Warbler said:
Gaffer Tape said:
To be honest, as I said in the video, I love DS9 precisely because it broke free from Roddenberry's conflict-free, homogenous utopia and shows that, no matter how evolved we get, we're always going to have some kind of dark side to us.
you do that the conflict-free, homogenous utopia was the essence of Star Trek, don't you? Roddenberry vision was we(humanity) would evolve past our petty problems and conflicts and prejudices and whatnot. Remember he came up with Star Trek during the Vietnam war and the Cold War and all the protests about the war a racism and the assassinations of JFK, RFK, MLK. His dream was that humanity would evolve past that sort of stuff. I suppose you can argue it is not realistic and a pipe dream, but it was Roddenberry's original vision(and not something he pulled out of his butt 20 years later) for Star Trek and he is the creator so . . . perhaps that is the way Star Trek should stay?
Yay, this is exactly where I hoped this conversation would go!
Indeed I do know that. And I don't have a problem with showing an evolved humanity where we'd overcome our earthly prejudices and become a wonderful race of space travelers. I just don't think that DS9 or STVI really do anything to negate that idea. Just because the Federation is forced into a war, just because the characters are forced to look into their darker side and evaluate their moral choices, doesn't mean that it's not still the Federation. It's simply the difference between accepting something as dogma and actually putting some thought into it.
To be honest, I feel that, by the time TNG had come around, Roddenberry had started to go a bit too far with "perfection." Allow me to explain. While Star Trek, in its earliest forms, created a world where humans, regardless of gender or race, worked together in equality, it was also a series focused primarily on a military-esque group, wearing military-esque uniforms, on a military-esque ship, equipped with military-esque weapons, and frequently using them to blow away the aliens of the week. That military-esque group having to use those military-esque resources in a war doesn't exactly seem that far out of the realm of what they're supposed to do to me. My problem with the "utopia" angle isn't that I think it's unrealistic, it's that it, when taken too far, doesn't lend itself well to drama. All conflict comes from external, easily blown up or run away from, sources. Even in a Federation where everyone works for the betterment of humanity, it's a bit silly and scary to think that everyone is going to have the exact same opinions.
But TNG, in its early seasons, was just too "perfect." Take episodes like "The Neutral Zone," which is basically an entire episode with the crew of the Enterprise acting smug about how much better they are than 20th century humans. But then take The Original Series episode "A Private Little War" where Kirk has to go against his principles and provide a primitive people with modern weapons in order to fight back against another faction who had been provided with weapons by Klingons, and he was left with the moral implications of his difficult (but possibly necessary) decision.
And then take Star Trek VI. While, of course, having a wonderful parable relatable to the current state of events of the world, was also treated a little more realistic. Sure the Federation was still great, but I believe that we're always going to find something new to hate, no matter how evolved we are. When we eliminate all of our prejudice for different genders and races on earth, the next logical step is that we're going to be prejudiced towards the hostile alien race that's been trying to kill us for decades. And, sure, we had our Admiral Cartrights who'd be willing to kill to keep peace, but our main characters were prejudices as well. They just had to work and learn and grow and evolve in order to grow past that. I can't think of a more Trek-like story than that. And I find it much more interesting in a narrative sense to show the characters learning a lesson than just saying, "We're better than that. We always have been, and, unswaveringly so, always will be." And again, there were plenty of renegade admirals and smug diplomats getting their comeuppance in the original series, so the idea of imperfect Federation members dates back to the origins of Trek.
So, really, I don't see how DS9 is antithetical to Trek. It subverts Trek because it knows how Trek works, it appreciates Trek, and it loves Trek. And with that knowledge and love in mind, it feels free to just dig quite a bit deeper than other Treks. The Federation in DS9 isn't bad or amoral. It's just always going to have problems. And I think Roddenberry knew that when he created Trek. I just think in his old age, he softened a bit on that and couldn't bear to show his world in anything less than perfection. If anything, DS9 felt more like the original series... just with quite a bit more depth.