Genuine question to those who see Picard as a dystopia-what are the elements that make it show and are there any other examples of those behaviors in past Trek?
They're not sure, but they'll know it when they see it.Genuine question to those who see Picard as a dystopia-what are the elements that make it show and are there any other examples of those behaviors in past Trek?
If 0 is dystopian and 10 is utopian, then TNG was something like a 3, and PIC is more of a 6.
If 0 is dystopian and 10 is utopian, then TNG was something like a 3, and PIC is more of a 6.
He's actually saying that TNG is more dystopian, though I don't know if that was his intent.What's your evidence? How is the Federation in Picard worse, than the land grabbing, genocide enabling, treaty breaking federation of TNG?
I got confused and mixed them up XDHe's actually saying that TNG is more dystopian, though I don't know if that was his intent.
I got confused and mixed them up XD
Thanks for pointing it out.
There was no casual (human) smoking on TNG, no eye gore, no broken characters. In PIC, people are messed up, as they all pointed out in their premiere interviews and comic con panels.
There was no casual (human) smoking on TNG, no eye gore,
no broken characters. In PIC, people are messed up, as they all pointed out in their premiere interviews and comic con panels.
So, Raffi is supposed to be forced to have help? O_o
Not that ethics and patient confidentiality have done well in Star Trek future but I find the idea of forcing treatment on a person, who protecting them from their own choices to be odd, to say the least.
Here's my thing and ultimately this may be a place of difference-I don't think people become poor because of their own choices always, and that society can do work to help improve the lives of all. That said, in my experience, forcing therapy upon a person who is not willing or engaged does not yield the best outcomes. I personally believe in removing as many barriers to getting help as possible. That's why I work for a community mental health agency that doesn't charge clients who have Medicaid. Finding resources and removing barriers is a part of the job. But, I have noticed that ordering a person to treatment doesn't mean that the person has any investment in participating.I know you tend to lean towards the right. But my point is the argument that Raffi failed - and became poor - due to her own bad choices is fundamentally the same argument that conservative people use regarding poor people today. I suppose the difference is we're supposed to believe in the case of the Federation a "perfect meritocracy" has now formed, whereas in the present we still have a lot of work to do? I'm not 100% sure to be honest.
I know you tend to lean towards the right. But my point is the argument that Raffi failed - and became poor - due to her own bad choices is fundamentally the same argument that conservative people use regarding poor people today. I suppose the difference is we're supposed to believe in the case of the Federation a "perfect meritocracy" has now formed, whereas in the present we still have a lot of work to do? I'm not 100% sure to be honest.
Speaking personally, I don't really believe in free will. We don't have a say in our DNA, in the place we are born, and our neurochemistry. As far as neuroscientists can determine, our brain unconsciously makes decisions that the conscious part of the brain later rationalizes. Because of this, I don't believe in personal responsibility as it's commonly portrayed - I think it's basically arbitrarily punishing people based upon who they happened to turn out as being. But I recognize that Star Trek has had a very spotty relationship with the sciences over the years, and has some fundamentally fantastic elements within it (like mind/body dualism) meaning perhaps free will does exist within the fictional universe, and personal responsibility means something.
So, does the smoking automatically equal dystopia? O_oThere was no casual (human) smoking on TNG, no eye gore, no broken characters. In PIC, people are messed up, as they all pointed out in their premiere interviews and comic con panels.
And PIC is not dystopian.
From most Utopian to least Utopian, I'd go:If 0 is dystopian and 10 is utopian, then TNG was something like a 3, and PIC is more of a 6.
At this point I don't see how. Picard deals with things we have seen in Trek before, in one way or another.It’s getting close to it. Much closer then TOS and TNG. K
In what way?It’s getting close to it. Much closer then TOS and TNG. K
It's a step backwards from a more enlightened society (Ex Post Facto, Little Green Men, Time's Arrow).So, does the smoking automatically equal dystopia? O_o
Also, for broken characters what about Lwaxana Troi's blocking out a painful event, Yar growing upon a colony with rape gang and her mother killed over groceries? Do those count?
I don't see it as the step backwards that others do. I think it is a sign that Federation society is a living and breathing society that has its ups and downs.It's a step backwards from a more enlightened society (Ex Post Facto, Little Green Men, Time's Arrow).
Which of those were ongoing current issues dealt with in most or all episodes, and which were part of 1/178 episodes?
By our standards, it’s a more believable view of the future. People still have vices, they still bicker, kill, enslave, discriminate on racial grounds (treatment of Romulans), there is still money and by implication, rich and poor.
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