While my regeneration module undergoes remaining technological and philisophical upgrades, I therefore return to the BBS temporarily:
Okay. Hey, folks! Now, down to business:
I've always been puzzled by the apparent discrepancy between Starfleet (and or Federation) and American principles/philosophy. Namely: the Prime Directive is antithetical to US foreign policy;based on Picard's comments to Lily in First Contact, and several DS9 episodes, Earth, if not the federation as a whole, is some kind of communist techno-utopia.
I wouldn't say
communist, per se. Picard's lines were, "The aquisition of wealth is no longer the driving force in our lives. We work to better
ourselves and the rest of humanity."
Communism is strictly "bettering the rest"--As Marx would say, "
From Each According To His Ability,
To Each According To His Need".
Capitalism is basically "bettering ourselves", with "bettering the rest of humanity" being a nice side effect of the Invisible Hand of the market forces.
What the UFP seems to have is some sort of future "meritocracy". There are certainly some elements of capitalism in the UFP economy--Bashir's father, for example, seems to illustrate the "Freedom To Fail" aspect, as well as a nice bit of rugged individualism. Still, the "moneyless" aspect indicates that, while we
could call the Federation a "free economy", it's not capitalism as we know it.
Do American star trek fans represent the more leftish, liberal facet of the nation,
Not specifically. I, and
Nerys and
Shran, are living proof of that.
For the most part, the principles of Trek are broad and general enough so that both the Left and the Right can sit and enjoy its wonderfully thought-provoking messages.
or do most just fail to make the connection between say US involvement in the middle east and latin america etc. and 'non inteference in the internal affairs of other planets' ?
As
Shran has pointed out, much (albiet not all) of the interventionalism (some would say imperialism) of the US has been conducted by the Left--or, at the very least, the (
clears throat) "Progressive" Movement.
Teddy Rosevelt, I believe, was the one who started the whole "world's policeman" thing. And of course, The-One-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named got the US into WWI with the attude of "making the world safe for democracy".
(What the world got was the Treaty of Versailles, the gutting of the British fleet, and Hitler and Mussolini. But I digress....)
Anyhow--about Roddenberry.
While The Bird did often times style himself as a "Progressive"--such as that "monyless society" thing--still, there were times when TOS's messages of freedom and indiviual liberty seemed almost...libertarian. Note Spock's remarks about and to Khan in "Space Seed".
Also...how many times have Kirk and Co. "intervened" in order to set the inhabitants of a world free from a (usually machine) oppressor--"The Apple" being a major example? I duuno...but it seems very much like "imperialistic nation building" to me.
