High Orbit Drifter said:
I hate to be overtly negative but most of the stuff here is as impossibly wrong as that ComiCon panel or that Friedman book (I read it too - pure drek).
Not everyone in New York or who goes to New York is a leftist. Leftist do not endorse slavery.
Some leftists don't, but Stalin, Lenin, Castro, and Mao all had uses for slave labor, they had labor camps.
High Orbit Drifter said:
Rodenberry himself was pretty far left, his wife supposedly describing him as a communist. I don't know about that but he certainly is to the left of the political spectrum as practiced in the US of the late 1960s. I'm not sure if Galadrion is trying to say the panel was being sarcastic?
For a left winger, I must say, Star Fleet is a fairly militaristic organization, they have armed starships to explore the galaxy, even NASA doesn't have that! Notice all the starship crewmembers have military rank, not everyone who flew in the NASA shuttle had military rank, even though shows such as "I Dream of Jeannie" gave the impression that NASA was a paramilitary organization where everyone walks through the corridors wearing dress blue Air Force Uniforms. The real NASA has people wearing suit and ties, or they are contractors, most aren't military people, that is more Russia!
High Orbit Drifter said:
Federation implies a STRONG central government. CONfederation is the weak one. It nearly impossible to tell what the Federation of Planets is, centralized or a confederation or what, due to all the different versions on the different shows and movies, as has been pointed out. The character of the government changes to suit the plot - it IS a show after all. Then again, the original show was written by a bunch of liberals (see the comment on Roddenberry above)
We then have the inconsistency that the Federation is not all "peace and flowers", you don't see too many "long haired hippie" types in Star Fleet, those that do appear in Star Trek are usually civilians. A Federation simply implies that their are multiple governments or a government of governments. The idea is that power is divided between the central government and the states and both are coequal, that is the meaning of the word Federation, though not all things that are called federation really are, just like not all things that are called "democratic" really are either. The label has some use in giving legitimacy to undemocratic regimes.
High Orbit Drifter said:
The writers have consistently used the United States of America, not as an "evil United States" but as the paragon of virtue, aside from all the money grubbing, at least the Original Series. It was less the model during the Next Generation.
Ever wonder why that is? The United States was transitioning from the John F. Kennedy patriotic brand of liberalism to the hippie version of questioning all government authority. the Original Star Trek was short-haired and pre-hippie, a few hippies did show up in the original series and they were trouble makers.
High Orbit Drifter said:
Ferengi where brought in, not as Picard's love nemesis (which is just weird) but as examples of unbridled capitalism, described as equivalent to 19th century Yankee traders. Who they exist in Star Trek economics is never explained (thankfully).
Which is strange when you consider that Star Trek was originally billed as "Wagon Train to the Stars" which is definitely 19th century. The starships in Star Trek are analogous to 19th century wooden sailing ships on the high seas, other shows such as Battlestar Galactica have a more 20th century depiction of Space Travel as they include fighters and space age versions of air craft carriers, but Star Trek didn't have that!
High Orbit Drifter said:
Epicenter is exactly right - that panel was dragooned into the convention, didn't know what to talk about so decided to stir everyone up. Its an old professor's trick, so the Berkley guy probably thought it up. Say something outrageous, and obviously wrong, and see if they can get the dumb kids to start talking so the panelists don't have to, or anyway just bat the ball back at them.
He's right about the writing getting slop..er.. more flexible as the years went on. Granted there was a ton of canon to support, which could otherwise hamper a good story.