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Star Trek vs Firefly or the Fascist Enterprise vs Freedom-loving Serenity

Browsing Jonah Goldberg's Liberal Fascism blog, at NRO, I found a small entry about Star Trek's fascist tendencies.

Philosophy professor Kelley L. Ross, Ph.D., is rather persuasive in arguing that Star Trek not only anti-capitalist and anti-religion, but, when push comes to shove, is downright fascist.
"If daily life is not concerned with familiar economic activities and the whole of life is not informed with religious purposes, then what is life all about in Star Trek? Well, the story is about a military establishment, Star Fleet, and one ship in particular in the fleet, the Enterprise. ... So what one is left with in Star Trek is military life. ... In the 20th Century there has been a conspicuous political ideology that combines militarism, the subordination of private economic activity to collective social purposes, and often the disparagement of traditional religious beliefs and scruples: Fascism, and not the conservative Fascism of Mussolini and Franco, who made their peace with the Church and drew some limits about some things (Franco even helped Jews escape from occupied France), but the unlimited "revolutionary," Nihilistic Fascism of Hitler, which recoiled from no crime and recognized no demands of conscience or God above the gods of the Führer and the Volk."
Firefly, Dr. Ross argues is the "anti-Star Trek".
"All of the disturbing characteristics of the Star Trek shows, the militarism, collectivism, anti-capitalism, and atheism, are notably missing from the excellent but shortlived series Firefly. ... Unlike the starship Enterprise, a powerful warship of the United Federation of Planets, the ship Serenity is a small, private "Firefly" class transport with no weapons -- except the hand weapons of the crew. The captain and first officer... are veterans of the attempt to prevent the vast Alliance of planets from taking over their own worlds. ... [Joss] Whedon wants to make it clear, however, that he doesn't think of the Alliance as evil ... but rather as something perhaps too big for its own good, or the good of its citizens. ... In the pilot, Serenity takes on, not only Simon and River [fugitives from the law], but the Shepherd, i.e. Minister, Book ... Although the Shepherd expresses his religious views in, usually, a low key way, and the details given of his beliefs are spare, he does have an actual Bible, and once he even seems to make a reference to Jesus, as a carpenter. In the movie, the word "Christian" is even uttered -- though most viewers may not have noticed that the words "Jesus" () and "Buddha" (, literally "Buddha Founder") have both been spoken in Chinese during the shows.
... "The very best thing about Firefly, in comparison to Star Trek, is probably that it doesn't try for the slightest bit of Utopianism. It does not assume that a single galactic government would be best, as it does not assume that present religion and capitalist economics are undesirable. This is refreshing, to say the least ..."
Give the whole thing a read. I found it very interesting. In part, because the idea that Star Trek presents a future chock full of Utopian Liberal Fascism, which will make Trekkies liberal heads just explode in frustration.
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