Star Trek Head says it is acceptable to make horrific movies because Star Trek is a safe space – Aitrend

Written by Joshua Tyler Published

Section 31 Alex Kurstmann
Alex Kurtzman’s Star Trek: Section 31

Everyone talks about Star Trek again. Unfortunately, they talk about it in the context of death.

If you are looking to blame his death on someone, you may have to put it on Alex Kurstmann. It has been responsible for the concession since 2009 Star Trek. It is also a newly released Paramount+producer Star Trek: Section 31It is so bad that it is so bad that 58 % of the Star Trek fans who responded to our survey voted to demand the deletion of the film from the Internet from the Internet.

So what happened? What does Alex Kurstman say to himself? Its response, in short, is: Star Trek is a safe space, so it’s okay to make a terrible movie.

Is my summary exaggeration? Here is a careful quote from his interview with Trekmovie, as they asked him what he would say to the masses concerned about Section 31.

“I think you tend to find Star Trek because you feel somehow as it does not fit, right? Star Trek becomes a safe place that tells you that it is okay to be different. It is okay to be inappropriate. This is a movie about mistakes, right?”

A “hero” eats the human eyeball within the “safe space” of Alex Kurstmann

After this terrible quote, he began in the authority of a coherent word about “protecting our freedom”, and then, even drowned. He tried to say that the best way to protect the dream of Jin Roddinbury in the bright future is to make films about terrible people who do terrible things.

Here Kurstman:

“In the end, I feel that what we say is that in order to be Starfleet and that the beautiful vision that Roddenberry had from this optimistic utopia, in order to have this vision, for the presence of light, you need to work in the shadows. It is Yin and Yang. You cannot get On one without the other.

At Alex Kurstman’s head, there is nothing like a bright and happy future for humanity because you can not only get one if it is balanced with a terrible thing. At Alex Kurtzman’s Star Trek, there can be no dream of Jin Rodenberry.

Then he continued to try to leave his failures by wrapping himself in LGBTQ icons, saying about his terrible movie, “In this way, I think it is just another color in the Star Trek.”

In review 0 stars from Star Trek: Section 31, I asked whether the film could be a mainly evil. Now the Star Trek fans have an answer. If you are looking for evil, look for Alex Corsetman.


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