Part of the problem is an arrogant assumption about what a better future actually looks like. Personally I find most supposedly positive visions of the future pretty dystopian, but their adovacates dismiss any criticism as an ignorant desire to live in literal crap. It feels like another case of people looking only at one extreme or the other.Frustration wrote: ↑Mon Sep 12, 2022 11:02 pm Perhaps it's not anti-intellectualism as such, but hostility to the idea that we can make a better future or make progress, however that is defined.
Old-school Trek was notoriously optimistic about the potential of the future, recent Trek has become increasingly pessimistic.
Modern Trek (and entertainment in general) has thrown in to that mix a miserable level of cynicism though that surpasses even mine. For that reason I actually really rather like Lower Decks. Despite the frequent sarcasm it seems the most free of it, and willing to embrace both the good of Trek whilst not pretending that there's no bad, and having a laugh at it all. At least once it got past the first few episodes, where its blatant siding of Mariner and belittling Boimler really could be described as anti-intellectual.