I used the term cult, because the population appears to be quite low, and lives in a hazardous remote location far away from any other civilization, which reminded me of Jonestown.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:41 pmWeird your mind went cult when mine went totalitarian dictatorship.Mabus wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:28 pm So a society that is specifically bred to fill in certain niches, is extremely protective of itself to the point of falling apart if its members flee (even though they could just breed other identical members in their place), but utterly fails when an outside problem appears? Sounds more like a cult than a civilization.
BTW, it's an isolationist eugenicist culture that has absolutely no freedom or acceptance of deviation. Is there ANY culture in Trek more antithetical to Federation values?
TNG - The Masterpiece Society
Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
- CharlesPhipps
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Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
I'm not so much disagreeing as pointing out this situation could be viewed as far more fucked up than Picard is acting. They're acting like they're a hidden elf village when Geordi is the only one who reacts like these guys are Nazis.Mabus wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 4:08 pmI used the term cult, because the population appears to be quite low, and lives in a hazardous remote location far away from any other civilization, which reminded me of Jonestown.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:41 pmWeird your mind went cult when mine went totalitarian dictatorship.Mabus wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:28 pm So a society that is specifically bred to fill in certain niches, is extremely protective of itself to the point of falling apart if its members flee (even though they could just breed other identical members in their place), but utterly fails when an outside problem appears? Sounds more like a cult than a civilization.
BTW, it's an isolationist eugenicist culture that has absolutely no freedom or acceptance of deviation. Is there ANY culture in Trek more antithetical to Federation values?
Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
I know. I was just clarifying my point.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 4:10 pmI'm not so much disagreeing as pointing out this situation could be viewed as far more fucked up than Picard is acting. They're acting like they're a hidden elf village when Geordi is the only one who reacts like these guys are Nazis.Mabus wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 4:08 pmI used the term cult, because the population appears to be quite low, and lives in a hazardous remote location far away from any other civilization, which reminded me of Jonestown.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:41 pmWeird your mind went cult when mine went totalitarian dictatorship.Mabus wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:28 pm So a society that is specifically bred to fill in certain niches, is extremely protective of itself to the point of falling apart if its members flee (even though they could just breed other identical members in their place), but utterly fails when an outside problem appears? Sounds more like a cult than a civilization.
BTW, it's an isolationist eugenicist culture that has absolutely no freedom or acceptance of deviation. Is there ANY culture in Trek more antithetical to Federation values?
Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
A few hints of "change for the sake of change is good" in this review, an attitude I loathe. Change is good as a means to an end of dealing with problems, change or "evolution" aren't positive or negative in their own right. Change that removes anything negatively affecting your life is positive, change that has the opposite effect is negative.
Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
They're not Federation members and have no desire to join so it really doesn't matter how antithetical their values are.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:41 pm BTW, it's an isolationist eugenicist culture that has absolutely no freedom or acceptance of deviation. Is there ANY culture in Trek more antithetical to Federation values?
The difference is only a matter of degree.Weird your mind went cult when mine went totalitarian dictatorship.
- clearspira
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Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
It only doesn't matter because the Federation will not invade for any reason other than its own defence. Living next door to a superpower that hates your guts has normally spelt death throughout history.pilight wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 7:23 pmThey're not Federation members and have no desire to join so it really doesn't matter how antithetical their values are.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:41 pm BTW, it's an isolationist eugenicist culture that has absolutely no freedom or acceptance of deviation. Is there ANY culture in Trek more antithetical to Federation values?
Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
So you think when Picard says:CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 4:10 pm I'm not so much disagreeing as pointing out this situation could be viewed as far more fucked up than Picard is acting. They're acting like they're a hidden elf village when Geordi is the only one who reacts like these guys are Nazis.
"They've given away their Humanity with this genetic manipulation. Many of the qualities that they breed out – the uncertainty, self-discovery, the unknown – these are many of the qualities that make life worth living. Well, at least to me. I wouldn't want to live my life knowing that my future was written, that my boundaries had been already set."
that`s him treating the society as "a hidden elf village", I mean elves are usually bastards so I guess...
His hand wringing at the end does not strike me as praise of the society, it is exactly like the free speech advocate who defends speech he disagrees with, the explanation being that only speech we disagree with needs the protection of freedom speech, since we don't try to suppress speech we agree with. Anything you can only defend on the basis of bare toleration is a thing which has nothing else going for it and that is all Picard does rhetorically and of course materially he just agrees to take the asylum seekers off world, so his actions are effectively condemnatory of the place...
Yours Truly,
Allan Olley
"It is with philosophy as with religion : men marvel at the absurdity of other people's tenets, while exactly parallel absurdities remain in their own." John Stuart Mill
Allan Olley
"It is with philosophy as with religion : men marvel at the absurdity of other people's tenets, while exactly parallel absurdities remain in their own." John Stuart Mill
- CharlesPhipps
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Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
I think it depends on how much you actually ascribe the concept of perfection to exist. In this case, the society of the colonists is stagnant and literally incapable of dealing with any issues it runs into. It is incapable of change and that means when CONFRONTED with outside context problems, it's doomed. It is a society that, as Kirk would say, is incapable of growth.Riedquat wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 7:12 pm A few hints of "change for the sake of change is good" in this review, an attitude I loathe. Change is good as a means to an end of dealing with problems, change or "evolution" aren't positive or negative in their own right. Change that removes anything negatively affecting your life is positive, change that has the opposite effect is negative.
Which was actually written into the Prime Directive (original recipe version) as an exception.
Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
I doubt if it was a ferengi colony Picard would have had any sympathy for their culture or try to stop interference.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:41 pmWeird your mind went cult when mine went totalitarian dictatorship.Mabus wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 3:28 pm So a society that is specifically bred to fill in certain niches, is extremely protective of itself to the point of falling apart if its members flee (even though they could just breed other identical members in their place), but utterly fails when an outside problem appears? Sounds more like a cult than a civilization.
BTW, it's an isolationist eugenicist culture that has absolutely no freedom or acceptance of deviation. Is there ANY culture in Trek more antithetical to Federation values?
Re: TNG - The Masterpiece Society
Yeah, definitely. That's basically the entire point of something like Brave New World as an examination of a situation where "what if it were possible to do this?"clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 8:36 amThe implications of that are pure horror.
''And here are our cotton pickers - don't worry - they love it.''
''And here is my wife. Don't worry, she loves spending her days cleaning my house.''
From inside, it's Utopia where no one is ever unhappy with their lives. From outside, it's an authoritarian (depending on how it's structured and who decides what shape society has) cult filled with brainwashing horror.
I think the Federation manages to have a Utopia that feels a lot less horrifying (that is, you have to look much harder to find the cracks). Your mileage may vary.