darkwing_duck1
Vice Admiral
^ I think that's overstating things more than a bit.
What this boils down to is what Sisko said once: "It's easy to be a Saint in Paradise."
The 24th century Federation had been though a 70+ year period of unprecedented peace and stability. The Romulans seemingly no longer players on the galactic stage. The Klingons now allies. What conflicts there were essentially small-scale "brushfire" wars that were far away and had no appreciable effect on the overwhelming majority of the populace. Coupled with an unprecedented expansion of material prosperity via the replicator, and it was a Golden Age of the classic sort.
But like all Golden Ages, it had a flaw: the Federation assumed that the rest of the galaxy was as "enlightened" as it was. And it assumed that the fulfillment of material wants had eliminated the wants themselves.
But not everybody fell into that trap. Those were the people that moved to the "frontiers" to make new lives for themselves. They still remembered and honored the drive to achieve above and beyond the normal toil. They wanted to accomplish something that they could look back on proudly and point to as a legacy for the future.
They were a different social breed of people than their co-citizens, and I suspect neither side really understood each other that well.
In the real world of course, whether the writers intended to or not, the Federation parallelled the real world politics of it's day with it's "we can just all get along" attitude, which has come back to bite US in the ass as hard as it did the Federation.
What this boils down to is what Sisko said once: "It's easy to be a Saint in Paradise."
The 24th century Federation had been though a 70+ year period of unprecedented peace and stability. The Romulans seemingly no longer players on the galactic stage. The Klingons now allies. What conflicts there were essentially small-scale "brushfire" wars that were far away and had no appreciable effect on the overwhelming majority of the populace. Coupled with an unprecedented expansion of material prosperity via the replicator, and it was a Golden Age of the classic sort.
But like all Golden Ages, it had a flaw: the Federation assumed that the rest of the galaxy was as "enlightened" as it was. And it assumed that the fulfillment of material wants had eliminated the wants themselves.
But not everybody fell into that trap. Those were the people that moved to the "frontiers" to make new lives for themselves. They still remembered and honored the drive to achieve above and beyond the normal toil. They wanted to accomplish something that they could look back on proudly and point to as a legacy for the future.
They were a different social breed of people than their co-citizens, and I suspect neither side really understood each other that well.
In the real world of course, whether the writers intended to or not, the Federation parallelled the real world politics of it's day with it's "we can just all get along" attitude, which has come back to bite US in the ass as hard as it did the Federation.