Yes, but one thought that specific problems like alcoholism would’ve been solved in the future and replaced with new ones like holo-addiction or transporter psychosis. Guess what, they haven’t, but we’ve been, er, “censoring” those for you because Roddenberry said so once upon a time, and no, they don’t actually take only an episode to resolve.
From a dramatic point of view, if you chip away at the notion that some of today’s problems are totally irrelevant in the 24th century, then you also take away a bit of that sense of hope. If you’re going to show alcoholism, it shouldn’t be the way PIC did it, simply by revealing that Raffi is an alcoholic trying to get better. We need to know the hoops she must have jumped through to obtain enough of the real thing and hide the issue on physicals that would’ve probably led to mandatory counseling. Let’s work with the premise specific to Star Trek of that era, not just ignore it because it’s easier.
And was she doing anything to disturb paradise on Earth? Getting drunk and high in the privacy of your own home does not disturb others at all.It probably can if it’s doing anything to disturb the “paradise” on Earth.
And was she doing anything to disturb paradise on Earth? Getting drunk and high in the privacy of your own home does not disturb others at all.
It's also ridiculous to assume anyone is an alcoholic for liking a shot or two. It's a pathetic interpretation of what's been seen on the show.
Maybe, but it never felt so to me just an overused character trait for ship's engineers. Alcohol tolerance is far more impressive in the alien that kept up with Scotty in spite of having never drunk alcohol before.I always thought Scott was an alcoholic. He has quite a built up tolerance to be able to drink someone under the table. Also, using the Klingon Theragen solution to push the effect usually points to someone with a problem.
Maybe, but it never felt so to me just an overused character trait for ship's engineers. Alcohol tolerance is far more impressive in the alien that kept up with Scotty in spite of having never drunk alcohol before.
It would be rather ridiculous to just assume that no one is ever affected by the proven addictive nature of the thing. They may be rare, but I never once expected drunkards to be literally non-existent in this world anymore than violent offenders are in any way non-existant.
unless they are an immediate danger to themselves or others, which she clearly wasn't.
If I understand it right, an alcoholic can't drink at all without falling back into addiction. Scotty got drunk, but was never addicted. If he was an alcoholic he'd be teetotal, off the ship, or cured by something that happened in the next 200 yearsMaybe, but it never felt so to me just an overused character trait for ship's engineers. Alcohol tolerance is far more impressive in the alien that kept up with Scotty in spite of having never drunk alcohol before.
Just because all that happened, it doesn't make her poor.
Poverty was eradicated in the 50 years since First Contact. So, in regards to this thread's title 'Raffis poverty'... there is no poverty to speak of.
50 years? Between 2063 and 2113? I know Archer and Trip tell T'pol that it's gone as of 2151...
People expect it to be cured with a snap.Thing is, maybe poverty has been eradicated, but I really think that people will still have personal problems, including addiction, and people may still have trouble coping. For that matter, plenty of people will still make poor life choices, because people have been peopling since people have been people.
You just aren't as likely to end up actually homeless or dead because of these issues. That's still a whole lot better than we have today, and by comparison, as utopian as I could possibly ask for. I don't really understand why people think addiction in the 24th century is far fetched.
People expect it to be cured with a snap.
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