Whether you like that idea or not is irrelevant. It would be very racist for Star Trek to depict a future utopia as one in which Asians have been genocided.
It also just makes no sense.
No matter how destructive ww3 was, it only killed a fraction of the population. Numbers I've seen from Trek wouldn't even kill off all of China.
While I detest any real attempt to hash out the pre-tos era - ent included - i'm glad they didn't hash out ww3 for the show - it just doesn't make any sense even with the limited info we got.
They aren’t considering cancer rates due to the exchange, war related diseases, famine, and post atomic horror justice system in the immediate post war setting. And that the war's destruction is intended to be at minimum WWII x5, which would amplify all of the above. And China's one child policy (I think its a two child policy now) impacting recovery.
Its why both numbers cited - 600M by Riker and Burnham, and 2B by Pike - are correct. One is about the immediate conflict itself. And the other is about the post war effects. The latter would affect China's population significantly.
Still doesn't make the idea that Asia in particular was genocided any more plausible in-universe, or any less racist from a metatextual POV.
I am not sure what racist about it.
US/European born Asians exist in Star Trek (Hikaru Sulu, Harry Kim, Julian Bashir and his family, that family in Into Darkness), and Asian states such as Japan and Malaysia still exist.
I do not think there is an intention to be racist.
In fact, in FC, they never even said that the ECON were the aggressors in WWIII at all.
and something clearly happened for Panama to become a part of Venezuela.
We do know that the 1990s Eugenics Wars already imply that it was Asian cities bombed out of existence, since it never reached North America.
Next, clearly the Eastern Coalition was not, as TOS would put it, as an efficient state as Nazi Germany (the most efficient state in the history of the world as Kirk put it). The Eastern Coalition population suffered for the ECON not being as efficient administrators and managers and were not able to turn their fortunes around like Germany did in the 1930s.
You can say that the political and social backstory of Star Trek is poorly explained. But I do not see the racism.
something clearly happened for Panama to become a part of Venezuela.
What on Earth are you talking about?
-- Archer flunked geography in school because he was too busy playing water polo.
Well, I can't remember too many Europeans, Australians, or New Zealanders appearing in most Star Trek series either. Not saying there weren't any (Picard is a famous example), but in far lower numbers than their populations would suggest. (Europe's population is significantly larger than that of the US and Canada together). So I'm not sure that by not showing many Asians (or other groups), Star Trek is racist rather than US-centric
-- Archer flunked geography in school because he was too busy playing water polo.
it kind of attempted to be "the 24 of the Star Trek universe").
The anti-racist response to prior ST's lack of Asian representation is not to rationalize it. It is to increase Asian representation in modern productions.
It was obviously an attempt to revive the TOS character dynamics, which is not a bad thing, but it had the effect that this approach felt a bit like a return to the 50s or 60s and their white male hero roles.
it kind of attempted to be "the 24 of the Star Trek universe"
Even 24 eventually added an anti-torture stance near the end of the show's run because the world had changed.The pro-torture angle? Agreed.
Even 24 eventually added an anti-torture stance near the end of the show's run because the world had changed.
We still haven't seen anyone in the new series condemn Archer for using torture. Just that Archer is one of Starfleet's most decorated captains and has a spacedock named after him.
Not saying i want Archer cancelled (though that might make for an interesting episode), but Starfleet seems to have rationalized that what Archer did was okay. Or he was rehabilitated like Dubya is today.
Nothing wrong with wanting to go back. But it needed to be modernized. That no one could even reference an off screen male enlisted crewmember having a husband, and that the two people of colour in the main cast got marginalized and had limited development while yet were still Americanized as Archer and Trip - despite their characters not actually hailing from America! - is problematic.
But alas, I don't want to turn this into a political controversy. All I'm saying is, I think writing by far has a greater impact than external looks of the cast. Just like ideas make a much larger part of our "identities" than external looks do, imho.
No one questions the need for quality writing, but the idea that a lack of representation does not harm people from marginalized communities, or that there isn't a strong need for diversity in casting, is simply not borne out by reality.
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