Of course we want social justice and Star Trek as always brought these themes in prior shows based on current events. However, STD does it differently. They do it at the expense of targeting most of the white male characters on the show as weak, incompetent or arrogant.
Arrogance is never in short supply, even among heroic figures, white male or otherwise, in fiction. As for weak and incompetent—I don’t see any overwhelming imbalance. Pike and Stamets, anyone?
They especially made the Klingon males 2-dimensional characters with associating them as the stereotypical Trump supporter.
Klingons are almost always two dimensional in Trek. Not really a fan of them.
No problem on the show can be solved without the messiah Michael Burnham's intervention.
I’ll let a Trek fan from a Trek board take this one:
Come on. Burnham works well with others, especially Tilly, Stamets and Saru. She's been a team player since she came aboard Discovery. We've seen Tilly, Saru, and Stamets come up with cool solutions while Burnham is around. Owo even initiated and completed the escape from the basement in New Eden.
This whole "she does everything and no-one gets to shine unless she's gone" complaint is really disingenuous and completely incorrect. Each character has different skill sets and at different times they've solved problems with those skill sets.
Could Burnham have piloted the donut manuver? No. Could Burnham navigate the Mycelial network to get the ship and crew home from the MU? No. Could Burnham save herself on the asteroid? No. Could she even save Pike free-falling to his death? Not by herself, she still needed Owo and Detmer to control the descent. Could Burnham save them all from Mudd by herself? No. Could she solve the translator problem when the Sphere caused Babel on board? No, it was Saru who helped save the day.
Could Burnham even find or save Spock by herself in this last episode? No.
Hmmm, it's almost as if the show is trying to tell us that no one person can do everything alone. Characters need to trust and depend on each other. Pike/Tyler and Stamets/Tilly stories in this very episode were cases in point.
What a strange stance for a Star Trek show to take...
IF you disagree with STD's obvious agenda, the fans label you a racist. I've never felt prior Star Trek shows put forth this agenda and I'm not a minority (no pun intended) in this viewpoint.
The “obvious agenda” of what, exactly? I see no substantial difference between this Trek’s “agenda” of progressivism and any previous one. Aesthetically different? Sure. Otherwise? Not seeing it.