MightyDavidson wrote: ↑Mon Feb 11, 2019 4:38 am
CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Mon Feb 11, 2019 3:49 am
Given what happens, does anyone believe the writers actually thought Nazism was a good idea?
Mind you there's a weird habit I've noticed that efficiency is held up as the highest good.
Like, "they're murdering people in the streets but it's alright as long as they're the fastest most competent murderers they can be."
I don't think they thought it was a good idea. Though they may have had to try and find some positive spin to put on it, in order for the story to work as written. Portraying Nazism accurately would make John Gill a lunatic who'd never be sent on a mission of this sort and it would say rather nasty things about the Federation itself. It's a plot that ought to have been thought through WAY more then it was, is my point.
But there was a lot of "accuracy" with John Gill's version of Naziism.
SPOCK: Why do the Nazis hate Zeons?
ISAK: Why? Because without us to hate, there'd be nothing to hold them together.
So the Party has built us into a threat, a disease to be wiped out.
DARAS: I'm an Ekosian fighting the terrible thing that's happened to my people. The decoration was for betraying my own father to the Party. It was my father's idea. You see, he used to be very close to the Fuhrer.
Then he saw the changes and where they were leading. He turned against the Party. They imprisoned him. Melakon sentenced him to death.
GILL: Planet fragmented. Divided. Took lesson from Earth history.
KIRK: But why Nazi Germany? You studied history. You knew what the Nazis were.
GILL: Most efficient state Earth ever knew.
But as I have already pointed out that simply was not true. Nazi Germany was terribly inefficient. There are far better examples from history on how to unite a people. Why not go back further and use Otto Von Bismarck's methods? Or Tokugawa Ieyasu's (First shogun of a unified Japan)? I think even an armchair historian could come up with dozens of better ideas.
As for saying something bad about the Federation we and and would see plenty of that:
Doctor Adams who had "done more to revolutionise, to humanise prisons and the treatment of prisoners than all the rest of humanity had done in forty centuries" was secretly torturing his patients
Commodore Matt Decker becomes so obsessed with destroying a planet-destroying robot that he flies a shuttle into the mouth of the thing.[20] Interestingly, Kirk seems to be going down this very same path in "Obsession", but how he handles it is very different from Decker.
Doctor Richard Daystrom whose duotronic breakthrough won him the Nobel and Zee-Magnes prizes, had his engrams put into his computer, which quickly loses it and starts killing people, followed by Daystrom himself losing it and stating, "We're invincible. Look what we've done. Your mighty starships, four toys to be crushed as we choose," followed by Spock giving the obviously crazy man the Vulcan neck pinch.
Captain Garth of Izar whose exploits were required reading, who has totally lost it and compares himself to Alexander, Caesar, Napoleon, Hitler, Lee Kuan, Krotus (last two are would-be conquerors)[
Dr. Janice Lester, who was presumably a competent Starfleet officer with a legitimate complaint about discrimination in the service, goes off the deep end and resorts to a rather creepy kidnapping scheme to get what she always wanted.
Then there is that idiocy about needing to see to captain a starship given in "Is There no Truth in Beauty?" Uh, why? Other then the viewscreen what can the captain directly see?