Has Star Trek: Discovery made the case for the United Federation of Planets being a society to be proud of?
Do you think the show might have been stronger for showing Starfleet's 'normal' behaviour or ethics, before entering controversial moral areas around war? When watching DS9 as a teenager, Sisko's action's in two episodes were shocking, because people had previously spent 10 seasons watching Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Picard, Data, etc, carefully make an ethical case against that sort of behaviour, and how it ultimately comes back to haunt a society. With Discovery, the show is entering the controversial moral area, without having established that Starfleet has a particular code of behaviour first; but can it play with moral controversy, when it has never established a baseline of ethical behaviour in the 23rd century to begin with?
To cite a few of the more controversial things that have happened in the show: enslaving a potentially sentient creature, leaving a prisoner of war behind to potential torture out of vindictiveness, three counts of hiding a medical condition that might endanger your mission from colleagues. I'm not saying don't write these stories, I'm saying, without having established that the Federation isn't some kind of dystopia, the choices of where they show consideration or kindness, almost come off as arbitrary, particularly to a new audience.
Perhaps the issue is this:
In Star Trek (2009), Captain Pike says to Kirk that Starfleet is a "peacekeeping and humanitarian armada". This assumes that the audience will sympathise with that goal or motive. But that cannot be taken for granted any more. Or perhaps the reality is, it could never be taken for granted, even in the 1960s. TOS went to pains to make arguments why humanitarian behaviour is a wise course, agree with it or not. But many people just don't accept that as a standard of behaviour; aid to the poor, being part of a international cooperation, seeking peace as opposed to fighting endless defensive war, are not things universally accepted as good by the people watching the show.
Both Star Trek and Star Wars, I think, derive a lot of their appeal from having an ethical opinion, and not being afraid to say it. Whether you agree with them or not, it is appealing to see a work of fiction that knows what it stands for.
Do you think the show might have been stronger for showing Starfleet's 'normal' behaviour or ethics, before entering controversial moral areas around war? When watching DS9 as a teenager, Sisko's action's in two episodes were shocking, because people had previously spent 10 seasons watching Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Picard, Data, etc, carefully make an ethical case against that sort of behaviour, and how it ultimately comes back to haunt a society. With Discovery, the show is entering the controversial moral area, without having established that Starfleet has a particular code of behaviour first; but can it play with moral controversy, when it has never established a baseline of ethical behaviour in the 23rd century to begin with?

To cite a few of the more controversial things that have happened in the show: enslaving a potentially sentient creature, leaving a prisoner of war behind to potential torture out of vindictiveness, three counts of hiding a medical condition that might endanger your mission from colleagues. I'm not saying don't write these stories, I'm saying, without having established that the Federation isn't some kind of dystopia, the choices of where they show consideration or kindness, almost come off as arbitrary, particularly to a new audience.
Perhaps the issue is this:
In Star Trek (2009), Captain Pike says to Kirk that Starfleet is a "peacekeeping and humanitarian armada". This assumes that the audience will sympathise with that goal or motive. But that cannot be taken for granted any more. Or perhaps the reality is, it could never be taken for granted, even in the 1960s. TOS went to pains to make arguments why humanitarian behaviour is a wise course, agree with it or not. But many people just don't accept that as a standard of behaviour; aid to the poor, being part of a international cooperation, seeking peace as opposed to fighting endless defensive war, are not things universally accepted as good by the people watching the show.
Both Star Trek and Star Wars, I think, derive a lot of their appeal from having an ethical opinion, and not being afraid to say it. Whether you agree with them or not, it is appealing to see a work of fiction that knows what it stands for.