorism on Vulcan, Spock’s childhood bullying, and Starfleet even declaring entire vessels (such as the Intrepid) Vulcan-only; but it still seems to be present in the 24th and even, in some respects, as far ahead as the 32nd century.\n
- Seceding worlds (and the Maquis.) Unlike the United States of America, which had a whole civil war over the matter, Federation member worlds, and even colonies, appear to have the right to withdraw Federation membership. Aside from the Cardassian Border colonies that produced the Maquis rebellion, Turkana IV is perhaps the most prominent example in the 24th century. We know later in history most of the Federation’s worlds, including Earth, Ni’Var, and Andoria, will secede as well in the aftermath of the Burn, and there are some indications that M’Talas Prime may be ex-Federation by the time of Picard. Turkana IV and M’Talas prime serve as an effective demonstration of exactly why this might become a progressive issue: neither seems to have thrived without the Federation, and the Maquis secession resulted in years of violence ending in mass murder on the part of the Dominion. On the other hand making Federation membership irrevocable is not exactly respectful of the sovereignty of those worlds’ people. This is likely an issue that sees divided perspectives.\n
- Expansionism and Imperialism. This may be another controversial one. It is undeniable that the Federation is expansionist, always settling new worlds, welcoming new members, and pushing its borders outwards. As an organization Boldly Going Where No Man Has Gone Before is a central element of Starfleet’s mission. However it is clear that one of the key goals of the Prime Directive^1^ is in ensuring that this expansion does not come at the expense of sovereign indigenous civilizations. Nevertheless, we often see the citizens of other polities feel their people are pressured, or even subtly coerced, to join the Federation, especially in DS9. It is not hard to believe that these concerns are shared by at least some Federation citizens.\n
- Social issues in neighboring societies. It is clear that many of the Federation’s neighbors do not place as high a value on the rights of the individual or of the people as do the Federation, from Ferengi misogyny to Klingon classism to Cardassian totalitarianism. This is the opposite side of the coin from the prior issue, and it seems like the dominant strain of thought in the Federation is to pursue a policy of not intervening even in other advanced societies in the name of inalienable rights, or even providing more than token support to internal resistance movements much of the time (witness the struggles of Bajor, for instance.)\n
- Section 31. It remains unclear how much of the existence of Section 31, particularly in its modern form, is known to the public. However if it is known, an organization willing to violate the Federation’s every high-minded principle in the ruthless pursuit of protecting its interests is doubtless a fraught subject. If their existence only *became* public knowledge after the fact of their indiscretions, one could easily imagine it being a scandal that tarnishes entire governments.\n
- Criminal Justice. While crime is no longer as widespread as it is in our own time due to lack of deprivation, the Federation still practices a form of carceral justice. Better minds than I discuss elsewhere the matters of police and prison abolition. Here is one 21st-century left-wing cause that hasn’t yet become obsolete.\n
- Militarism. A common criticism of Star Trek is that everything in the Federation seems to revolve around Starfleet. While that’s partly a limitation of the nature of the show, it raises the question: how true is it really? And how true do the people of the 24th century perceive it to be? How comfortable are civilians with the prominence of Starfleet?\n
\n
Please use the comments to offer your own insights, or to suggest any issues I may have overlooked.\n
\n
^A subject about which liberal and left-wing arguments both for and against are so played out as to be not worth any further mention.
"""
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App\Entity\Magazine {#400
+icon: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Image {#302 …}
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+title: "daystrominstitute"
+description: """
[Welcome to Daystrom Institute!](https://startrek.website/post/73)\n
\n
Serious, in-depth discussion about *Star Trek* from both in-universe and real world perspectives.\n
\n
Read more about [how to comment at Daystrom](https://startrek.website/post/175954).\n
\n
##### **Rules**\n
\n
**1. Explain your reasoning**\n
\n
All threads and comments submitted to the Daystrom Institute must contain an explanation of the reasoning put forth.\n
\n
**2. No whinging, jokes, memes, and other shallow content.**\n
\n
This entire community has a “serious tag” on it. Shitposts are encouraged in [Risa](https://startrek.website/c/risa).\n
\n
**3. Be diplomatic.**\n
\n
Participate in a courteous, objective, and open-minded fashion. Be nice to other posters and the people who make *Star Trek.* Disagree respectfully and don’t gatekeep.\n
\n
**4. Assume good faith.**\n
\n
Assume good faith. Give other posters the benefit of the doubt, but report them if you genuinely believe they are trolling. Don’t whine about “politics.”\n
\n
**5. Tag spoilers.**\n
\n
Historically Daystrom has not had a spoiler policy, so you may encounter untagged spoilers here. Ultimately, avoiding online discussion until you are caught up is the only certain way to avoid spoilers.\n
\n
**6. Stay on-topic.**\n
\n
Threads must discuss Star Trek. Comments must discuss the topic raised in the original post.\n
\n
#### **Episode Guides**\n
\n
The /r/DaystromInstitute wiki held a number of popular Star Trek watch guides. We have rehosted them here:\n
\n
- [Kraetos’ guide to Star Trek (the original series)](https://startrek.website/post/760)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Animated Series](https://startrek.website/post/765)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: The Next Generation](https://startrek.website/post/768)\n
- [Algernon_Asimov’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/776)\n
- [Darth_Rasputin32898’s guide to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](https://startrek.website/post/772)\n
- [OpticalData’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/780)\n
- [petrus4’s guide to Star Trek: Voyager](https://startrek.website/post/781)
"""
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