And there are plenty aliens in Star TrekI think it likely humans would get past the -isms only as long as they had some aliens to displace their anger and prejudices on.
And there are plenty aliens in Star TrekI think it likely humans would get past the -isms only as long as they had some aliens to displace their anger and prejudices on.
In practise is a semi military dictatorship masquarading as a democracy, or its just poor writing that Starfleet and the UFP are interchangeable.
I think it likely humans would get past the -isms only as long as they had some aliens to displace their anger and prejudices on.
The world building in Star Trek is very poor, or the budgets were, a rebooted TNG era should have an Enterprise diverse crew as diverse as the novels or as the Kelvin movies.
I got the impression that a lot of ships and fleets in Starfleet are operated almost entirely by crews from Federation worlds, like ships mostly made up of Vulcans or Andorians with the odd other species sprinkled in for experience and cohesion. LaForge's mom, for example, worked on a ship mostly of Vulcans IIRC. This made sense to me when you consider that a lot of species could have different environmental needs and specialities. I could see those Miranda class ships and Defiant vessels in the Dominion War being operated mostly by Andorians, since we know they were quite a militaristic species and consider serving their military an honour etc.
Remember the "Officer Exchange Program" had a Benzar, a Federation member world, serving on the Enterprise as an Ensign and they still seemed to be a full Starfleet member, just used to working in a Benzar working environment.
I know it is down to budget, but that's always been my head canon to explain it.
I got the impression that a lot of ships and fleets in Starfleet are operated almost entirely by crews from Federation worlds, like ships mostly made up of Vulcans or Andorians with the odd other species sprinkled in for experience and cohesion. LaForge's mom, for example, worked on a ship mostly of Vulcans IIRC. This made sense to me when you consider that a lot of species could have different environmental needs and specialities. I could see those Miranda class ships and Defiant vessels in the Dominion War being operated mostly by Andorians, since we know they were quite a militaristic species and consider serving their military an honour etc.
Remember the "Officer Exchange Program" had a Benzar, a Federation member world, serving on the Enterprise as an Ensign and they still seemed to be a full Starfleet member, just used to working in a Benzar working environment.
I know it is down to budget, but that's always been my head canon to explain it.
I mean, the unavoidable implication of this explanation is that the Federation Starfleet practices segregation....
I mean, the unavoidable implication of this explanation is that the Federation Starfleet practices segregation....
In canon, Earth first achieved warp technology in 2063, and only achieved feasible interstellar travel in 2051, nigh a century later, with the Warp Five engines — Soval claimed that it took Vulcan more than twice as long to cross the barrier from inventing warp to interstellar travel.
Merely having a warp engine or some other means of f.t.l. is clearly very different from the means of interstellar travel.
On-screen evidence very much suggests that humans are the dominant and favored species within the U.F.P., considering as well that most of the admirality seems to be made up of humans, who are not one of the more longer-lived species, suggesting a certain bias that favors humans.I mean, the unavoidable implication of this explanation is that the Federation Starfleet practices segregation....
Colonialism? I don't know about that. I'd say imperialism. At least as conceptualized in TOS, that's how I always saw the PD: a set of rules to prevent the UFP/Starfleet from being tempted to construct the kind of hegemonic status enjoyed by the UK or US in recent Earth history, or the Klingons in Trek's present.I feel the Prime Directive is a very white man's guilt view of colonialism.
Dunno how old you are, but you could expand it to all of U.S. history and the list of really decent presidents would still only be a half-dozen or so. (In my lifetime? At most one. And yeah, it's discouraging.) Fortunately, the U.S. president is not the only exemplar of governance on Earth, much less of human capabilities. There are best practices out there that the U.S. could and should be following, but isn't.My opinions of whether we'd make it are dramatically influenced by who is President in my lifetime.
The "lead a horse to water" principle? Ah, you are an optimist.I think that cultural progress can be sped up along with the technology, just drop off some teachers or books. ... If we got replicators and some schooling on how that kind of society can work I think it would work itself out
Hmm, I'm not sure whether that sounds optimistic or not. It's hard to say, especially because "personal responsibility" has become such a right-wing catchphrase. Probably best to assume that you're not intentionally using it as a dogwhistle, and that you're implicitly including the capacity to demonstrate social responsibility through collective action, as well.My biggest thing is that humans have control over a lot of different facets and when we are willing to practice personal responsibility that positive results can happen.
Yeah, I always liked that aspect of TOS myself, and it's one of the things that always seemed a little "off" to me about First Contact (even in contrast to the versions of humanity's first warp explorations presented in earlier Trek novels). Although, to be fair, even TOS posited that we had to get through some version of a Third World War first.I think TOS at first suggested that humans somehow came to their senses on their own. And that technology helped positively changed human nature. In a logical step by step manner.
Create technology that produces more than enough food and products for everyone, --- eliminate poverty and greed. If humans are free from poverty and less greedy,-- then class and discrimination problems begin to vanish. If class and discrimination vanish--- then humans start seeing each other as equal etc, etc.
Ah, the optimism runs wild in this thread!It'll probably take contact from advanced aliens to shock humans out of being racist, sexist, narrow minded bigots. Once you realize there's intelligent life on other planets, human prejudices are going to be small and insignificant.
Hear hear. I always hated that episode, and thought it exemplified how deeply TNG's writers misunderstood the whole purpose of the PD. It's not about "fate," it's about fairness. Allowing other cultures the opportunity for self-determination does not mean letting them get destroyed.One of the most dangerous interpretations of the PD that I've ever seen comes from Pens Pals. They're having a discussion about saving an intelligent, but pre-warp civilization. It has the outward appearance of an intelligent discussion, but then it goes in a strange direction.
They're talking about things "cosmic plan" and "fate" and destiny. And whether the civilization was meant to be destroyed, and hence they shouldn't save it.
Nothing mystical about it (again, outside certain episodes of TNG). It's about not exercising dominance, that's all. Not putting a thumb on the scales of other cultures (as so many Earth nations had been guilty of doing). Offering genuine humanitarian aid without strings attached—that's fine, and it's where the UFP should/would "interfere."I’m more of the inclination that the non-interference principle is a little too close to mysticism. (Ditto free will and the invisible hand of the market, but those are threads.) But devil’s advocate, where should/would the Federation or any power interfere?
I'll never understand how personal responsibility is a right wing catchphrase. I can only control myself.Hmm, I'm not sure whether that sounds optimistic or not. It's hard to say, especially because "personal responsibility" has become such a right-wing catchphrase. Probably best to assume that you're not intentionally using it as a dogwhistle, and that you're implicitly including the capacity to demonstrate social responsibility through collective action, as well.
I mean, the unavoidable implication of this explanation is that the Federation Starfleet practices segregation....
Yes, self-determination is a huge aspect that I think the PD occasionally gets right. I think that individuals, peoples, and planets have the right to self-determination and to make their choices.Allowing other cultures the opportunity for self-determination does not mean letting them get destroyed.
Different species have different physiological needs, however if a Human wanted to serve on a Vulcan dominated ship as long as they past the relevant xeno cultural exams they should be allowed to serve there. (I bet Dr McCoy would fail such a test lol) .Spock being the only non human on the Enterprise in the TOS (Ok it was down to budget) was ridiculous.I mean, the unavoidable implication of this explanation is that the Federation Starfleet practices segregation....
Interstellar travel was definitely feasible prior to Enterprise; deep space exploration wasn't. Six months to travel 20 light years or whatever it was meant they were pretty much stuck in the local neighborhood in relation to the greater intergalactic community that they'd become a part of.
This is the case. I would hope a Star Trek reboot would change all this, but that did not happen in the modern movies. The scene where all the admirals meet before they were attacked, well they all looked human. Since the UFP was really a T.V version of the USA this natonalistic bias was reflected in the show, exchange the concept of the human privilege in the UFP for the Eurocentric privilege of real life and the concept exposes its in universe ugliness. Would make an interesting media study essay.On-screen evidence very much suggests that humans are the dominant and favored species within the U.F.P., considering as well that most of the admirality seems to be made up of humans, who are not one of the more longer-lived species, suggesting a certain bias that favors humans.
The flag ships also, time and time again, have had a primarily human crew, a human captain, and named after an Earth ship.
Ah, the optimism runs wild in this thread!What if the inclination toward prejudice is simply re-directed toward the new group outsiders?
I don't think it is segregation to have completely difference species, with different needs and living standards, to work together.
On-screen evidence very much suggests that humans are the dominant and favored species within the U.F.P., considering as well that most of the admirality seems to be made up of humans, who are not one of the more longer-lived species, suggesting a certain bias that favors humans.
The flag ships also, time and time again, have had a primarily human crew, a human captain, and named after an Earth ship.
Jumping into one of the most interesting threads I've seen in quite a while!...
Colonialism? I don't know about that. I'd say imperialism. At least as conceptualized in TOS, that's how I always saw the PD: a set of rules to prevent the UFP/Starfleet from being tempted to construct the kind of hegemonic status enjoyed by the UK or US in recent Earth history, or the Klingons in Trek's present.
In-universe, that makes sense to me not only for idealistic reasons, but also as an effective way of distinguishing the UFP from the Klingons: no "empire" here, just voluntary association. Out-of-universe, it seems like a pretty enlightened concept for Gene and company to have come up with, acknowledging the shortcomings of human tendencies and (implicitly) critiquing the American exceptionalism so commonplace in the Cold War era.
(How TNG handled it... that was another story.)
Nothing mystical about it (again, outside certain episodes of TNG). It's about not exercising dominance, that's all. Not putting a thumb on the scales of other cultures (as so many Earth nations had been guilty of doing). Offering genuine humanitarian aid without strings attached—that's fine, and it's where the UFP should/would "interfere."
Sci said:I mean, the unavoidable implication of this explanation is that the Federation Starfleet practices segregation....
Why not?
Surely in their era "segregration" is no longer associated with discrimination, or any form of unequal or preferred treatment the way it still is in our time, simply because the idea of unequal treatment is something they've left behind them for over three centuries.
And it could just be eminently practical to simply put all chlorine-breathing species on the same type of ships, and all oxygen breathing species on another contingent of ships. Otherwise, everyone would have to wear environmental suits on the job all the time.
And even between lifeforms that can intermingle, such as Vulcans and Humans, perhaps most still prefer the company of their own species - given how for example Tuvok often is the butt of (goodhearted) jokes and pranks on Voyager, that would be understandable.
This is why I find the humancentric nature of Star Trek uncomfortable, for me it reflects the eurocentric nature of life. What's the lesson for the TV audience, humans are soo special it takes us to create a UFP (ENT) and be its military leaders?And within the fictional world of Star Trek, leaders should be aware that that same principle holds true, and should seek to minimize species segregation as much as possible.
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