The problem is a lack of context. We're simply told that genetic augmentation is illegal with real no explanation why except that it likely stems from Earth's Eugenics Wars.
Sadly, it's a non-canon Khan comic book miniseries that provides the best case I've seen why Earth has a total ban on augmentation. The Eugenics Wars were depicted as perhaps one of the darkest times in Human history, starting off with multiple nuclear strikes from Khan and his peers to seize over forty nations and to put the fear of God into the rest. Now putting that non-canon book aside, onscreen Trek has really glossed over the Eugenics Wars and how bad it must have been for Earth to still have a ban on augmentation centuries later. We've been told in passing dialogue in various episodes that anywhere between 30 to 40 million people died and that it put Humanity into a new dark age that lasted for decades, but that sill kind of leaves it up to viewers to conclude that Earth would rather totally ban augmentation indefinitely than even risk having another Eugenics Wars.
To be fair, though, Star Trek Into Darkness did show us what just one pissed-off Augment could do to San Francisco...
The Federation has a lot of justification for banning augmentation. Firstly, there is the fact that human augments have largely had a tendency towards sociopathy and world domination and were responsible for one of the most destructive conflicts in human history. Secondly, it's shown that augmentation on the general populace goes wrong far more often than it goes right. Bashir was one of the few, possibly the only augmented individual, who got lucky and didn't suffer from some degree of behavioural or mental deficiency.
Humanity has worked hard to rebuild itself from the ravages of the eugenics wars and WW3 and there is just too much at stake to risk another Khan coming along.
Dude, chill. It's not the end of the world.
That...makes sense.I'd put a bet on the Soong Augments in ENT causing the ban to still be in place - especially with the impact on the Klingons.
Had that not happened, it is possible that the Fed would have relaxed the rules a bit.
You know Star Trek promotes bigotry. Yes, it does, against people who augment their genetics to be the best person or species they can be.
It is an irrational fear because of one specie , one planet , and one fear from a war fought hundreds of years earlier by this earth specie's. It has brought great harm to other species and peoples through-out the Federation and codified this bigotry into Federation laws.
Illyrains a peaceful people, who use genetic augmentation to adapt themselves to the worlds they colonize. Adapting oneself to living peacefully on another world is much better than terraforming worlds to ones will. It makes more sense for the people and the world they want to live on to use augmentation. Illyrian's and their use of augmentation are now outcast in the Federation even thou they have never harmed another species but face persecution for their beliefs, instead.
Here is the Bigotry: Free Illyrains... Free the Augments... Replace the words genetic augmentation with a race, religious, sex, species and so on in the paragraph below...
The Federation needs to end this irrational earth fear over genetic augmentation and free the Federation people to be all they can be...
They not allowed to join because their species values and use of genetic augmentation and Federation law make the second class citizens...
Earth is the Federation's homeworld, and if it's still on the books there, it would carry over.
They do send Una to a penal colony for at least 7 years for being augment as a child.
Here an article about prejudice in New Worlds...
https://redshirtsalwaysdie.com/2022...ds-exploring-how-prejudice-hinders-starfleet/
No matter how much Star Trek has gotten it right in centuries past, there isn’t really a utopia for the future. Number One’s secret proves that. Illyrians have done no wrong, but they are prevented from moving forward with the United Federation of Planets simply because of who and what they are.
I want to point out Federation never passed any laws about the Suliban and their propensity to augment their genetic code.
The silliness of the total ban on augmentation is that it is arbitrary and not at all "defined" within the context of why such a ban was put into place in the first place.
Considering how moral Pike is meant to be, I find it difficult to accept he stayed in an organisation that imprisons his friend and colleagueMy belief is that it’s the intent for the tone-deaf-ness of Starfleet and the Federation here. I have absolutely no idea how they’ll get Una out of this but I imagine it’ll involve some speechifying. If they get her out of it at all. We have no idea what happens to Number One. She may end up staying in prison.
Me too, having a galactic society still following the cultural prejudices of 1990's Earth in the 31st century would be ridiculous. (which is why I was not a fan of the idea of the Discovery crew jumping so far into the future)In story, the context is Space Seed and WoK.
To me the message was, they tried to do the right thing, let the Genetic Manipulation Genie out of the bottle and it literally bit them in the ass, multiple times.
So now they are all... Uh-uh. Nope. Never again. Leaving any good to come from it, like addressing congenital diseases or deformities, out in the cold.
So that's "canon", but I hope DISC revisits the issue in the far future, breaks the ban and does story's examining how lives are improved when properly handled.
And yet they allow warmongering, Germans who started two Earth world wars in Starfleet. I think Germans should be banned from Starfleet. For every good German, there is an Adolf Hitler waiting in the wings.The Federation prejudice towards augments because they fear mega maniacs. It is irrational because there have been many more mega maniacs that have no genetic augmentations...
Also, you can't be bigoted against a class of people that literally physically cannot yet exist.
If you mean that Augments are second-class citizens in the UFP, then you can make a legit argument there. But while all Illyrians may be Augments, all Augments are not Illyrians.
"Illyrians are outcasts in the Federation,"
But the Federation bans Illyria from joining because of a choice they have made as a society, not because of "who and what they are" per se. That decision on the Federation's part might be unjust, but it is a reaction to an active choice, not to a natural status.
, the experience of the Suliban Cabal
No more than Santa Clause or the Easter Bunny…or Archie Bunker for that matter. One cannot be bigoted against fictional constructs. It would be like saying I think the Martian Manhunter is inferior because he’s green. It’s absurd.The Illyrians do exist
We know from the New Worlds that even to be the great great grand child of an argument makes you a second class in Federation society... ask Noonien-Sing...
Sci said:Ferengi Prime said:You know Star Trek promotes bigotry. Yes, it does, against people who augment their genetics to be the best person or species they can be.
Well, no. Every single time the Federation's ban on genetic augmentation has been mentioned, it's been depicted as something that is morally ambiguous, not as something that's a clear moral good. Star Trek as a narrative is not endorsing the Federation's ban on genetic augmentation.
Also, you can't be bigoted against a class of people that literally physically cannot yet exist.
The Illyrians do exist
and in an episode in the New Worlds the Illyrians were trying to change their DNA to remove their enhancements. So they can join or become part of the Federation and it cost them their lives being turned into light creatures.
You do not want to change you DNA to belong if you are not being persecuted by the Federation bigots...
They not allowed to join because their species values and use of genetic augmentation and Federation law make the second class citizens...
Okay, you're being unclear when you say "they." How can "they" as in Illyrians be second-class citizens of the UFP if they're not allowed to become UFP citizens in the first place?
If you mean that Augments are second-class citizens in the UFP, then you can make a legit argument there. But while all Illyrians may be Augments, all Augments are not Illyrians.
We know from the New Worlds that even to be the great great grand child of an argument makes you a second class in Federation society... ask Noonien-Sing...
Illyrains a peaceful people, who use genetic augmentation to adapt themselves to the worlds they colonize. Adapting oneself to living peacefully on another world is much better than terraforming worlds to ones will. It makes more sense for the people and the world they want to live on to use augmentation. Illyrian's and their use of augmentation are now outcast in the Federation even thou they have never harmed another species but face persecution for their beliefs, instead.
See, here's a problem. You're framing this as though the Illyrians are a marginalized culture within the Federation. But they're not -- they're a foreign state who are free to run their society as they wish. It's fair to say that the Federation is largely bigoted against Illyrians and that that's a bad thing. But when you title a thread "Free the Illyrians!" and say, "Illyrians are outcasts in the Federation," you're implying that they're an oppressed minority within Federation society when in fact they are free and are an entirely external society.
Also, the Prime Directive protects the Illyrians' right to use genetic augmentation within their own society.
They are outcast for a bunch of them on a planet gave their lives in an attempt to join the Federation by changing their argumentations.
The sad thing was Pike and Spook were proud of them for wanting to change their society to be part of Start Fleet. It remind me of the 19th century of the white man going to civilized the savage Indians...
But the Federation bans Illyria from joining because of a choice they have made as a society, not because of "who and what they are" per se. That decision on the Federation's part might be unjust, but it is a reaction to an active choice, not to a natural status.
The Illyrians were not making super humans or human weapons only trying to blend into new worlds they want to colonize. You know live with the new natural worlds they find.
In fairness, societies do sometimes pass laws that are arbitrary and not at all defined within the context of why the law was put into place in the first place. ::coughcoughabortionbanscoughcough::
Are you saying that Star Trek depicts bigotry, or are you saying that Star Trek promotes bigotry?
Yes, and this is an example of how Star Trek, as a narrative, is not endorsing the Federation's bigotry against Augments. It is depicting it as a bad thing.
No. It shows it as a reality and has done so since it's inception.So Star Trek promotes bigotry...
Nope.So Star Trek promotes bigotry...
No. It shows it as a reality and has done so since it's inception.
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