I believe it could be argued that being conservative is in a way anti-roddenberry, anti-star trek.
I believe it could be argued that being conservative is in a way anti-roddenberry, anti-star trek.
I believe it could be argued that being conservative is in a way anti-roddenberry, anti-star trek.
I believe it could be argued that being conservative is in a way anti-roddenberry, anti-star trek.
Bullshit.
I believe it could be argued that being conservative is in a way anti-roddenberry, anti-star trek.
Bullshit.
Yeah, I can't agree with that, either. Lots of people have dreams, and Star Trek is a hopeful vision of the future for humanity. That's something a lot of people, regardless of political affiliation, can get behind.
Plus, starships. Starships are cool.
People who adopt ideology have labeled themselves.I've a friend who refers to himself as an arch-conservative and swears by Rush Limbaugh, but he loves ST TNG. People are always more interesting than we give credit for, especially when we're distracted by labels.
I regard myself as left of center but still mainstream, because every stream has a left bank and a right bank. The problem is that so much of our public discourse is dominated by people who have left the stream and are off in the weeds somewhere.
People are too complex to say "because this person believes in X, then they must hate this unrelated Y."
I'm a moderate republican agnostic with a gun collection and an insatiable science fiction habit. I Love Trek's hopeful message. Don't even try to pigeonhole me.
I got the impression that mainstream science fiction got more and more conservative in recent years. In the previous decades, science fiction stories were further "out there", but now I read stuff like "Earth needs to be in danger so audiences can relate", etc... Just look at the conceptual differences between original Battlestar Galactica and the reboot, for example.
Same thing happened with Trek. No money, utopian society, etc... All that got reduced more and more to the point where Uhura orders Budweiser in a bar. At some point in Trek, future humans were supposed to appear alien to us in the audience. But now it's a trend to make things look like nothing will change in 300 years, and that the only difference is the technology, but not the state of society.
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