Mind you, there's not much of a story if the protagonists decide not to do anything about Problem X. However, I always keep in mind the Prime Directive exists solely as a plot device. It was never meant to be anything other than to give Kirk something to brood over.Cassandra wrote: ↑Fri Jul 06, 2018 11:20 pm Trek's overarching narrative is uncomfortably pro-intervention if examined through a non-American, or even non-western, lens. A large portion of Trek is about the mostly human protagonists solving other peoples' problems. The implication is that it is humanity's duty to take care of the rest of the Trek galaxy as it is unable to take care of itself. This is rather troublesome given that Trek is more-or-less intended to be America-in-space as metaphor for the real Earth. In that context, Trek's message that interventions are virtually always good things comes off as somewhat jingoistic.
Still, of all places, TOS is the only place where the Prime Directive is occasionally shown as a good thing. The Omega Glory, A Piece of the Action, and Patterns of Force for example showing how it can go disastrously wrong.
Re: The Drumhead
The thing about the Drumhead was it was designed around the concept of hysteria and witch hunts by drawing wrong conclusions around the basis of suspicion. McCarthyism is a big inspiration for it where he took the actual FBI capture of real communist spies and then used it to launch a moral crusade to keep himself in the spotlight. The guy lied about his past but came up with elaborate conspiracies and infiltration which led her to interrogate Captain Picard of all people. The villain of the piece is clearly getting off on the power of being a prosecutor that she no longer cares about the truth.