Star Trek: TOS/TNG/DS9/VOY/ENT/Kelvin = Future Utopia
‘Mirror Universe’/Star Trek: Discovery = Future Dystopia
It’s as simple as that.
Nope. We've seen nothing more than a couple of ships. The first ship was doing the classic Trek thing where they beamed down to repair a society that they or some other space travllers hurt. Then they were in a hostile situation with aliens who firmly believe the Federation to be little better than a Borg like race, using "We come in peace" as a lure to assimilate them. It's what that whole "Remain Klingon" thing was and why T'Kuvma reacted the way he did when Georgiou said "We come in peace". Georgiou, in best Kirk or Picard fashion was trying to TALK to the Klingons. She was also clear about Starfleet's policy "Starfleet doesn't fire first". One person wanted to fire, and the rest of the crew looked at her like she was crazy. Because they live in society that doesn't do that. Too bad they're facing a warlike race who views us an invading force.
The second ship is developing top secret tech to be used in the war, and may be possibly top secret itself. Beyond that, we don't know jack or shit about the rest of the Federation, Starfleet or anything else about this time period. We don't know or have any real context for what's going on with Discovery yet as that's part of the unfolding story. So no, people in a war, acting like people in a war and low level lighting is not a "dystopia". We don't know what the state of the war is, who's winning, who's losing.
From the 24th century Utopia:
"Let me tell you something about Hew-mons, Nephew. They're a wonderful, friendly people, as long as their bellies are full and their holosuites are working. But take away their creature comforts, deprive them of food, sleep, sonic showers, put their lives in jeopardy over an extended period of time and those same friendly, intelligent, wonderful people... will become as nasty and as violent as the most bloodthirsty Klingon."
Oh, and making fun of Gene Roddenberry and his “vision” is nothing more than a convenient strawman for lack of arguments.
Tell me, what is this "vision", where is it stated? Tell me specifically what Roddenberry originated because let's be clear about what he did not originate or create: optimistic, hopeful futures. That was a staple of sci-fi long before he ever got there as evidenced by Space Patrol, Rocky Jones, Tom Corbett, the Legion Of Super Heroes, among a few in the forward looking Rocket / Atomic Age. The original Star Trek was Space Patrol with a better budget and more mature stories.
Pretty much the only thing he did that those older properties didn't was show that those bright futures also had some minorities in them. Except societal progress was already giving minorities and women greater representation across the board, so he didn't even originate that and it would've happened regardless. So since we've established that he didn't create hopeful or optimistic futures, and society was already giving minorities greater visibility and rights, what's left that he actually came up with on his own? What's *his* vision? Because I'm not seeing a "Roddenberry Vision" so much as some concepts that were already around that he and his followers think he originated.
I doubt that very much. STD seems to be run by people who think a dramatic show must be dark and gritty, and who confuse complex or multifaceted characters with thoroughly unlikeable ones.
And some fans think that anything that is even slightly more serious than an episode of Teen Titans Go! is "dark", "gritty" and "dystopian" because they don't understand the concept of just regular old "serious". Which is what the bulk of t.v. drama has been since t.v. started. You not liking the characters on this show doesn't mean they're not complex or multifaceted. They've been about as complex or multifaceted as any other Trek protagonists by the third episode. So enough with the non-stop pants pissing about this. They're telling their story in their way and they don't care if the shift leader at Taco Bell has a different idea on how to do the job they've been doing for years. They're gonna do what they're gonna do and crying about it on the internet isn't going to change that.
Utopia and enlightenment are meaningless without understanding the struggle it takes to achieve and maintain that state.
Thankfully Star Trek has figured that out.
Goddamn right.
However if one is able strip away the nostalgia candy coating of TOS, a lot of the less evolved humans are congruent. Sure we’re not supposed to laugh at Harry Mudd any more, because we now realize he’s a human trafficker. Human trafficking “space pimp” wouldn’t and shouldn’t be played for laughs in 2017.
And kept them hooked on drugs in order to maximize his return on the trafficking. Oh, and he also re-enforced the idea that they weren't desirable to men unless they were pretty in order to get them to take the drug.
TOS was never "utopian." It was optimistic, yes, in that it was set in a future that was better than today, but the 23rd century was by no means perfect and neither were the people who lived there, especially out on the rough-and-tumble final frontier.
Yep. Classic Trek was just an updated version of Space Patrol and Rocky Jones, two shows that were set in futures that were better than today. These futures weren't perfect and neither were the people who lived in them, especially on the rough and tumble frontier. Hell, the machine used in "Dagger Of The Mind" and "Whom Gods Destroy" was a straight up lift of the machine used in Space Patrol to rehabilitate criminals.
Hell, TOS tended to distrust utopias. Anytime Kirk stumbled onto a society that was too perfect and too peaceful and where the people were too nice, you could be sure that there was a fly in the ointment somewhere: alien spores, an insane computer, etc.
"Man needs struggle" or some other variation on that. Except I no longer wholly believe that those were "flies in the ointment" as much as a straw for him to grasp in order remove a system he personally didn't like or wasn't comfortable with. Here he is extolling the virtues of Federation society and it has yet to yield him that ideal world, yet on other worlds, foreign and alien ideas and modes of living have yielded that and he doesn't want that. He want's his way to yield that. Except when he doesn't. See "The Ultimate Computer" where technology was about to take a great leap forward.
"The Ultimate Computer" is almost painful to watch today because of it's anti-progress stance. It's like watching the candle stick makers rail against the coming of the electric light, but in this story the electric light goes crazy and kills some people and it's creator has a break down. So instead of taking his clearly ground breaking research and trying to build upon it, the candle stick makers lock it's creator away and say "See, we're better off just sticking with good old candles. Man wasn't meant to have light with the easy push of a switch. He must struggle with matches, sometimes a ladder and sometimes he has to use a long candle lighter or lift some glass, because there are certain things Men must do to remain Men." And yeah, I get the point of people being displaced by tech, the problem is that the story just vilified the tech and didn't offer any meaningful way forward like retraining in other fields which is something that has always been needed when new techs arrive.. Just vilify the tech, get rid of it and never reference it again.