So if the shows are Federation propaganda, just how much worse were the actual events of "In the Pale Moonlight" on DS9?
So if the shows are Federation propaganda, just how much worse were the actual events of "In the Pale Moonlight" on DS9?
So if the shows are Federation propaganda, just how much worse were the actual events of "In the Pale Moonlight" on DS9?
But is there some sort of massive Orwellian conspiracy to conceal the horrible truth from everyone? If that were the case I would lose all interest in the show.
So if the shows are Federation propaganda, just how much worse were the actual events of "In the Pale Moonlight" on DS9?
Well, it could be that TOS was the propaganda of an earlier era, and DS9 the fiction of a later era that tried to be more forthright about its society's mistakes -- like the difference between old movies that portray American Indians as primitive savages to be fought by noble cowboys and cavalrymen and more modern ones that acknowledge the crimes committed against them in the colonization of the US.
I just find the concept of the 'Captains Log Conceit' to be entirely unconvincing. With the possible exception of TOS, there are just too many scenes (and sometimes almost entire entire episodes) where no starfleet or federation personnel were present. And even outside that, there are way too many details that would never be included in any log of any kind.
But the idea suggested in the TMP novelization is that the episodes are works of fiction inspired by Kirk's logs, dramatizing actual events complete with the embellishments and fictional extrapolations of most dramatizations. By analogy with another Shatner work, it's like Judgment at Nuremburg -- based on a true story, but with parts of it made up or simplified or changed for dramatic effect.
In response to the original point, if all of Trek is a work of fiction presented by Starfleet (or its partisans within the Federation entertainment industry), then not only might we be seeing exaggeratedly negative portrayals of the Federation's enemies, but we might be seeing an exaggeratedly positive portrayal of the Federation itself. Think of the World War II-era films that glossed over the United States' immoral acts like the internment of Japanese-Americans in concentration camps. The first episode of the 1943 Batman serial actually praised that crime as the action of a "wise" government to protect the nation against enemies from within. So maybe the show's portrayal of the benevolence of Starfleet and Federation policies could be an idealized depiction of a more ambiguous reality.
For instance, what if Vulcans were "actually" an oppressed minority? Building up Spock as a central character in the fictionalized version of events could've been a form of tokenism to make the show seem fair and inclusive, but he had the advantage of being half-human. And maybe the portrayal of Vulcans' savage mating rites was a form of ethnic stereotyping to sell the idea that they're a morally inferior people who need to be closely supervised -- much like the way the infrequently practiced custom of sati (widow-burning) among certain narrow subcultures in India was exaggeratedly presented as a universal, compulsory practice in Indian culture in order for the British Raj to convince the folks back home that Indian culture was immoral and dangerous and the Indians needed to be converted to proper English culture and values for their own good. (Note also how poorly the all-Vulcan Intrepid crew fared in their one token mention.)
Gene Roddenberry himself called TOS an inaccurate representation of the five-year mission in his TMP novelization. It opens the door to question if anything we've seen in Trek is what "really" happened, or some skewed after-the-point interpretation.
Here's the relevant section of the TMP novel:
Unfortunately, Starfleet's enthusiasm affected even those who chronicled our adventures, and we were painted somewhat larger than life, especially myself.
Eventually, I found that I had been fictionalized into some sort of "modern Ulysses" and it has been painful to see my command decisions of those years so widely applauded, whereas the plain facts are that ninety-four of our crew met violent deaths during those years - and many of them would still be alive if I had acted either more quickly or more wisely. Nor have I been as foolishly courageous as depicted. I have never happily invited injury; I have disliked in the extreme every duty circumstance which has required me to risk my life. But there appears to be something in the nature of depicters of popular events which leads them into the habit of exaggeration. As a result, I have become determined that if I ever again found myself involved in an affair attracting public attention, I would insist that some way be found to tell the story more accurately.
(P. 7-8)
Then there's Voyager, which implies that up until "Latent Image" we'd been seeing the Doctor's censored, Ensign Jetal-free version of the show.
It's fascinating to wonder what we might be missing...
Eddington: Why is the Federation so obsessed about the Maquis? We've never harmed you. And yet we're constantly arrested and charged with terrorism...Starships chase us through the Badlands... and our supporters are harassed and ridiculed. Why?
Because we've left the Federation, and that's the one thing you can't accept. Nobody leaves paradise. Everyone should want to be in the Federation.
AZETBUR: "Human rights." Even the name is racist. The Federation is basically a "homo sapiens" only club...
QUARK: But you're overlooking something. Humans used to be a lot worse than the Ferengi. Slavery, concentration camps, interstellar wars. We have nothing in our past that approaches that kind of barbarism. You see? We're nothing like you. We're better.
QUARK: All right, name me one Ferengi you do like.
Ah ha. You see? I was right. You Federation types are all alike. You talk about tolerance and understanding but you only practice it toward people who remind you of yourselves.
FINN: How much innocent blood has been spilled for the cause of freedom in the history of your Federation, Doctor? How many good and noble societies have bombed civilians in war? Wiped out whole cities.
And now that you enjoy the comfort that has come from their battles,their killing... you frown on my immorality? Doctor, I am willing to die for my freedom. And, in the finest tradition of your own great civilization, I'm willing to kill for it too.
There is a real possibility that they could be, but my "gut" reaction to the question is no and I'll think I'll stick with that.
But is there some sort of massive Orwellian conspiracy to conceal the horrible truth from everyone? If that were the case I would lose all interest in the show.
I agree completely. I appreciate the cleverness of the propaganda interpretation but it undermines the hopeful future aspect of the show. For me, Star Trek has always been a hopeful escape, an inspiration to be more thoughtful and open-minded. The propaganda interpretation takes us right back to the depressing present.
It still does not work for me at all. If this has all been 'propaganda' aimed at praising the Federation and discrediting its enemies, then why is the Federation presented as being so flawed? Why are there so many stories about the goodness of its enemies? Why are there so many stories entirely devoted to Quark's mother, who has nothing whatsoever to do with the Federation or its enemies?
Why do stories like the Mirror Universe exist, which only serve to cast our propaganda heroes in a bad light?
Most of all, if this is 'propaganda' then who is supposed to be the target? And don't say we are, because if you're going to drag real world viewers into the equation then this entire exercise of redefining the series based on itself is completely pointless. I mean, really, as propaganda goes, ST is pretty terrible. It certainly wouldn't convince anyone outside the Federation who was also hearing news stories about oppression or starvation or whatever in the Federation. People inside the Federation would mostly know it was a lie (if it was a lie). Even if they happened to live in a nicer part of the Federation, there'd definitely be some undercurrent of suspicion in that type of society, and there's way too much that's clearly made up in the stories for anyone in that situation to believe them.
So when Picard says 20th century humans are savages it's smug, but when Quark says it it's insightful?Let's bear in mind that Quark comes from a civilization that enslaves the entire female half of its population, which is equally 'savage' as the human history he rants about.
If you're going to hold individuals responsible for the barbaric actions of their ancestors from centuries ago, everybody is evil.
As for the 'homo sapiens only' remark, ever think that perhaps if the show is an edited version of Kirk's logs, it was edited to increase the concentration of humans (For production/cost saving reasons) and the actual Enterprise was a far smaller percentage human?
Just because the best TV shows on right now are depressing and reveal the evil of human nature doesn't mean we have to reinterpret all television shows to be that way.
Here are some anti-Federation rants from other cultures. Some of it is exaggeration, but some of them make you think:
Eddington: Why is the Federation so obsessed about the Maquis? We've never harmed you. And yet we're constantly arrested and charged with terrorism...Starships chase us through the Badlands... and our supporters are harassed and ridiculed. Why?
Because we've left the Federation, and that's the one thing you can't accept. Nobody leaves paradise. Everyone should want to be in the Federation.
AZETBUR: "Human rights." Even the name is racist. The Federation is basically a "homo sapiens" only club...
QUARK: All right, name me one Ferengi you do like.
Ah ha. You see? I was right. You Federation types are all alike. You talk about tolerance and understanding but you only practice it toward people who remind you of yourselves.
FINN: How much innocent blood has been spilled for the cause of freedom in the history of your Federation, Doctor? How many good and noble societies have bombed civilians in war? Wiped out whole cities.
And now that you enjoy the comfort that has come from their battles,their killing... you frown on my immorality? Doctor, I am willing to die for my freedom. And, in the finest tradition of your own great civilization, I'm willing to kill for it too.
As I already suggested, maybe TOS was from a more propagandistic era and DS9 was the media of a later, postmodern era where the entertainment industry was freer to be more honest and critical of society. Much like the difference between 1940s American movies and 1970s American movies, say.
Why do stories like the Mirror Universe exist, which only serve to cast our propaganda heroes in a bad light?
Do they really, though? If anything, I'd think that showing an "evil opposite" universe just serves to cast the real universe as more intrinsically "good."
Most of all, if this is 'propaganda' then who is supposed to be the target? And don't say we are, because if you're going to drag real world viewers into the equation then this entire exercise of redefining the series based on itself is completely pointless. I mean, really, as propaganda goes, ST is pretty terrible. It certainly wouldn't convince anyone outside the Federation who was also hearing news stories about oppression or starvation or whatever in the Federation. People inside the Federation would mostly know it was a lie (if it was a lie). Even if they happened to live in a nicer part of the Federation, there'd definitely be some undercurrent of suspicion in that type of society, and there's way too much that's clearly made up in the stories for anyone in that situation to believe them.
On the contrary, propaganda is very good at convincing people of lies about their own society. People who watch FOX News are less informed about the truth of current events in the world than people who watch no news at all. They don't know that what they're being sold as news about the state of their nation is a pack of lies constructed to serve the agendas of the rich and the bigoted, because they don't get exposed to enough alternative sources of information, or aren't inclined to believe what those other sources say because they find the propaganda more persuasive. The same goes for the propaganda engines in plenty of other nations. Propaganda is very much about controlling and manipulating the information that your own population is exposed to, so that you can make them believe what you want them to believe about their own nation and their own government. Convincing people in other nations is secondary. It's harder to do because those people have their own governments and their own information sources that are harder for you to control.
Eventually, I found that I had been fictionalized into some sort of "modern Ulysses" and it has been painful to see my command decisions of those years so widely applauded, whereas the plain facts are that ninety-four of our crew met violent deaths during those years - and many of them would still be alive if I had acted either more quickly or more wisely.
That sounds less like we were given a false image of the occurrences of the original five-year voyage of the Enterprise and more Kirk being guilt-wracked over the loss of crewmembers under his command, blaming himself for their loss because he wasn't fast enough, or he wasn't strong enough.
TOS shows the Federation failing in a number of ways. Starvation, disease - not to mention the blatantly insane commanding officers. It's less confrontational than DS9, but it's still pretty terrible propaganda.
Yes, they do. That is captain Kirk, our hero, randomly killing people with his magic mirror. If they were intended as evil opposite to make our heroes look better, then they should not have been alternative versions of our heroes.
It's possible when a) the state of your nation is still normal enough for most people not to notice major problems first hand (the posts in this thread seem to suggest that the 'real' Federation should be far beyond this point) and b) the propaganda is coming from a supposedly respectable *news* source. Dramatized propaganda will have a far different set of requirements to be effective, since it is automatically conceding the fact that it isn't real. Generally speaking, it will work best to stiffen the resolve of people that already believe you, not to convince anyone else that you're right.
Again, the conceit we're playing with is that TOS was a fictionalized version of actual events. So we can assume that captains like Merik and Tracey and people like John Gill actually existed and actually did bad things -- in which case the propaganda goal would be to show the more good, honest, noble Starfleet heroes defeating them, to portray them as rogues who did not represent the values of Starfleet or the Federation as a whole, and possibly even to exaggerate their sins in order that history would remember them as villains.
Again, the conceit we're playing with is that TOS was a fictionalized version of actual events. So we can assume that captains like Merik and Tracey and people like John Gill actually existed and actually did bad things -- in which case the propaganda goal would be to show the more good, honest, noble Starfleet heroes defeating them, to portray them as rogues who did not represent the values of Starfleet or the Federation as a whole, and possibly even to exaggerate their sins in order that history would remember them as villains.
That's what I get for being too speculative with Captain Tracey here.
But Merrik redeemed himself at the end of "Bread and Circuses" and Professor John Gill admitted to his mistakes.
If one wanted these to be remembered as villains, their good actions would not be mentioned.
Bob
And Captain Renault starts out as an amoral collaborator but finally grows a conscience and turns on the Nazis.
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