The article mentioned something about Picard wearing a colonist style outfit when he visited a Romulan refugee settlement. It's not the first time I've seen a comment about that. Was that intentional or just a misinterpretation by some people?
Its hard to tell if the scene was subtly depicting Picard as being earnest but patronizing towards the Romulans, as in basking in the heroics of saving the Romulan people.
Now, Stewart is a producer on the show, and is on record for saying he didn't want to go anywhere near TNG if he did Picard, but instead take it in a different direction if he got involved.
So in Picard, Stewart himself describes the setting and the Federation as "different". It doesn't exist as we knew it anymore.
It's isolationist, cynical and wounded, and most of the characters in it have a lot of issues and conflict, to the point that you might be able to tell them apart from a 21st century human. The same stuff doesn't seem to apply anymore.
So now I'm wondering if that colonizer style outfit was a deliberate choice by Stewart. Was he hinting that the Federation had changed or was colonist in it's thinking without realizing it?
Or that it was on a dangerous path to xenophobia.
If so, then he was hinting that the setting in Picard is dystopian. And that he wanted it to be that way.
It doesn't change the prosperity or material progress of the Federation.
Humans are well fed and don't need anything, but they have a lot of other problems.