From all of the news and all of the trailers, I think that the makers of this thing have entirely missed the point of Star Trek.
Gene Roddenberry was a man with many faults. You just need to read Joel Engel, Grace Lee Whitney's and Harlan Ellison's books just to scrape the surface of them.....
But......
He was certainly onto something when he devised the Star Trek show and gave it a philosophy that said that things were going to be better in the future.
One of the attractions of the show was, I think, that - unlike other shows - it said that humanity would better itself and that the crew of a spaceship could live in harmony.
Unrealistic? Maybe. But it was an ideal that we could all aspire to.
When every other sci fi film or show was dystopian, he said that we would make it.
We would survive, thrive, grow and mature.
We would learn tolerance and banish prejudice.
And, no matter what history had shown, we would actually, in the future, aspire as individuals and as a group, to be the best that we could possibly be.
The Next Generation was probably the purest realisation of that philosophy and approach. The entire crew got on very well with one another, thank you - and they were likeable characters, to boot.
That made it extraordinarily difficult to write, conflict being the essence of drama. But, as one TNG writer said, it made him have to think of new ways of writing.
Patrick Stewart spoke once of how he had received a letter from a New York policeman, who wrote that he had terrible days on his job. That he saw some terrible things and that, on those days, his view of humanity was as low as it could possibly be.
But he would then go home and put a tape of the show on - and then he would start to feel better about humanity and about it's future..
What does that policeman now have to look forward to with Discovery?
Lots of explosions. Lots of arguing. An interplanetary war arc for the entire first season. And lots of Walking Dead/Game of Thrones-like "surprise" deaths of regular characters.
Way to go.
This also makes Discovery indistinguishable from all the other "negative" shows.
Yes, previous incarnations of Trek have also railed against the Roddenberry restrictions and, on occasions drifted away from or contradicted that Utopian ideal, but never quite to this degree.
I foresee this show fizzling away with a whimper after two seasons maximum, no more. with the Star Trek name being the only thing that grants it that second season.