I've been looking at TNG in a new light lately. It's kind of a dystopia if you think about it. People are so removed for the so-called negative parts of their lives (lust, greed, jealousy, hatred) that they're sterile and almost dehumanized. They're too happy. Somethings got to be wrong, but it's never really examined except in The Wounded.
Both O'Brien and Maxwell are wounded but they don't admit it even to themselves and no one in this new world order can understand that another human being might be in any kind of pain because we're all so happy!
Case in point: O'Brien talks to Keiko about how he feels about the Cardassians. He goes as far as to comment how he can't understand why anyone would hold a grudge against an old enemy if the war is over, even though he shows clear hostility toward the visiting Cardassians
About Maxwell, O'Brien talks like an idiot about how Maxwell seemed to take his family's death "OK". He was always smiling and singing a tune. And everyone apparently accepted this. No one psych evaluated him or asked him if he was ok. They just accepted that the new type TNG human would actually be able to deal with that kind of trauma with a smile and a song.
But in actuality both them men are full of rage they can't even admit to until it bursts.
I found it especially sad that Picard seems to almost chastise Maxwell for acting on feelings related to his family. Only grudgingly at the end does Picard "pitty" Maxwell.
This kind of facing the truth about their pain theme happened a few more times on TNG (Picard after BOBW for ex). But I would have liked it if by the end of the series there was some kind of humanity scale catharsis that made people realize their lifestyles just weren't health. And, no, I don't think DS9 accomplished that. It went way too dark to the point of being comically sadistic.
Both O'Brien and Maxwell are wounded but they don't admit it even to themselves and no one in this new world order can understand that another human being might be in any kind of pain because we're all so happy!
Case in point: O'Brien talks to Keiko about how he feels about the Cardassians. He goes as far as to comment how he can't understand why anyone would hold a grudge against an old enemy if the war is over, even though he shows clear hostility toward the visiting Cardassians
About Maxwell, O'Brien talks like an idiot about how Maxwell seemed to take his family's death "OK". He was always smiling and singing a tune. And everyone apparently accepted this. No one psych evaluated him or asked him if he was ok. They just accepted that the new type TNG human would actually be able to deal with that kind of trauma with a smile and a song.
But in actuality both them men are full of rage they can't even admit to until it bursts.
I found it especially sad that Picard seems to almost chastise Maxwell for acting on feelings related to his family. Only grudgingly at the end does Picard "pitty" Maxwell.
This kind of facing the truth about their pain theme happened a few more times on TNG (Picard after BOBW for ex). But I would have liked it if by the end of the series there was some kind of humanity scale catharsis that made people realize their lifestyles just weren't health. And, no, I don't think DS9 accomplished that. It went way too dark to the point of being comically sadistic.