Oh thank god there are some people on this forum that actually realise this and don't think everything Discovery does is completely great and 100% justified. S31 being an official organisation isn't just canon breaking, it's almost just sheer core-concept of Star Trek breaking. I and so many Trek fans don't want to watch another dystopian sci-fi vision where there are evil assassins killing people and brutal Realpolitik is still the status-quo of foreign policy. We want to watch a future that is better than ours and Discovery by making S31 basically the 23nd century CIA just craps all over that. Especially that "nation building isn't pretty" line in E4. Jesus christ I nearly threw up in my mouth. That isn't what Star Trek is about, that is absolutely cynical 21st century war-hawk realpolitik views of the writers sneaking in and justifying things like Libya, Venezuela, Iraq, Syria, Yemen etc.
Yes....this all stirs my thoughts and feelings, as well. There is a tendency on the part of many humans to focus rather narrowly on what is past and what is present and to project that forward, even hundreds of years, with not a whole lot of counterpoint. Crafters of any kind of future-fiction, especially that which is done for commercial purposes, are to an extent hamstrung by the knowledge that if they paint too rosy a picture of the future, too many will object that it is unrealistic....even though no one
knows what the future will encompass.
I have found, over the years, that I keep returning to the TOS episode 'The Enemy Within'. It keeps nagging.
It seems to me that for humans to succeed in the long-term, as a species, the reasons for negative excesses need to be found and effectively dealt with once and for all. I don't believe that emotion is the sole root cause. I believe that mental and physical factors are working in tandem. We need to fix what's wrong. We need to find a way to maintain balance at all times. I would not describe the Vulcans as balanced. As presented, they seem to remove emotion rather than actually keeping it balanced. On the whole, as presented, they're not exactly warm and friendly. In general, they seem rather one-dimensional and incomplete. The Klingons, in general, seem to be at the opposite end of the spectrum, where emotion rules to an extreme.
Right now, we really don't have much to compare and contrast ourselves with. Life on this planet....we know of no other. There is the
idea of aliens visiting us, but nothing concrete to back that up. At least at this point, you really can't do anything all that meaningful with it. It's shadows and wisps without substance.
So, we project human traits onto the civilizations of our fiction.
But, how realistic is that? And, how realistic is it that in 200 or 300 years from now,
we will not be all that much further along than we are now in how we conduct ourselves? Answer: we just don't know. It could go either way.
One
could envision a scenario in which the 'normal' development of civilizations in the universe involves that very 'fixing themselves' at some point. Who is to say that the norm is
not a universe of civilizations in harmony with each other? Again, at this point, we don't
know.
If we take that idea of "Any sufficiently advanced technology would seem like magic" and really apply it, the possibilities are endless.
Our science, at present, tells us that we are able to look far out into the galaxy....and beyond. And that there's a whole lot of emptiness. But, are we being
allowed to see what's actually out there? Can we say, with 100% certainty, that we are
not in quarantine, behind a veil? No. Because anyone who is not even aware they are inside a box knows nothing of what is outside the box. Going right back to the beginning of Trek, 'The Cage' resonates with that very well.
But, it's all just science-fiction, right?
For the record, personally, I don't believe that joining humans with machines is the ultimate solution. I also don't believe that A. I. will come up to the level of life forms. Not in the near-term and possibly never. If we are able to dig deep and fix what is wrong, I still doubt that we will be able to transfer every last 'thing' of life to a machine. It's sort of like always approaching infinity, but never quite getting there.
Just my thoughts, and Your Mileage May Vary....a lot.
