It is logically inconsistent to be willing to ascribe only negative traits to the entire species whilst withholding positive traits from the entire species when both positive and negative traits appear in roughly equal numbers.
Roughly equal numbers? I daresay that's a matter of perspective. My impression is that the negative traits are disproportionate to the positive ones, both quantitatively and in terms of actual impact.
Hm. Really? You can seriously say that when you live in a liberal democracy with peaceful trading relationships with numerous other societies? Tell me, have you ever gone to a hospital? Received or seen a loved one receive advanced medical care? I know that you've been the beneficiary of important technological developments such as telecommunications, since that's how we're speaking. Ever been the beneficiary of a charity? Needed help feeding yourself?
For every story about human depravity, there are numerous other stories about human generosity and affection. For every war fought, there are other wars averted. For every cruelty, there's decency. Only someone with an irrationally melancholic temperament can't see that.
And, frankly, I'm surprised. I would expect a
Star Trek fan to know the importance of recognizing and encouraging the positive attributes of humanity over the negative. You think we'll ever achieve the utopian Earth of Trek if we just write off humanity as mostly bad?
Personally, I find the whole, "I wouldn't contact us if I was the leader of an alien species because we're so screwed up" argument, as well as the "You shouldn't interfere with a primitive culture by contacting it" argument, kind of ironic, considering that the entire premise of Star Trek is that it took contact with extra-terrestrial life to energize humanity to change its cultures and unify into a peaceful, world-wide, egalitarian, constitutional liberal democracy.
That, or Cochrane shoots the Vulcans and humanity goes on to found an oppressive interstellar empire.
And yet even with the Mirror Universe, it took contact with a peaceful, benevolent foreign culture -- the Federation -- to motivate that oppressive empire to begin to reform itself.
And *we* are similarly tense and conflict-ridden. Just for different reasons. Terrorism, for example.
I'm aware of no credible fear amongst any segment of the population that a planetary shooting war is about to emerge amongst the world's major nation-states.
There is plenty of fear about al Qaeda. That may not, in and of itself, be a "planetary shooting war", but it's the next thing to one.
I don't know what world you live in, but in the one I live in, people's fear of al Qaeda, while present, is in no way proportional to the fear they had of Nazi Germany. How could it be, when al Qaeda has never and will never be able to achieve that kind of a death toll?
But to equate any of the conflicts facing the world today with the sheer scale of the conflict that everyone knew was boiling on the eve of World War II is an act of profound and absurd hyperbole.
If it helps prevent any further bloodshed, hyperbole can be useful.
The relative utility of hyperbole is utterly unrelated to whether or not it is a realistic -- or, for that matter, widely-shared -- fear. You are changing the topic.