Star Trek: "Computer, turn on the lights" "Unable to comply"
Real world
Real world

I like aspirational future, but would much rather Trek fans try to do it in the real world.Well, it seems you've answered your own question. We all want the aspirational Trek future. My point is that you build upon what's come before with aspirational stories with your characters in your universe. What made Trek unique then is also true now.
I don't know. I grew up being told the world was ending at every turn (I remember the Berlin Wall coming down and my parents wondering what that would mean, various wars, and y2K, among others). Yet, we have, as a humanity, increased access to information, a downturn in poverty across several countries (per worldbank statistics), and increase access to clean water sources.That's easier said than done these days.
Naturally, xkcd did an entry sort of about this circa 2015:The problem of being outpaced by real world events has always been faced by the entire SF genre. I enjoy the debate about it, then go read "The Martian Chronicles".
So? Giving up is not much of a better option.You're a lot more optimistic than I am. I personally think we're collectively frakked and we're never going to have that "Star Trek Future" because humans are basically awful and the bad guys always get away with their crimes, no matter how much we fight for justice.
As for humanity improving socially and cuturally seems to boil down to the rest of the world becoming an overseas version of a Westen Utopia (or a Utopian verison of the USA) which seems a touch arrogant to me.
For me its just an entertaining TV show, that I like to talk about. Nothing more, nothing less.
It would have been about the dangers of the photon torpedo and an attack by a giant Gorn….in the sequel it would face a giant Mugatu.I wonder what Star Trek would have looked like, had it been produced by any other nation, say, the Japanese.
(I mean, except for the obvious stuff, such as there being a lot of Japanese in the future).
Exactly so.My suspicion is that for all the awful that will happen there'll also be most people just living their lives. Looking at the difference in the world between 1900 and 2000, I think the world of 2100 will be more astonishing still. Technology evolves exponentially. It's on us to carve out our little corner of it and enjoy it all.
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