James Holden: A child who won’t grow up turns into a fool.
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
RMH
AnasAbdin

JBB: An Artblog!

Origami Around
Keni
Jules of Nature
Sade Olutola
DEAR READER

ellievsbear

roma★

#extradirty
art blog(derogatory)

Kiana Khansmith
wallacepolsom
Monterey Bay Aquarium
NASA
Today's Document
Xuebing Du
styofa doing anything
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@girrrate
James Holden: A child who won’t grow up turns into a fool.
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018)
Kevin Conroy on Inside of You podcast with Michael Rosenbaum [ x ]
Rest in peace, Dark Knight.
A sky full of stars by europeanspaceagency
favorite doctor who quotes: 54/?
Star Trek + Social Commentary (context in the captions)
This is the reason star trek exists. This is why it is important. Without this there is no point of making it, you can add all the flashing lights and CG explosions and half naked women you like but without this, right here, you are not making Star Trek.
This is about Sci-Hub. yeah we get it.. gatekeep knowledge and protect the interests of capital…
Listen, this is serious.
Do not use the website called Sci-Hub!
It lets people access scientific articles for free. This is dangerous. It helps the free flow of knowledge and reduces the competitive edge of all the people who worked really hard to have been born into a wealth.
Like, it’s literally a website where you can type in the DOI of an article and read it, without ever having to pay the publisher who exploited the author.
So, again, do not, under any circumstance, use Sci-Hub. I mean, can you imagine a world where knowledge is free and easily accessible to everyone? Even, y'know, poor people?
Libgen also has many books online, including textbooks, searchable by name, author, and ISBN. Can you imagine textbook companies not getting their hard-earned income from poor college students? Here is the link just so you make sure that you never accidentally stumble across this horrible, unethical website.
Oh, and while we’re talking about books, if you’ve managed to stay clear from Libgen, definitely don’t go to zlibrary, where you can also find a lot of textbooks, but unfortunately they’re completely free.
Reblogging so you know which sites to totally avoid
Think Blazin’ Bev needs to lay off the LDS.
Jonathan Archer, the eternal optimist by startrekninja
A size comp between the Millennium Falcon and the USS Defiant
Thank you toa-banshee for your submission, I think it is so easy to forget sometimes the difference in scale between the movies, books and TV shows can be so extreme.
Like above, we see the U.S.S Defiant next to the Millennium Falcon, two amazing ships, honestly right up their on my list, but to see the difference in scale to the star trek’s Defiant, Begger’s belief.
These ships were beautiful, from the radar dish on the Falcon to the Quad phaser cannons on the Defiant and a cloaking device, the feel of the ships were a complete polar opposite.
I would say the Millennium Falcon really gave you the feel of space travel, the cockpit, the stars whizzing past was beautiful, even more so in comparison to the Defiant’s typical closed bridge feel.
I wonder how many United Federation Of Planets Starbase’s would fit inside the Death Star? size wise?
Wonder If that actually could be calculated, Great submission toa-banshee keep them coming.
STAR TREK: DISCOVERY – 2x04 ‘An Obol for Charon’
And I need a new ready room. Where the hell do people sit, huh.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine was not a perfect show but its treatment of imperialism, war crimes, and genocide was light-years ahead of some of the stuff coming out today (looking at you, Star Wars).
In DS9:
Bajor, a world struggling to recover from decades of genocidal colonial policies, is front and center
Bajoran characters, most prominently Kira, are allowed to grapple with their own trauma and their stories don’t revolve around making their oppressors, the Cardassians, feel better
Kira’s history of violent resistance against the occupation is not sugarcoated, nor does the show shy away from the fact that she hurt innocent people in the process. But neither does the story condemn her for using violence to resist genocide
Not only was Kira a terrorist, but a religiously driven one as well. Belief in the Prophets held Bajor together during the occupation, and is a major subject of exploration in the show
Despite all that Bajor suffered, Bajorans are not relics of the past or a destroyed, defeated people–their culture is vital and alive, they are rebuilding against incredible odds, and are working toward Federation membership
Bajorans themselves are not some misty spiritual cardboard cutouts, either. They are complex, they lash out, they are spiritual, they are lovers, killers, reactionaries, weirdos, mystics, the full range of experiences and personalities
And then there’s Kai Winn, who is an entire book in herself. She is such a well-drawn female villain, a complicated portrayal of self-serving ambition, self-deception, and self-entitlement
Because Bajorans are given their own stories, it actually works when some Cardassians–generally minor and one-off characters–are shown to be dissenters, or themselves traumatized from the occupation
We actually see Dukat, the leader of the occupation, trying to play the misunderstood hero/redemption card only to get slapped down by the narrative time and again
Dukat isn’t a one-note villain either; he is often charming and sometimes inspiring, as when he has a stint as a resistance fighter himself against the Klingons occupying Cardassian territory
Ultimately, though, the story reveals Dukat to be a liar, a virulent racist, an abuser, and at heart an imperialist megalomaniac who almost destroyed the Alpha Quadrant with his lust for power
David Brin was right and Star Trek is better
You are right to center Bajor in this but let me talk about Cardassians too:
- the show makes an effort to explore Cardassian culture without ever trying to excuse their imperialism and the brutality of the Bajoran occupation
- Cardassian civilians who just want to do their thing outside of the military or secret agencies are shown
- the complex questions of accountability of small cogs in the machine of the administration of totalitarian regimes are explored without easy black/white answers
- they are shown as victims of imperialism as well without diminishing their own responsibility
- the reasons (lack of resources, cultural pride, militarist society) that drove Cardassians to occupy other planets including Bajor are explored openly without excusing their actions
- the selection of characters complicit in Cardassian imperialism range from true believing patriots to small minded bigot to ambitious asshole to nihilistic egotist, just like real world dictatorships
I wonder if ds9 could have happened AT ALL in a post 9/11 world tbh
#moviesetmemes@moviesetmemes