Ratty said:
The biggest schisms didn't come until after Gene Roddenberry died. DS9 "betrayed" Roddenberry's utopian model of the future, which a lot of people would say is the whole point of Star Trek.
It was also quite stupid, given that his "utopian vision" involved thrusting hundreds of civilians into harm's way at a moment's notice. Hence my theory that the Enterprise wasn't so much the flagship as it was Starfleet's "B Ark." It would also explain why everyone in TNG was so damn incopetent. Roddenberry had some reeeeeeeally bad ideas.
While Niners put an emphasis on deeper more complex characters (and character relationships) with darker, more mature and intricate storylines.
And some of us really didn't care.
While both of the shows that followed DS9 certainly have fans Voyager was frequently dumb and could be said to have betrayed the Trek vision in its own ways[footnote]Janeway would violate the prime directive all the time, unless the plot said she'd decided to follow it that week so they'd stay lost and the show could keep going.
Trek was frequently dumb before then, even under Roddenberry's eye. I know this is about the division of the fanbase, but I don't get why they suddenly drew the line at this show being dumb when TOS and TNG were, also. The hammy, corny, stupidity was half the fun. How else could Shatner get work?
Enterprise was canceled before it finished the story it was telling.
Being terrible probably had a little to do with that.
Add to that the fact that 3 of the last 4 pre-reboot Trek movies were just awful and it's not hard to see why opinions might differ on which is the "best" version of Trek and how far back we have to go to get to it.
But that's sort of my point. Even if one doesn't like the reboot, or thinks it reeks of Abrams taint, it's inane to think that removing him (or anyone, really) will somehow bring us back to the ham of the original, or the bland, annoying Mary Sues of the Next Generation. Trek has changed, it's not going back, and that has nothing to do with Abrams.
But the reboot doesn't really deliver on anything most older Trek fans would like. Not the hopeful vision of the future, or the exploration, or the darker and mature storylines with deep characters. Basically it turned Trek into another generic action franchise.
I know quite a few oldschool Trek fans who would argue that point. And further the point that these are just a long list of spurious complaints by a fanbase who likes to make spurious complaints. I've seen less pettiness from Dave Tennant Who fans, who got mad that Matt Smith held a gun and the Doctor would NEVER CARRY A GUN!