Why is Star Trek so popular?

gorfias

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@Hawki

That is fine so long as you remember the pecking order. I tried watching Firefly, but Siri didn't work me. Especially since I had already seen better.
I re-watched episode 1 of Firefly multiple times, just, not getting into it. I kept trying. I heard of so many loving it. Then, finally, it stuck, I went on to episode 2.

Fantastic show. Sad it didn't do better. Fantastic. Hope you give it another shot.
 

BrawlMan

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I re-watched episode 1 of Firefly multiple times, just, not getting into it. I kept trying. I heard of so many loving it. Then, finally, it stuck, I went on to episode 2.

Fantastic show. Sad it didn't do better. Fantastic. Hope you give it another shot.
I don't even have time for it right now (too many movie and shows on my to watch list). I do thank you for the encouragement, but everytime I try watching it, Outlaw Star drills in to my skull. If it's any conciliation, I used to have a copy of Serenity. Sold it when I was 19.
 
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Dwarvenhobble

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Isn't paralleling modern concerns generally better?
Does Romeo and Juliet suffer for not being topical enough or are some of the themes and ideas long lasting?
How about Macbeth?

The idea that Star Trek is a "fight between ideas" doesn't match the IP, even TNG onwards. A lot of Star Trek has been set in the context of its production period. TOS to Undiscovered Country is very much in the context of the Cold War. Enterprise, albeit haphazardly, is produced in the context of the War on Terror. Discovery, at least in its first season, is influenced by the context of multiculturalism and globalism. TNG, at least in its first two seasons, doesn't seem to have a clear parallel, but that's arguably a sign of the times as well - the end of the Cold War, and thus, the "end of history." Small wonder in a sense that TNG is more utopian than TOS.

Of course, as I stated before, I think a lot of shows have done this better than Star Trek (B5 for politics in general, Battlestar Galactica for the War on Terror, etc.), but if you get a pure 'ideas show?' That can work, but it's certainly not how Star Trek started out.
I'd say the later series of Enterprise with the Xindi etc but earlier on it was more about the start of the ideas and ideas of the federation. The cusp of humanity taking the next step as such.

STD is very superficial from what I've seen with it's stuff. It's multicultural unless people disagree from what I've seen.

I mean DS9 is kind of a deconstruction and re-examination of Star Trek to an extent.

Voyager is very much trying to see how the ideals hold up without back up and having to deal with also lives on the line and try to find a way to not compromise ideas but also not sacrifice lives.

Star Trek didn't start out as an ideas shows I mean supposedly originally it was basically "Wagon Trail to the Stars" but it did evolve that way when it carried on

That take on Doctor Who isn't unreasonable, especially since that sentiment is indirectly expressed within the show itself, but I think it's a onesided view of it.

Doctor Who repeatedly emphasizes how wondrous the universe is. It's telling that the Doctor's main course of action is to simply spend his (or her, right now) time exploring for the sake of discovery and enjoyment. Him saving Earth and everything else is part of the package. Like, by the requirements of storytelling, most of the time we see the Doctor is when he's dealing with trouble, but it's clear within the series that the Doctor and his friends have a lot of "me time," able to visit places where nothing bad happens and they can enjoy themselves.

As for Star Trek, maybe. But I'm not sure if the likes of the Dominion, the borg, and everything else counts as "small darkness."
I dunno the Borg and the Dominion are more creeping shadows than big darkness as such. I mean to have them be a bigger Darkness you need more "All is lost" moments and often the Federation beats them to a stand still (well except one of the fights with The Borg) They're a threat but they're rarely if ever portrayed as such an unbeatable massive threat. The Borg are often single vessels just probing for a weakness.
 

Satinavian

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When i discovered Star Trek, it was TNG. And it was beautiful.

A positive outlook on the future, not some dystopian "capitalism gone wrong", "gang crime dominates society", "megacorps control society", "environmental damage destroyed everything and humanity fights for scraps" or plain post-apocalyptic setting. Positive future vision were kinda rare at the time.

And it was a show with alien civilisations and space travel and it was NOT about fighting them. That is the big one. Nearly every other show with aliens mostly has the fight against those aliens at the core. Star Trek had "trying to get along", "finding diplomatic solutions to problems" and "discovering interesting new stuff" at its core.

I liked even the prime directive. How nice, a show that is NOT about the enlightened humans educating aliens about true moral behavior. There is enough of this preachy colonialist mindset elsewhere.

And it expanded its setting and tried to incorporate old decisions which is why we actually have a proper setting now.


The next Star Trek i have seen was TOS and it was bad in comparison.

Then Deep Space Nine came. And shifted focus towards the aliens. Which is good. And had some proper politics, which is good as well. I did like Babylon 5 more though. But that dousn't make DS9 a bad show. And the dominion war... while it did work for DS9, i am not sure it was good for Star Trek itself to have such a long war arc.

The newer shows are at best passible for me, not great.

TNG itself, well, there are places where it shows its age. Science could be better and i think modern audiences are less forgiving to this whole esoterc nonsense often present in the plot.


As for time travel, i always hated it when Star Trek did it. They never had a proper, consistent idea about how time travel should work. Nearly every time it behaves differently. And characters never show a proper understanding of it when they use it. Even when they know enough about it to actually do it.
 

Asita

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*shrug* I mean, it's got the legacy of reinvigorating Science Fiction, especially for daytime television, and its longevity through its spinoffs and sequel series means it was probably a relative constant in the lives of many of its fans (including younger ones whose parents may have introduced them to it, thereby fostering nostalgic fondness). Alternatively, there's the way that Star Trek at its best tends to go a bit more philosophical than its peers (I believe its format was best quipped as "talky-techy"), or the fact that at the end of the day it's basically Gulliver's Travels in Space, and those kinds of stories will always have an audience. Really, there's a lot of reasons someone might be fond of the series.
 

Hawki

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I re-watched episode 1 of Firefly multiple times, just, not getting into it. I kept trying. I heard of so many loving it. Then, finally, it stuck, I went on to episode 2.
Hate to be "that guy," but wouldn't it have been better just to plough on to episode 2?

I'm kind of reminded of Farscape. Its pilot is pretty lacklustre because, like a lot of pilots, it has to convey a lot to the viewer in a short amount of time. I didn't keep rewatching the pilot in order to 'get it,' I just headed on.

Does Romeo and Juliet suffer for not being topical enough or are some of the themes and ideas long lasting?
How about Macbeth?
Okay, that's a fair point. I guess the short answer is that Shakespeare did it better, but that isn't fair. I guess I'll put it like this:

Romeo & Juliet is pretty universal in that the idea of unrequited/forbidden love is fairly common across cultures - common enough that it's basically a remake of Pyramus & Thisbe. Macbeth, similarly, has the archtype of the hero's fall (Macbeth is done in by his own ambition). However, Star Trek is sci-fi, and the best sci-fi often reflects the anxieties of the present. TNG certainly handles ideas, sometimes well (e.g. Measure of a Man), sometimes not (e.g. The Neutral Zone), but to use these specific two, the rights of machines is a pretty generic concern, the latter is TNG being on its high horse about how much capitalism sucks.

I'd say the later series of Enterprise with the Xindi etc but earlier on it was more about the start of the ideas and ideas of the federation. The cusp of humanity taking the next step as such.
I never made it beyond season 2, but the ideas are there in the first season. There's the suliban, and how they come across a suliban concentration camp, where they've been imprisoned simply by virtue of their species. Also, the desert planet where rebels are fighting a government, and Archer has to decide how much he wants to be involved, if at all. Now, those are fairly broad analogies, but in the context of the time, they do fit the War on Terror. That said, Into Darkness is a better analogy.

STD is very superficial from what I've seen with it's stuff. It's multicultural unless people disagree from what I've seen.
The weird thing about STD is that so many people criticize it as being woke, when, least by my reading, it's kind of critiquing the idea of multiculturalism and integration.

Like, we have the Federation, who see themselves as perfect moral arbiters. In their eyes, why WOULDN'T the klingons want to join them? But the klingons see the Federation as a hemogenizing force that they want nothing to do with. This is stated at the start, and stated at the end as well. In a weird sense, STD is a repudiation of some of Star Trek's core ideas.

I don't think it's done all that well, but it's at least there.

I liked even the prime directive. How nice, a show that is NOT about the enlightened humans educating aliens about true moral behavior. There is enough of this preachy colonialist mindset elsewhere.
I can't actually think of shows that have done that/did that. If anything, the prime directive concept trope is far more common, and even Star Trek itself has taken shots at it.

As for time travel, i always hated it when Star Trek did it. They never had a proper, consistent idea about how time travel should work. Nearly every time it behaves differently. And characters never show a proper understanding of it when they use it. Even when they know enough about it to actually do it.
I do agree there though, time travel in Star Trek is a mess. Apparently any ship can do it, but they don't, even if it might be tactically beneficial to do so.

Not saying that Star Trek shouldn't do time travel episodes, but I'd rather them be a mechanical exception rather than a mechanical norm. City on the Edge of Forever? Nice idea. Star Trek IV? Bleh.
 
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lil devils x

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Are people watching a different Star Trek then me? Because, so far, they have hardly ever go back to Earth. It's pretty much non existent. The times they have gone back is when society is falling apart. Oh, and that time after the Borg and JL visits his brother.

What I have seen is the Starfleet is very willing to let millions die to protect their principles. So now I understand why Conservatives love it so much. It's the Libertarian nightmare people go so worried about - 'You gotta pull yourself up by you bootstraps. You gotta ignore that shelling from your enemies, that means nothing.' Just finished the first ep with Ensign Ro.... it just hammers home how the Federation is trash. (Perhaps I'm being harsh here. It is VERY clear that the writers don't talk to each other or even watch previous episodes. Federation rules fly out the window very quickly when its convenient to the plot. So saying this is consistent across the series is a bit much.)

#QuarkandGarrickwereright

OT: I'd really love a stand alone storyline in TNG that doesn't somehow involve mind control. It was really bad in season 1 but is still pretty prevalent is season 4. But season 4 does have episode where the crew completely screw up and there is no fixing it. Winning every episode is not good TV.
I find your take on it a bit strange to be tbh. I am likely the biggest Star Trek fan on the Escapist, *looks over at my boxes of original phasers, ship models and Mego figures*... and would think that conservatives would like it less than progressives as it directly goes against many conservative ideals. Earth in the Star trek Universe is what people would consider " true communism" that was achieved after they solved scarcity through replicators and colonizing and trading with other planets and space objects. Humans eliminated currency and wealth inequality on earth and their other inhabited planets, and instead were driven by " the betterment of mankind" to pursue their personal goals rather than the need to survive. People could choose to join the federation as scientists, pilots, engineers ect, they were not forced to do so out of necessity, but instead they chose to do so out of the " human desire to explore the universe and to learn as much as they can about the universe and all that dwell within". Curiosity was the primary motivating factor, and those that did not wish to do so were not left to " pull themselves up by their bootstraps" as you put it, they instead were given access to the resources they needed to pursue their own goals and desires. People replicated what they wanted whenever they wanted and recycled what they no longer wanted back into the replicators so that the materials could be used to make something else for whoever needed it instead. " For the betterment of mankind" was the determining factor for distribution of less prevalent resources, and determination of the laws, not individual rights.

The whole " individual must pull their own weight" and the " pull yourself up from your bootstraps" mentality that was involved with the training for members of starfleet was only to ensure the survival of the ships crew while in the isolation of space. The people who chose to join starfleet and go out to explore "strange new worlds" had an extremely high risk of death for doing so, so they trained them to increase the survival of all. It constantly focused on " the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the one, or the few", but this was completely voluntary to participate in. The members of starfleet had a choice to leave startfleet at any point in time as soon as they were at a location where they could safely do so. You can't just leave a ship in the middle of open space, you had to be on a safe planet, space dock or have one in safe distance to do so by shuttle. Whether or not you were in starfleet and put yourself through such difficult things or risk your life was completely voluntary, however, they were not forced to do any of those things. They CHOSE to do so willingly, without economic or physical force, only the drive to be able to explore the universe.

The Federation is a complex political structure based on agreements between allied species and planets that had constantly changing laws, rules and guidelines depending on updated agreements and who was making the decisions at the time. The struggle to adhere to federation laws, orders and rules was meant as part of "struggle to survive" while exploring the universe in extreme circumstances and environments. It wasn't that writers were not aware of what other writers had been doing or were doing, a core, long running theme in all of the series was that the crew constantly struggled to abide by federation laws, rules and orders while trying to carry out their missions and survive. This constant struggle was a core part of the series, not a fluke. Earth, and earth colonies were all communist, most of the federation was socialist, and capitalists were considered to be more like " pirates" and " crooks" and not held in high regard in the Star Trek Universe. Members of the federation dealt with them out of necessity to gain rare resources or in vital situations but almost always presented these " space merchants" with contempt. Your take on it though seems a bit baffling to me, as it seems to be the opposite of what Star Trek was really about. Throughout the many series, the ships also had passengers on their ships that were not crew members who were instead treated as " guests", and did not have the same rules, roles and responsibilities apply to them as they did to the rest of the crew. That is because their " bootstrap" mentality only applied to the crew, who willingly volunteered to have it apply to them.
 
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lil devils x

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Star trek gives people " hope" for a better future. The hope that instead of destroy our world and all that dwell within it, that people will instead manage to come together at a critical point and make the necessary changes to create a better world for everyone. That people will pull together as a community and take care of one another and one day actually put " for the betterment of mankind" as their primary motivation rather than only seek self interest, and that once people have done this, they will then be able to move forward as a species to be able to explore the universe and everything within out of a curiosity driven desire for knowledge to better understand our universe. That people will be able to meet the obstacles and overcome the challenges put forth before them while learning from each experience to lead to a better understanding of all things.

It reminds me of the whole 1960's world's fair theme in Tomorrowland, as an example of people actually looking forward to our future, and were driven to invent and experiment with solutions to solve all of our problems rather than become complacent and stop trying to work together to solve problems. Most of the media we receive all focuses on Humans destroying the world, one another and everything that dwells within, trying to superficially be " better" than the competition, focuses on exalting greed and selfishness, not on what people can do once they put all of that behind them and pull together for a common cause. If humans stopped fighting, stopped using all the worlds resources for frivolous and selfish endeavors and instead pooled the worlds resources together and focused on " for the betterment of mankind" like ending global homelessness, hunger, disease, drought, floods, wealth inequality, and increasing global prosperity, education, scientific and medical research, the world would start advancing at a much more rapid pace overall. That is what Star Trek gives us that most media does not. Star Trek inspires people to imagine what could happen if we simply started using our lives and resources for the betterment of the people and planet rather than waste either on frivolous and selfish endeavors as we currently do now. Star Trek shows us how the biggest obstacle holding people back from being able to accomplish greater things in our universe is often our own pettiness, and if we do manage to overcome these trivial things, that we will be able to do so much more and advance at a much greater speed when people come together to care for one another, putting the needs of the many above our own selfish desires to accomplish amazing things for all people instead and that being the greatest reward of them all.

Star Trek doesn't focus on one hero being above all else coming to save the day. Instead, Star Trek focuses on every " little guy" whether it being the engineer who gives their life crawling into ducts exposing themselves to lethal radiation to save their crew, or the communications officer who prevents a war due to the awesome communication skills, or the doctor who discovers a cure for an unknown disease, the " hero" in Star Trek is all of the everyday crew working together for a common goal and in doing so, no matter how small their part may seem on it's own , is what it takes for all to not only survive, but to succeed and prosper. Star Wars has individual heroes , awesome Jedi's with immense power that are placed above everyone else. I like that Star Trek really doesn't do that as much as it focuses on average people just doing their jobs is what works best to help everyone succeed.

Although both are great works of fiction, I see Star Wars more like a fantasy fairy tale with individual fantastic heroes, whereas Star Trek is more like a "dream of the future" whereas the average person and their compassion, understanding, curiosity, cooperation, ingenuity, and willingness to put others before self is the core part of our " humanity" and will be what leads to our success in our future endeavors rather than focus on the individual being " better" than everyone else. Star Trek focuses on everyone working together just doing their job as being more important than one person having super skills to make them better than everyone else. Star Trek focuses on it being our " humanity" that can either destroy us or cause us to accomplish great things, and we do not really need any super powers to make it happen.

EDIT: @%$^#@$! I have no idea why the text editor chose to change all my "Star's to " starts" and the other weird autotype errors but I hope I managed to fix them all.
 
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Satinavian

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I can't actually think of shows that have done that/did that. If anything, the prime directive concept trope is far more common, and even Star Trek itself has taken shots at it.
TNG is 30 years old. At that time it was different.

Nowadays you do have a lot of other shows that use reasoning similar to the prime directive concept. But one reason is copying Star Trek and the other reason is the long series of painfull failed interventions, particularly in the middle east. Nowadays people are reluctend to export democracy and western civilisation to people who don't want it. But then ? Selfcongratulating showing natives "how it is done" was the more common approach.
 

Seanchaidh

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I'd put most of it down to high production value, compelling visual effects, and otherwise (usually) great execution of the vision of the writers which weren't really that common in sci-fi shows before Star Trek. Star Trek-- especially TNG and after-- looks like a regular show set in a possible future rather than the hokey bullshit Tom Paris plays on the holodeck. Admittedly, TOS kind of bridges the gap between dreck that looks like Captain Proton and actually serious looking shows. The higher production value also means it can have a more serious tone without seeming ridiculous. Star Trek was a pioneer in this regard at least as it comes to sci-fi. And DS9 (contemporaneously with Babylon 5) pioneered the series-long story arc.
 

Trunkage

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What's the first episode go like? Meet a new species that wants to join the Federation. A strange ship and blast the people. The Enterprise sits to the sidelines and does nothing. Later, they find out that some people in this species had done some wrong. Federation says, 'peace out" and Cancels them. The end. (Let's not worry about all those deaths we could have saved just by lifting a finger. We found out much later that they deserved it. They George Floyd it, retroactively reasoning out why someone should died instead of trying to help in the moment.)

How does the first episode with Bajor go? Oh, you're mad because of genocide by Cardassians. I literally couldn't care less because someone destroyed my outpost. Yes, Picard does something right at the end but not because he actually cares about Bajor, only because it suits his political gains. If Orta did commit terrorism, Picard would have completely thrown all of Bajor under a bus. Nor does anything he do really help Bajor. It's like watching Nazi Germany roll into Poland and... you do nothing. Great principles Starfleet.

Just watched an episode with a colony that they needed to heat up by blasting the surface. The problem was that it could cascade, burning up the atmosphere, killing everyone on the ground. So you know what they did: LEAVE THE WHOLE COLONY ON THE GROUND, risking death. Let's not take safety precautions and evacuate the planet. That would mean you actually care about people.

Believe what you want. If you want to know why a bunch of Conservatives hold on to Star Trek dearly, its because Starfleet is very Conservative with some of its ideas. If you want to know why there is a Culture War about Star Trek, its because it Progressive Conservative. Pretending its just progressive is nonsense.
 

Thaluikhain

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Actually, I'd add the Picard/Kirk speeches where they go on about how humanity has decided we are going to do what is right. I always liked those, and I think others did.

There's the TOS story with the contrived thing about the war run by simulation but backed up with suicide booths, and they can't just call the whole thing off because they've admitted to themselves that they are inherently violent killers and Kirk agrees, but says the trick is to not kill today. "We are all killer, but we're not going to kill...today". Sure it's cheesy and contrived, but I like that sort of thing.

Does Romeo and Juliet suffer for not being topical enough or are some of the themes and ideas long lasting?
How about Macbeth?
IIRC, Macbeth was intended to be very topical, but having long lasting themes and ideas people have forgotten that.
 

Hawki

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Nowadays you do have a lot of other shows that use reasoning similar to the prime directive concept. But one reason is copying Star Trek and the other reason is the long series of painfull failed interventions, particularly in the middle east. Nowadays people are reluctend to export democracy and western civilisation to people who don't want it. But then ? Selfcongratulating showing natives "how it is done" was the more common approach.
That seems like a stretch.

Off the top of my head, IPs that have had something resembling the Prime Directive include Halo, The Orville, StarCraft, and Star Ocean. I won't go into the details of each one, but none of them really feel like a commentary on the Middle East, and the worth of such directives is questioned in each setting.

Star Wars vs. Star Trek stuff
TBH, I've always felt the Star Trek vs. Star Wars thing to be a false dichotomy. Star Trek is sci-fi, Star Wars is space fantasy, as you kind of allude to. Despite them both taking place in space, they're separate genres in my eyes. I'd say the closest thing Star Trek had to a rival was Stargate, at least in the 90s to 00s. Course, that's no longer the case now, for better or worse. :(

If you want to know why there is a Culture War about Star Trek, its because it Progressive Conservative. Pretending its just progressive is nonsense.
Star Trek's 'war' seems to be a fanbase one, as to what counts as "real" Star Trek or not, and invoking "Rodenberry's vision" as if it's the Old Testament. Usually it's applied to the Kelvinverse and Discovery, but if you go back far enough, the whole "betrayal of Rodenberry's vision" goes at least as far back as Wrath of Khan.
 

Thaluikhain

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Star Trek is sci-fi, Star Wars is space fantasy,
I'd argue that Star Trek is generally space fantasy as well, it just pretends to be sci-fi. For example, the Force is front and centre in Star Wars, whereas Star Trek has similar things in there, just not so obvious.
 

happyninja42

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Okay, that's fair, but Star Trek doesn't have the monopoly on bright futures.
Nobody said it does. You asked why we LIKE it, that's one major reason. The fact that other shows have also depicted a positive future outlook, doesn't somehow negate "We like Star Trek because of it's optimistic humanism" as a reason for liking it.

Frankly scifi has always been a repository for writers to try and portray a better human society, through the lens of a fictional, alien culture and society. Star Trek was just one of the first widely produced and broadcast tv shows, that got popular appeal, to do so. So it kind of planted the first flag in the psyche of people of the time, as being "the show you can watch if you don't want a constant feeling of depression/angst in your scifi. if you don't care about -gritty realism-, etc." So it's drawn that demographic over the years.

For me, it's definitely the open ideas of exploration and cooperation. That humanity has moved past our current divisive tendencies, and started to work together, as one people, towards a larger goal of discovery and advancement. That we can solve most of our problems through diplomacy and helping those around us, for no reason other than why not help those around us? And if we have to resort to violence, it's framed as being a regrettable thing.

To confront the galaxy around us with an open hand, instead of a fist. That's why I like it. And I think the fact that the newer iterations of Trek, are going more to just violent action as the staple for their stories, is likely why I've stopped watching it.

That and the show does have a bad track record of terrible writing, and inconsistent characters, especially in shows like Enterprise and Voyager. TNG and DS9 are my favorite iterations of the show. The OT was just too dated for me to really enjoy it much, and the later shows were just....bad.
 

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The first Episode is " Man Trap" on TOS. Which Star Trek are you talking about? You have to be a bit more specific as to what you are addressing here, as there are numerous STar Trek spin off series now with very different things happening within the Federation of Planets. The first episode is about a shape shifting alien manipulating and endangering the crew. It focuses much on the strengths and weaknesses of human and humanoid "feelings" or lack there of.

Much of the various Star Trek series focuses on human nature's strengths and weaknesses. Starfleet is not always supposed to be " the good guys" and it often focuses on forcing people to make hard choices for the betterment of mankind. Often it portrays decisions in shades of gray rather than clear cut right and wrong. Most episodes involve testing the crews ability to abide by the " prime Directive" by attempting to force their hand or make impossibly difficult decisions:
In the fictional universe of Star Trek, the Prime Directive (also known as "Starfleet General Order 1", "General Order 1", and the "non-interference directive") is a guiding principle of Starfleet, prohibiting its members from interfering with the internal and natural development of alien civilizations.[1] The Prime Directive applies particularly to civilizations which are below a certain threshold of technological, scientific and cultural development; preventing starship crews from using their superior technology to impose their own values or ideals on them.[2] Since its introduction in the first season of the original Star Trek series, it has served as the plot focus of numerous episodes of the various Star Trek series.

Evacuating a planet would be a violation of the prime directive. As Scientists, they are supposed to be studying them, not interfering with them. They worry about exposing the civilizations they are observing or changing the natural course of the civilization's development. By even seeing a starship, it could change the entire course of their development from that point on. It is sort of like scientists we have now that study a pack of lions, they generally do not interfere and " save the antelope from the lion" or break up a fight between male lions because they will kill one another, they are just supposed to be observers and whatever happens happens without their interference either way. Besides, it is not even within their capabilities to be equipped or able to save other civilizations, and may just make things worse, not better while they pick and choose who they will save and who they will not. The point of those things is to try and force the crew to make difficult decisions, and show that they do not always make the right ones.

It is like the chain of events set off from " saving the antelopes from the lions" by saving the antelopes, it leads to the extinction of lions in the future. Star Trek has a lot of " because this happened, even if the action was good, it caused this other horrible thing to happen later in the story line" You have to keep watching to figure out why things played out the way they did in another episode. Sometimes the really horrible things have to happen in order for something more important to the story line to happen in a later episode.
 
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lil devils x

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Star Trek's 'war' seems to be a fanbase one, as to what counts as "real" Star Trek or not, and invoking "Rodenberry's vision" as if it's the Old Testament. Usually it's applied to the Kelvinverse and Discovery, but if you go back far enough, the whole "betrayal of Rodenberry's vision" goes at least as far back as Wrath of Khan.
Personally, I think Discovery is the best Star Trek made by far. Sure, there are plenty who disagree with me, but being a life long fan since I was in diapers and watching TOS reruns with my Dad, I like that they are more willing to break rules and are far more adaptable than previous crews. It also shows examples of why the prime directive became much more important for the time periods that existed in TOS and TNG.

For those complainers that Star Trek is trying to be too PC and BS, I don't even think they are really Star Trek Fans, as they have always been progressive for their time periods made. Female leaders, prominent minorities in major roles, cast diversity, and interracial/ inter species sex has never been taboo for Star Trek from the beginning. In TOS, Kirk had sex with a green alien, we had minority and female admirals and leaders of other nations and ships, so having gay sex in the new star treks really isn't out of character for the series itself as it would be more unexpected if it didn't at this point.
 
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happyninja42

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Evacuating a planet would be a violation of the prime directive. As Scientists, they are supposed to be studying them, not interfering with them. It is sort of like scientists we have now that study a pack of lions, they generally do not interfere and " save the antelope from the lion" or break up a fight between male lions because they will kill one another, they are just supposed to be observers and whatever happens happens without their interference either way. Besides, it is not even within their capabilities to be equipped or able to save other civilizations, and may just make things worse, not better while they pick and choose who they will save and who they will not. The point of those things is to try and force the crew to make difficult decisions, and show that they do not always make the right ones.
The problem with this, is that they are very often well equipped to save other civilizations, as multiple episodes have pivoted on that very point as the focus of the story.

The main issue with the prime directive, is that different people interpret it differently. People on the creative staff I mean, not the fictional ones. So you will have episodes with vastly conflicting interpretations of the directive, that directly contradict each other (sometimes with the same captain) on how they should proceed.
 

lil devils x

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The problem with this, is that they are very often well equipped to save other civilizations, as multiple episodes have pivoted on that very point as the focus of the story.

The main issue with the prime directive, is that different people interpret it differently. People on the creative staff I mean, not the fictional ones. So you will have episodes with vastly conflicting interpretations of the directive, that directly contradict each other (sometimes with the same captain) on how they should proceed.
Depending on what was happening in the federation of planets at the time, the prime directive was interpreted differently. As the people making the decisions changed within the Federation council, so did their objectives, guidelines and laws. Some times they had " bad leaders" making the decisions, and sometimes, they had " bad captains" making bad decisions, or even individual crew members making bad decisions... I am not aware of any character who only made the right choices, they pretty much made sure that every character was fallible in Star trek.

Sure, the star ships may or may not possibly be equipped, but the species would have to be at risk of total extinction for the federation of planets to make a decision to relocate them to another planet, otherwise they would be in violation of the prime directive and the Captain's participating in an illegal evacuation would lose their starships over violating it and STILL risk the federation going back and " correcting their mistake" by moving the species back to where they were evacuated from in the first place and allowing ' nature to run it's course" and they would die anyhow. Keeping in mind that the federation of planets is a complex political environment with numerous allied species and planets agreeing to cooperate with one another, it isn't just humans making the decisions here. Other alien species may have their own motives for wanting to save or not save various other alien species and they have to be in agreement for that to happen as well.
 

gorfias

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Hate to be "that guy," but wouldn't it have been better just to plough on to episode 2?
Because by the time I would decide to give it another shot, I didn't remember anything from the 1st episode. I didn't know who these people were or what their situation was. So I'd rewatch episode 1 to remind myself. (Should have looked online for a summary of the episode).

On topic (Star Trek OG): it was a humanist show. It was political, but it didn't preach hatred of other factions. They had conflicts (Kingons/Romulans) but they'd work it out with anyone if they could do so. It was a very positive and hopeful show.

Compare that to, say, the reboot of Battle Star Galactica, which I loved. I don't rewatch this pretty dark show and I don't think it will ever be the kind of property Star Trek is: it's pretty dang nihilistic. I do recommend sci fi lovers give it a watch.