Hi guys. I was wondering what people thought of A PRIVATE LITTLE WAR. It's an unusual episode to me because it was a direct commentary on current events (when it was made).
Some modern documentary's sight it as an example of doing 'edgy social comentary' which Trek really wasn't, despite it's message of optimism and equality.
Basically you have Tyree's people, who are an incredibly illinformed and badly painted stand-in for the South Vietnamese and the other lot with the dark wigs the North Vietnamese being armed by shady communist forces, sorry, I should say shady Klingon forces. Then comes Kirk in in the role of 'military adviser' (Kennedy had a lot of those in South Vietnam because they tried to avoid the word 'troops') and he want's to create a "balance of power" by arming Tryee's people. This really isn't forward thinking stuff. It's very, very 1960's US military policy. The only voice of reason in the whole episode is McCoy, who I find to have the most interesting things to say about this whole affair, but his arguement is kind of shunted out of the way for the episode to feature on Kirk's decision.
You would think that Star Trek would promote a peaceful solution, or at least oppose the military action in South Vietnam, but it goes a completely right wing way to halt the marching communist bad guys by providing weapons for Tryee's people to fight them off.
In the final analysis, I find this episode to be interesting because, as I said above, to my knowledge it is one of the few, if not, only episodes that make specific reference to 'modern events' and that it backs the neo-colonial military intervention stance that Eisenhower thru Kennedy, then Johnson and finally Nixon carried out.
What does everyone else think?
Some modern documentary's sight it as an example of doing 'edgy social comentary' which Trek really wasn't, despite it's message of optimism and equality.
Basically you have Tyree's people, who are an incredibly illinformed and badly painted stand-in for the South Vietnamese and the other lot with the dark wigs the North Vietnamese being armed by shady communist forces, sorry, I should say shady Klingon forces. Then comes Kirk in in the role of 'military adviser' (Kennedy had a lot of those in South Vietnam because they tried to avoid the word 'troops') and he want's to create a "balance of power" by arming Tryee's people. This really isn't forward thinking stuff. It's very, very 1960's US military policy. The only voice of reason in the whole episode is McCoy, who I find to have the most interesting things to say about this whole affair, but his arguement is kind of shunted out of the way for the episode to feature on Kirk's decision.
You would think that Star Trek would promote a peaceful solution, or at least oppose the military action in South Vietnam, but it goes a completely right wing way to halt the marching communist bad guys by providing weapons for Tryee's people to fight them off.
In the final analysis, I find this episode to be interesting because, as I said above, to my knowledge it is one of the few, if not, only episodes that make specific reference to 'modern events' and that it backs the neo-colonial military intervention stance that Eisenhower thru Kennedy, then Johnson and finally Nixon carried out.
What does everyone else think?