Mediocre book. Great film. (if you 'get it')
That´s the problem. Many people either expect it to stay true to the book or just don´t plain get it.
Who says he isn't in the film also?
And, that movie is targeted to a specific audience, hence the casting choices.
Yeah, I'm sure attitude has nothing to do with it...
Mediocre book. Great film. (if you 'get it')
That´s the problem. Many people either expect it to stay true to the book or just don´t plain get it.
Meh, just because you dont like the film doesnt mean you didnt "get it".
I used to like the book, but every subsequent read through, I find things that make me dislike it more and more.
Heinlein is on record saying that in his vision the vast majority of individuals that are citizens aren't former MI.
Complaining about Starship Troopers the movie not being a faithful adaptation to the book is worse than complaining that Troy is not a faithful adaptation of The Iliad. As a great work of literature, The Iliad is owed respect, which Starship Troopers the novel isn't. The plot in the book is: Boy loses girl, joins the army, finds fulfilment and a career by imitating his drill sergeant. It's Private Benjamin with lectures, but no jokes. The moral of the story is: INFANTRY RULES!
There are people who viscerally recoil at such a simple minded story. When pressed for reasons why they mumble about fascism etc. Heinlein acolytes then cite a few quotes and triumphantly declare victory, but still whine about how their hero gets picked on. Others are a little more reasoned but fall afoul of what appears to be duplicity on Heinlein's part.
First, the claim that any Federal Service earns the franchise certainly doesn't fit with the repeated instances of a veteran in a civil service job, usually missing a limb no less. Federal Service has veteran preference! Also, Heinlein deliberately talks about paying contractors to perform nonmilitary functions, rather like Rumsfeld and his libertarian war by contractor in Iraq. What nonmilitary Federal Service exists to provide this widespread franchise? Short answer, none.
Second, not allowing the men and women in service to vote (particularly since they serve for the duration) does not keep the military from being an undemocratic influence in the polity. The officer caste has historically been the enemies of democracy but their control of the soldier franchise has rarely (ever?) been their power base. Typically, it is the use (or threat) of force in service of the ruling class that gives the military undemocratic power. (Patronage in contracts, to industrialists and politicians are also an aspect.) Heinlein puts in chatter like that to obfuscate the realities. It's very similar to the drivel about how whipping is a fair punishment because the rich scar as easily as the poor, while ignoring that the rich tend not to get charged, much less convicted. In fact, not allowing the cannon fodder to vote against a bad war is profoundly undemocratic.
Third, there is an extremely revelatory scene which totally undercuts the claims that the military can't turn anyone away. There is a vignette where a paraplegic who wants the franchise is tormented by fraudulent tasks til he gives up. Counting the hairs on a caterpillar was mentioned if I remember rightly. Formal rights to enlist can be undercut very simply. And Heinlein makes sure the witting know what he really means, which is not what the apologists say.
Fourth, the ancient Greek democracies, like Athens, had the franchise linked to military service. The basic thesis, that such a link provides stability is falsified by well known history.
There's a lot of foolishness said against the novel but the defenders have won the idiocy contest. Or is that lost?
Heinlein is on record saying that in his vision the vast majority of individuals that are citizens aren't former MI.
And which other none-military jobs would those be?
Heinlein is on record saying that in his vision the vast majority of individuals that are citizens aren't former MI.
And which other none-military jobs would those be?
A few examples: Civil service, bookkeeping, cargo shipping, construction, medicine, engineering, heck even *cooking* would all qualify.
Third, there is an extremely revelatory scene which totally undercuts the claims that the military can't turn anyone away. There is a vignette where a paraplegic who wants the franchise is tormented by fraudulent tasks til he gives up. Counting the hairs on a caterpillar was mentioned if I remember rightly. Formal rights to enlist can be undercut very simply. And Heinlein makes sure the witting know what he really means, which is not what the apologists say.
Heinlein is on record saying that in his vision the vast majority of individuals that are citizens aren't former MI.
And which other none-military jobs would those be?
BTW: What makes someone who couldn't do more than 'just' cook within the military more worthy to have the right to vote than a civilian cook?
Complaining about Starship Troopers the movie not being a faithful adaptation to the book is worse than complaining that Troy is not a faithful adaptation of The Iliad.
Again, the Hugo award disagrees. This isn't Sgt Rock and Easy Company. It invented a subgenre of scifi that exists to this day - military science fiction. And as all great speculative fiction does, it challenged the perceptions of the time.As a great work of literature, The Iliad is owed respect, which Starship Troopers the novel isn't.
Boy never had girl, and the relationship between Carmencita and Juan while highlighted in the movie is almost irrelevant in the book.The plot in the book is: Boy loses girl, joins the army, finds fulfilment and a career by imitating his drill sergeant. It's Private Benjamin with lectures, but no jokes. The moral of the story is: INFANTRY RULES!
The greatest science fiction writers of the time certainly did not - nor did the award committee at World Con, beating out offerings by Kurt Vonnegut and Gordon Dickson, among others.There are people who viscerally recoil at such a simple minded story.
Ah, standing up for a novel that you believe has merit is now 'whining.' This goes a long way to undermining you position. Try leaving the histrionics out of it, and discuss the work on its relative merit.When pressed for reasons why they mumble about fascism etc. Heinlein acolytes then cite a few quotes and triumphantly declare victory, but still whine about how their hero gets picked on.
We see a handful of Federal Service jobs - teacher of moral philosophy, recruiter, and the doctor who does the health screenings. The later is a civilian.First, the claim that any Federal Service earns the franchise certainly doesn't fit with the repeated instances of a veteran in a civil service job, usually missing a limb no less. Federal Service has veteran preference! Also, Heinlein deliberately talks about paying contractors to perform nonmilitary functions, rather like Rumsfeld and his libertarian war by contractor in Iraq. What nonmilitary Federal Service exists to provide this widespread franchise? Short answer, none.
As the Terran-Arachnid war is the first war in known memory that's a matter of theory not reality in this setting. The argument isn't made that the military shouldn't vote because of its effect on democracy - ridiculous when you consider that they only allow veterans to vote. It's made because of military considerations - the military isn't allowed to exercise power over who is elected because especially in this case that means they could influence policy.Second, not allowing the men and women in service to vote (particularly since they serve for the duration) does not keep the military from being an undemocratic influence in the polity.
LOL - how exactly does the officer caste threaten force in service to the ruling class without the support of the soldiers they command? I don't recall that part of the book, but I doubt very seriously you comprehended what the author intended.The officer caste has historically been the enemies of democracy but their control of the soldier franchise has rarely (ever?) been their power base. Typically, it is the use (or threat) of force in service of the ruling class that gives the military undemocratic power. (Patronage in contracts, to industrialists and politicians are also an aspect.) Heinlein puts in chatter like that to obfuscate the realities.
Clearly you don't recall the military courts martial enacted in the book. And Johnny was rich (the quote was his father could have bought the school he attended), and he had the distinction of receiving the worse corporal punishment in boot camp of any of the individuals that weren't drummed out.It's very similar to the drivel about how whipping is a fair punishment because the rich scar as easily as the poor, while ignoring that the rich tend not to get charged, much less convicted.
The MI are hardly 'cannon fodder', and Heinlein makes a distinction between allowing those who serve to make potential policy decisions. No currently serving federal service individual has the right to franchise. If you wish to go career, you lose the franchise for the duration. As no soldier joins without volunteering there isn't an issue of conscription influencing the political base either.In fact, not allowing the cannon fodder to vote against a bad war is profoundly undemocratic.
Already correctly disputed by another poster.Third, there is an extremely revelatory scene which totally undercuts the claims that the military can't turn anyone away.
LOL, this is the silliest argument of the bunch.Fourth, the ancient Greek democracies, like Athens, had the franchise linked to military service. The basic thesis, that such a link provides stability is falsified by well known history.
Actually so far I'd say the post I just discussed is ahead on points.There's a lot of foolishness said against the novel but the defenders have won the idiocy contest. Or is that lost?
Criticism of the novel suggesting that its society is militaristic, fascist, or racist says more about the source in its prejudiced reading of the text than it does the text itself.
I enjoyed the film and have it on DVD, but it's a horrific interpretation of the novel.
Heinlein is on record saying that in his vision the vast majority of individuals that are citizens aren't former MI.
And which other none-military jobs would those be?
Of course, this is also during peacetime - remember Johnny's dad believes the entire process is unnecessary and parasitical at the time because war is unthinkable.We've had to think up a whole list of dirty, nasty dangerous jobs that will either run them home with their tails between their legs and their terms uncompleted, or at the very least make them remember for the rest of their lives that their citizenship is valuable to them because they've paid a high price for it.
Another quote:We've had to think up a whole list of dirty, nasty dangerous jobs that will either run them home with their tails between their legs and their terms uncompleted, or at the very least make them remember for the rest of their lives that their citizenship is valuable to them because they've paid a high price for it.
Apparently Verhoeven didn't get what Heinlein was really talking about (I loved the novel).
"Service guarantees citizenship. Would you like to know more?"
Why should I, or anyone else, have to prove to the government that I'm worthy to cast a vote in an election or that I'm worthy to be voted for?
Oh, and the novel makes it clear that you can't vote or hold office while in the military and that career military therefor NEVER exercise power.
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