Yes, but Star Trek isn't just entertainment but is a way of life!!!!!Flawless utopians are dull as shit, dramaless, and completely unrealistic. Last time I checked, those are three things that don't make for good storytelling.

Yes, but Star Trek isn't just entertainment but is a way of life!!!!!Flawless utopians are dull as shit, dramaless, and completely unrealistic. Last time I checked, those are three things that don't make for good storytelling.
Yes, but Star Trek isn't just entertainment but is a way of life!!!!!
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The problem with ST is that it predicts an ideal future, but only AFTER a third world war!! I'd rather have a less ideal future but without WWIII if you don't mind? Well, and there's already one thing they predicted that never happened, it's the eugenic wars!
Having a utopian world doesn’t mean no drama or interesting stories
The way Trek characters describe how much humans have evolved, you wouldn't expect to see all this dysfunction. A lot of this stuff is just as bad or even worse than contemporary times.
There really shouldn't have been a Maquis situation at all if humans were really that evolved and prosperous. No admiral should be trying take over earth or scheme with the enemy over some plot. Or the failed colony where Tasha came from.
Sometimes I wonder if all these claims are realistic, or if they just went overboard with them...
Humans aren't afraid to die anymore.
...All of this is supposed to be the foundation that Trek is based on. All of them were reversed in some way as the franchise went on. And all this taken together, is Utopia or a form of it.
Really, all that TOS did was present a future where Earth's countries were no longer at war with each other. We'd all banded together so we could go have wars with aliens out in space instead.![]()
Humans not dying anymore, being immortal, and thus having no need to fear death, is utopian. Humans still dying but not afraid of death anymore is dystopian. Fear of bad things happening is rational and leads to taking action to reduce the probability of bad things happening. If people still die, fear of death is good.
If people die, but aren't afraid of death, they won't seek to develop ways to become immortal and avoid death. They will not seek to bring dead people back to life. And their society will seem rather dystopian to me, no matter what else is good about it.
Humans not dying anymore, being immortal, and thus having no need to fear death, is utopian. Humans still dying but not afraid of death anymore is dystopian. Fear of bad things happening is rational and leads to taking action to reduce the probability of bad things happening. If people still die, fear of death is good.
If people die, but aren't afraid of death, they won't seek to develop ways to become immortal and avoid death. They will not seek to bring dead people back to life. And their society will seem rather dystopian to me, no matter what else is good about it.
Why would there be prisons if it is utopian? Why is the Utopian TNG era have hard labor camps for prisoners?Also utopian doesn’t mean no prisons, just no underfunded or private prisons with degrading, dehumanizing conditions where you are abused by guards with no recourse.
The Roddenberry Box is alive and well.It does if you set up a bunch of asinine rules about how characters can't do this, or won't do that because "evolved humanity," which is often what was dictated by Roddenberry's office in early TNG, and then interpreted as the flame to carry on by Rick Berman in many instances.
Fear of death/mortality is part of what makes life precious and forces people (well...in some cases) to "make it count."
Wasn't that actually a major theme of Star Trek Generations?![]()
Fear of death/mortality is part of what makes life precious and forces people (well...in some cases) to "make it count."
Wasn't that actually a major theme of Star Trek Generations?![]()
Humans not dying anymore, being immortal, and thus having no need to fear death, is utopian. Humans still dying but not afraid of death anymore is dystopian. Fear of bad things happening is rational and leads to taking action to reduce the probability of bad things happening. If people still die, fear of death is good.
If people die, but aren't afraid of death, they won't seek to develop ways to become immortal and avoid death. They will not seek to bring dead people back to life. And their society will seem rather dystopian to me, no matter what else is good about it.
Why would there be prisons if it is utopian? Why is the Utopian TNG era have hard labor camps for prisoners?
In speech, yes, but in practice it was not.Sisko said there was no crime either.
You have to remember, if Roddenberry had his way, future humans don't use money, they walk around naked in public with no last names anymore, use Love instructors".
And are no longer offended by insults.
If you call a man's wife a "stupid b**ch" after accidently bumping into her, the man or the woman wouldn't get angry, at all. And all humans are like this.
Sound very Utopian
Popular with me.In my TOS universe we mostly only see Terrans in Starfleet is because we are only seeing United Earth. Yes, we are linked in a LOOSE federation with the Vulcans, Andorians & Tellarites, but only at the highest political level. Each have their own space, thier own political structures, their own laws etc. But each structure is linked and federated at that level. Mutual trade, defence, sharing knowledge, intelligence, technology etc.
Axanar ( whatever it was) increased links between Terra and the Vulcans and led to the "Vulcanian (peace/negotiation /diplomatic) mission" mentioned in Court Martial. By the time of the TOS movies we are seeing greater integration.
My (probably) unpopular opinion.
Some great ideas taking this concept further.Popular with me.
First Season TOS clearly has Starfleet under United Earth running Earth's space forces (Bases, Stations, Outposts, Ships, etc.). By our standards, Starfleet was like a combination of the Navy, Coast Guard and NASA. During Season One, Earth had 12 Starships commissioned and at least 12 main Starbases. United Earth operated similar to Colonial Britain for controlling their space domain (avoiding the word "empire").
By the middle of Season One, it looks like a new agreement was made such that Starfleet moved under a Federation Council arrangement and took over the operations of all UPF's joint space forces. Each Federation member would contribute assets to the joint forces, but each member still maintained their own assets in their own space domains (probably their own solar systems). By our standards, it was like NATO with the United States contributing the bulk of the assets and control. Starfleet headquarters would remain on Earth, and even though Starfleet was open to all member planets, it was mainly Earth-centralist. United Earth transferred all its Starships, Starbases and Colonies to the new organization.
Sounds like Vulcan logic.Human starfleet everywhere but with this thought it maybe seems more like an excellent way to dilute and disperse the Terran starfleet and so keep it a little more controlable and a little less of a threat?
UFP Treaties might say that home solar systems may not have planet/satellite based defenses, and any space ships and space stations in the UFP member planets with offensive capabilities have to be under Starfleet/UFP control. This guarantees members will not be able to fight with each other. (Sounds like Vulcan logic, again.Maybe why there's never any other ships within range of Terra in the movies?
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