That road to colonialism must be very slippery indeed if sitting back and watching an entire world full of people get wiped from existence is somehow preferable to both helping in secret so as to avoid tampering with their culture, or offering to help openly so as to allow them to make their own choice on the whole question of going extinct.CrypticMirror wrote: ↑Wed Apr 06, 2022 10:03 amI've heard this before somewhere, how did it go again?CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Wed Apr 06, 2022 2:01 amIf it's the mantle of godhood to offer humanitarian aid then sign me up, Moses.Frustration wrote: ↑Tue Apr 05, 2022 6:41 pm Deciding to take up the mantle of godhood would be a profoundly arrogant act - which is precisely why so many here have erupted into self-righteous moral condemnation. This forum, as a collective, has hot and cold running arrogance and a little arrogance candy left on the pillow.
People in the Utopian future have learned not to meddle; if only people in the here-and-now were so enlightened.
Inaction is also a choice to act.
"Come take up the white man's burden..."
https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/poem/poems_burden.htm
Humanitarian aid, when it is asked for. You can't just go around imposing "aid" on people who are not asking for it. That is the first step on the slippery road of colonialism, and it doesn't end well for anyone. And it has to be asked for equal-to-equal, not supplicant to overlord.Lazerlike42 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 06, 2022 2:53 am
- and remember: one of the major roles of Starfleet/the Federation is to do humanitarian work. Half the episodes of TNG feature some plot element where the Enterprise is doing some kind of humanitarian mission bringing food or medicine to some planet, bringing survivors somewhere, trying to fix the atmosphere or seismic stability of some planet, etc. When they refuse to help people just because they're at X stage of development, that's not like an average Joe not wanting to spend $10 to help a beggar on the street: it's much closer to the Red Cross deciding they aren't going to help victims of a typhoon or earthquake because the country where it happened didn't invent the internal combustion engine yet.
Discussions about the prime directive always lead to talk of the hubris of intervention, but isn't it also hubris to anoint yourself the arbiter of who should and should not be allowed to know of alien life? Who should have access to plentiful food and life saving medical treatment and who should be forced to live short, hard lives? Certainly there are many good arguments to be made against revealing yourself to a less technologically advanced civilization, and especially to sharing the use of technology, let alone information about how it works. But this dogmatic adherence to the idea that no one could possibly be capable of handling the knowledge of beings from other worlds, unless they have someone there that built a specific type of engine, that also reeks of the kind of arrogance that views people from other societies as inherently inferior. And quite frankly, its a bit hypocritical coming from a species that was living in a post apocalyptic shithole until aliens revealed themselves and helped them turn their dystopia into a utopia. First contact with alien life transformed our world into a paradise, the last thing we should do is let that happen to anyone else.
Now I'm not saying the federation should be stopping at every planet of cave dwelling hunter gatherers and trying to teach them science. I'm just saying that there are many nuanced perspectives to be considered here and it is entirely possible to come to very different conclusions about how these situations should be handled. If only more prime directive episodes were willing to actually explore an opposing viewpoint instead of lecturing us about the sacrosanct nature of the federation's highest law.
I would love to see an episode with a Ferengi trading goods with a species living in the equivalent of the renaissance, for the enterprise to object, only for the trader to point out that he has given them a choice, dealt with them honestly, and respected their wishes, while the high and mighty federation is practicing deception and forcing views upon a people simply because they have the power to do so. Let him make his case that he treats them as equals, while they carry around the hu-mon's burden of knowing what is best for everyone else. No straw men, no contrivances that somehow prove the federation was right all along, just some real, honest exploration of a complex issue from multiple points of view.