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|    Message 77,169 of 77,408    |
|    Melissa Hollingsworth to All    |
|    Re: AI REviews of STNG- Sarek    |
|    09 Aug 25 09:10:02    |
      XPost: rec.arts.startrek.fandom, rec.arts.sf.tv, rec.arts.tv       XPost: can.arts.sf       From: thetruemelissa@gmail.com              Verily, in article <1077p68$1t3f$2@gallifrey.nk.ca>, did       doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca deliver unto us this message:              > A Masterful Character Study: The episode provides a deeply moving look       > into the twilight years of a legendary character. The contrast between       > the rigid, stoic Sarek we've known and the vulnerable, emotionally       > compromised man he has become is both tragic and profoundly       > humanizing. It raises complex questions about dignity, aging, and       > legacy.              You know, it does that, but it also raises questions about our own       society's insistence that emotions are extremely important and it'll       harm us to ignore them. Previous generations did not believe that, and       most of them were a lot more together than today's hot messes.              The Star Trek writers seem to believe, collectively, that the Vulcans       are wrong. Spock's imperfect emotional control was seem as making more       human, and it was implied that this was better somehow... so humans are       better than Vulcans?              Then, his brother tried to start a whole religion based around emotions.       Whee!              In this one, Sarek is suffering from end-of-life emotional incontinence.       Apparently this is a brand-new condition, since the Vulcans appear to       have absolutely zero methods for handling such a person. Instead,       everyone just humors him... which doesn't strike me as very Vulcan.              I guess the idea is that he suppressed so much of his vital, important       emotions that it eventually melted his brain. I suspect such a person       would be much *calmer* in real life, since he never fed the emotional       wolf.              You know what I'd really like to see? A Vulcan ship's counselor. Not a       name-only Vulcan with lots of emotions, but a normal Vulcan who actually       gives Vulcan advice. "It is not logical to concern yourself with that.       You should ignore it and focus on your work."                            --       Saturday Doctor Who watch party 1:00 p.m. Pacific time              This week: "The Ambassadors of Death" [Third Doctor]       https://discord.gg/p3ujkCa4?event=1401613673331425291              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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