Quick, let's misquote Gene Roddenberry
(media.kotakuinaction2.win)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (35)
sorted by:
TNG pushed "magic dirt" and took it to the extreme. And was a proponent of modern HR culture (Troi).
The show often respected other cultures up to the point those other cultures did something Picard didn't like, at which point he'd just use the Enterprise's superior technology to enforce his will to the frustration of the aliens (while lecturing them in the process).
Basically they'd do to other civilizations what Q did to them. And they hated Q for it.
I'm not sure I agree with your assessment of Picard. While he did indeed laps from time to time, he also had an autistic adherence to the primary directive. there were episodes where an entire civilization was about to collapse or be genocided and he opted to do nothing as it would have violated the prime directive to intervene. there were also episodes where captured humans raised by aliens would come back being distorted and having weird tastes, and Picard would ultimately choose to let those humans live with their newfound culture instead of trying to re-educate them.
In Justice in Season 1 Picard prevents the aliens from executing Wesley Crusher because he considers their legal system privative and overly legalistic. And the aliens themselves tell him earlier in the episode "you could just take your boy, and we'd have no way of tracking him because of your superior technology" and Picard swears he won't do that (despite eventually doing exactly that).
You are right that there are a couple episodes (Homeward with Worf's brother, Pen Pals with Data and his friend, Suddenly Human with the human orphan raised by aliens) where the opposite happens. In Homeward and Pen Pals you have others forcing Picard's hand to act opposite; in Suddenly Human the Enterprise was matched with a technologically equal foe and therefore couldn't act unilaterally.
Picard was at his best when he acted the most right-wing (acted as the standard-bearer for his culture and people, looked out for his people above outsiders). That I think is one of the interesting paradoxes of the Trek shows: they are inherently left-wing in philosophy and outlook, but to make them palatable to a wide audience they have to add right-wing traits to the characters; but it is those right-wing character traits that make the characters (and therefore the shows) endearing.