I am not sure the prime directive is fascist.
I said that you hold doctrines responsible for murdering people and not people and that's exactly what you did IN THIS VERY POST THAT I AM QUOTING!!!
Communism has no murder rate at all, for the simple reason that Communism NEVER HAPPENED! Had you read Karl Marx instead of basing your conclusions on some third hand hater opinion, you would have known that the state that Marx describes as communist has never been even attempted. How can you say that a political regime is responsible for anything when that regime doesn't even exist?
Regardless of that you do exactly what I said you did. You accuse doctrines instead of individuals. You are a collectivist at the very least and you adopt the logic of a marxist. You're a walking irony.
Among all the nations and sub-nations of Austria, only three standard-bearers of progress took an active part in history, and are still capable of life -- the Germans, the Poles and the Magyars. Hence they are now revolutionary. All the other large and small nationalities and peoples are destined to perish before long in the revolutionary war-storm.
A general war will wipe out all these racial trash down to their very names. The next world war will result in the disappearance from the face of the earth not only of reactionary classes and dynasties, but also of entire reactionary peoples. And that, too, is a step forward.[/QUOTE]
Not to mention that he actually killed his own creation when he stated that Communists should seize power by a violent revolution. Every ideology which praises and encourage violence as the prime method for seizing power will attract psychopats like Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin, Mao, Rákosi, Pol Pot and similar Communist leaders.
Isn't it a bit strange that in every country where Communist parties have seized power, it has ended with terror, genocide, executions, concentration camps and political opression when those party leaders and members have tried to build socialism which would lead to the Communist paradise which Marx dreamed of?
And to call eye witnesses and victims of the Communist system, like Solzhenitsyn "third hand haters" is actually insulting.
Karl Marx wasn't the nicest man either. He considered peoples like Croats, Serbs, Czechs, Slovaks and other minorities in the Austrian Empire "racial trash" who should be wiped out.
I found it here:That's the first I've heard of any of it..Where did you quote that from? I think I know the answer but I'll wait for your answer before making any comment.
I found it here:
http://www.orgonelab.org/MarxEngelsQuotes.htm
More quotes here:
http://www.slavorum.org/forum/discussion/6399/marx-and-engels-on-slavic-people
And here:
he didn't like Basques and Scotsmen either. A bitter and evil man.
He died in 1883, so no. However there were political papers, interviews and speeches.I am certain that Marx never said anything on camera so it's simply useless
He died in 1883, so no. However there were political papers, interviews and speeches.
Hell yep.
So you didn't watch the video where a historican at the Cambridge University discussed those quotes? But he was probably a "third hand hater" and a "fascist".
I'm pretty sure that Marx had those opinions about certain peoples. His teachings are full of ramblings about bloody revolutions, how to hang "capitalists" and encouraging violence.
He did have some interesting economic theories which mah have had some truth in the 19th century. But all of that is obsolete now due to the ongoing evolution of society.
If we look at the world, there are more equality and freedom in developed countries in Scandinavia and Western Europe plus countries like the US, Canada; Australia and Japan due to peaceful evolution than there ever were in any Communist country where Marx's, Engels's, Lenin's and Stalin's teachings were practised.. I'm not saying that the countries I mentioned are perfect, there are a lot of bad things happening there as well. But they are far from the poverty and opression in the Communist countries.
I don't know which countyr you come from but I do think that too many people in the US and western Europe have a rosy-eyed view on Communism.
I don't know which country you come from but I get the impression that some people in the US and Western Europe have a very rosy-eyed view of Communism. Maybe because history is often seen in black and white in those countries. Since Hitler was the ultimate evil, those who fought against him must be the "good guys"and since the Soviet Union (unfortunately) ended up among the winners, they must be "good guys" too. Nothing can be more wrong.
I was 10 ears old when I first discovered that Estonia, Latvia and Lithania had been independent states before WWII and it took me some more years before I learned about the Soviet opression and genocide in those countries, all in the name of Communism.
You should read more history. You should read Solzhenitsyn's books about GuLAG, you should read about the Baltic Countries, the Soviet-Finnish Winter war, the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact when Germany and the Soviet Union divided Eastern Europe among themselves. You should read about "The Great Terror 1936-39 when 20-40 million Soviet citizens were murdered by Stalin's regime and the ethnic cleansing the Red Army did in the eastern part of Germany during the war.Hitler was definitely a "bad guy" but he wasn't the only "bad guy" during these times.
You should read about Rákosi's dictatorship in Hungary and the Soviet invasion 1956, the invasion of Czechoslovakia 1968, Mao's terror in China, the occupation of Tibet, the "Khmer Rouge", North Korea.
A lot to learn there!
And when it comes to dragoms, sometimes it takes a dragon to fight a dragon!![]()
in the TOS era it comes off as a reasonable idea that can applied differently based on the situation, by the TNG era it has transformed into a fanatical doctrine that cannot be challenged and Voyager was no exception to that. The TNG era PD often seems to make the Federation look elitist and lacking in empathy.
Besides the cheap drama of Worf or Data going behind Picard's back to save some dying civilization and Picard ending up agreeing with them in the end, became really played out and made Picard look like a fool, that tried old cliche should have been retired long ago.
Besides the cheap drama of Worf or Data going behind Picard's back to save some dying civilization and Picard ending up agreeing with them in the end, became really played out and made Picard look like a fool, that tried old cliche should have been retired long ago. The entertainment can be seeing Picard and the crew managing to save a civilization without them knowing it, rather then Picard saying some alien civilization dying is not his problem and getting mad at people who actually doing something proactive.
I mean if we apply this logic to other franchises, Superman shouldn't stop natural disasters or stop aliens from blowing up the Earth, because that interferes with humanity's natural evolution, the Zack Snyder Superman who doesn't save people is right. Spider-Man did the right thing by letting that burglar get away, it was simply his uncle's fate to be murdered that night by that burglar and Spider-Man is doing the wrong thing by helping people and fighting crime.
I also don't have the view that humans only ever act selfishly, I think humans can be altruistic at times, so sometimes when richer countries get involved with poorer countries its for the right reasons and sometimes they do it for the wrong reasons. I think you get good fiction out of people using common sense and acting altruistically.
SPOCK: "I've noticed that about your people, Doctor. You find it easier to understand the death of one than the death of a million."
- The Immunity Syndrome
Well to paraphrase a thought about the First Amendment protecting unpopular speech, you don't need to have a directive to prevent things that will clearly be a bad you need it to prevent things that seem good but turn out badly. I think both the original series and TNG showed how, despite good intentions, results of interference generally end up badly. By the 24th century it is a doctrine that some people, more often the captains, are fanatical about yet officers still question it, particularly Beverly Crusher and also Paris (his actions against it in "Thirty Days" were portrayed as positive though him getting punished as also at least appropriate).
I think it was generally Data who did it and not too often but when he did he got off with too little consequences.
Where's the drama or suspense in that?
Even Superman and Spider-Man (who generally see the world as much more black-and-white than Trek characters do or IMO should) believe there should be limits to how much and significantly they act, reflected in their reluctance to kill criminals. Less nobly, Spider-Man is often annoyed when new superheroes/vigilantes emerge and doubt that they will have the necessary wisdom to act appropriately.
But what's to prevent Starfleet captains or the Federation as a whole from engaging in selfish or abusive acts? To prevent that I think you do need pretty strict policies even if they also result in some good not being done. I think it's too easy to rationalize selfish or abusive acts as either beneficial to the other parties or at least acceptable.
Except how is letting civilizations die off good in any way? I think the PD can be a good thing, but taking it to an extreme that saying helping dying civilizations is wrong, makes it look foolish at best, callous at worst.
But then this just makes Picard's lecturing about the PD and letting alien civilizations die seem pointless and makes Picard look foolish and/or cruel.
Having the characters use their intelligence to solve the problem that is threatening to destroy this civilization, while trying to keep their efforts a secret from the people they are trying to save, is not dramatic?
How about the fact the Federation is supposed to be more altruistic then humans are today?
You are presenting a false chose, isolation or imperialism, not acknowledging the huge middle ground in between those two extremes.
Since I expect Federation captains to be better then Hitler or King Leopold, so I hope they wouldn't need a fanatical doctrine to tell them that enslaving other planets is bad, rather having the PD be a guideline and the Federation having enough good judgment to know to apply it in the field.
Of course helping people or a group sounds good and it may be but how you help them can be good or bad. Trying to prevent or mitigate natural disasters is the most justifiable and likely least harmful type of interference but what if a society is dying or, less severely, suffering or, yet more severely, just being stagnant because of its internal choices and power relationships? Then the consequences of interference seem more ambiguous and potentially negative. But most fans complain not only about "Homeward" and "Pen Pals" but also the many Prime Directive episodes that didn't deal with natural disasters.
The execution at times did make Picard seem a little pointless or foolish. But more often he was pretty impressive in applying his principles.
It is if the characters have, despite frequently engaging in such, either no real chance of being discovered or if they are discovered but no negative consequences can emerge from their being discovered..
That the characters and society are generally more benevolent than today doesn't mean that they should pretend or act as if they are infallible, I think increased humility is part of how the society improved. But the characters' actions are still fallible or at least questionable. For example Kirk insists he would not take resources by force in "Mirror, Mirror" but admits he would, though preferring not to, do so in "Requiem for Methuselah".
No, I think all the Prime Directive mandates is to not reveal your existence to pre-Warp societies and not, through either force or subterfuge, change the regime or culture of any society; those restrictions do not constitute isolationism.
That's the false choice between extremes, that captains wouldn't be that abusive doesn't mean they couldn't be either greedy or inadvertently very harmful.
Admiral Dougherty was portrayed as a decent man whose arguments for taking resources seemed at the least reasonable despite Picard considering them outrageous (a lot of the audience thought Dougherty was more reasonable, that the Federation needed and would make better use of the resources). In real life Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson are appropriately seen as at least decent and reasonable people, even as generally principled and beneficial, and not outrageously abusive and yet they helped overthrow regimes in Latin America, Iran and Iraq and gave support that extended warfare in Vietnam.
Can you at least agree that natural disasters that will wipe out civilizations is an extreme enough circumstance to make exception to the PD?
But he wouldn't appear foolish in those scenes if the PD wasn't presented as some doctrine that captains have to be fanatically loyal to.
There is the drama of whether the crew can prevent the disaster or not and none of that makes Picard look like some sort of callous idiot.
You are just judging Kirk on his thoughts rather then his actions.
Of the main Star Trek captains (Kirk, Picard, etc) how many of them violated the PD in a way that would be unreasonable or unjustifiable vs. how times they did that and it was understandable under the circumstances?
That argument about Dougherty would work better if I didn't think the Ba'ku a bunch of elitist jerks who put their own immorality above the well being of others. Also the PD didn't apply to the Ba'Ku, because they were none native aliens who used a warp drive to get that planet, that is not a PD situation.
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