Maybe because TNG, DS9 and VGR were so much better than anything made today.
You have
terrible taste and I don't want to be your friend.
My one minor quibble with Picard at this point is there's little else besides the serial storyline.
I find this statement really puzzling. It's a bit like saying, "Yeah,
Hamilton is a good show, but there's little else besides the musical." Or like saying, "Yeah,
The Godfather is a great film, but there's little else besides the movie." Or, "Yeah,
M. Butterfly is a great show, but there's little else besides the play."
Like,
Picard is its serial storyline. That's the point. Season One of
Star Trek: Picard is essentially a novel for television, with a beginning, middle, and end that are marked by unity of story.
Serialized television is just a fundamentally different genre than episodic television; each has things it can accomplish that the other can't, and it's not really fair to either genre to demand that they do things they can't.
It's easy to forget now, given our current cultural tendency to assign a political "side" to every person, place, event, inanimate object and color we encounter, whether warranted or not - but it wasn't always this way, and writers of a TV show didn't feel the need to make their character walk the straight path of one political divide or another because people weren't such kneejerk idiots about everything under the sun. Now, well....
Star Trek, and, yes, art in general, has always been political. TOS did not have half-white, half-black aliens in "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" or Kirk and the Klingons waging a proxy war on a pre-warp planet in "A Private Little War" because it wasn't taking a side. ("Battlefield:" "racism bad." "Private Little War:" Pro-Vietnam War. Yes, TOS took a side, and it didn't always take the right side.)
And yes, art and storytelling have always been political.
Henry V is one of the greatest plays in English-language theatre. It's also a piece of Tudor propaganda on par with anything ever put out by North Korea in terms of how it promotes a cult of personality for a political leader. Like, Henry V
literally launched a war of aggression against France that gets thousands of people killed for his own personal enrichment and power-lust, but that play wants us to think of it as a good thing.
Hell, the very first motion picture blockbuster was a film that depicted the Ku Klux Klan as noble modern aristocrats defending "civilized society" from scary black men. (Yes, this is a political stance. It is racist and evil, and it is also a political stance.) The biggest names in early-to-mid 20th Century visaul art were mostly social democrats, socialists, and communists like Pablo Picasso and Diego Rivera whose works reflected their beliefs.
Superman comics were essentially a deliberate attempt to use fascist iconography for anti-fascist political messages. Even Norman fucking Rockwell painted
The Problem We All Live With.
I am so goddamn tired of this idea that art didn't used to be political. It was always political; you just didn't pay attention.
I see Archer referred to very often as a George W. Bush and 9/11 cowboy conservative whose senior officers are also largely cut from the mold of a post-September 11th America even though ENT was developed and its earliest episodes were shot before the terrorist attacks even happened. I can see some of that argument when viewing the devil-may-care, Earth-F**k-Yeah attitude that the NX-01 crew often displays early in the series
I honestly always thought of Earth's position in early ENT as being more akin to the attitudes seen in countries trying to free themselves from imperial or neoimperial rule. I don't think Earth in ENT is the United States under Bush; I think Earth in ENT is more like Bolivia under Evo Morales or the D.R. Congo under Lumumba, escaping from under the thumb of American or Belgian (Vulcan) hegemony.
While in today's Star Trek, the stories don't value much life,
Pure nonsense. If anything, modern Trek values life
more because it doesn't pretend that people who die violently are nobodies whose lives don't matter the way TOS so often treated
Enterprise security officers.
killing violently is the norm
TOS literally killed so many supporting characters that the term "Redshirt" was invented to describe its systematic dehumanization of supporting characters who would die violently in order to manipulate the audience into feeling tension for the primary characters.
PIC at least has the decency not to pretend that violence is something that can be sanitized or bowdlerized.