What are episodes from any series where you have problems with what the show presents as the correct side in an ethical dilemma.

This is a different question than purely having problems with ethical choices made by the characters themselves, as this question rests on what the writing frames as “correct” in the end.

I have two to start. The first is TOS ‘Let That Be Your Last Battlefield’. It’s the episode with the black and white characters locked in a constant struggle. The message is that holding eternal grudges and especially in the dimension of racism is wrong and self destructive. That’s fine as it goes. The problem for me is that Kirk, and the writing frames each of the two fighting aliens as being equally at fault.

One alien is from the previously oppressive class, and is hunting down the other alien.

The second alien is from the previously enslaved class, and is being hunted.

These are not equal positions. Clearly one side is more correct than the other. Also that more correct side is being hunted, and there is no indication he is intending to continue the conflict except for when the alien hunting him catches up with him and forces another fight.

Good initial message, terrible execution.

The next episode that has never sat right with me is Voyager’s ‘Critical Care’. In this episode the doctor is taken to work on hospital of an alien planet where medical care is allocated by a bureaucracy that largely follows an algorithm for assigning resources. Those who are deemed more essential receive higher quality care, and those on the bottom rung get scraps.

The message about unequal treatment, and the heartlessness of bureaucracy, especially medical bureaucracy is on full display. Eventually the doctor forces medication to be distributed for all.

Seems fine as messages go, but this episode sticks in my head. The thesis of the “correct” side of the dilemma seems to assume there actually are enough resources for everyone, and I’m not sure if I buy it. Sure, showing a sliver of high ranking people getting double doses of preventative medication while the lower rung masses get nothing is awful, I wonder about the math. If 10 high ranking people are getting double doses, and you have 100 people down below who need them, then I suppose you can cut the double doses and treat 10 of the lower rung people, but you still have to exclude 90 of them. In that case, a logical algorithm to decide which of those 100 people is the best return on investment seems cold but needed. A hard choice, but the alternative is chaos. In the end, the Doctor didn’t provide a roadmap for a better system, he just left the ship in the hands of a doctor who might game it for more resources, but those would logically be pulled from a central pool and leave less savvy off-screen hospitals with less. Assuming of course there weren’t infinite medical resources being hoarded in the beginning. I don’t know, it was just a little too murky for me.

  • Teal@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Tuvix was an accident that if left alone would have ended two lives.

    Tuvok has a wife and children that he wants to get home to but staying as is would have ended all he had. Neelix would have never joined the other Talaxians, saved them and found love and family.

    I think Janeway made the right choice. Maybe it wasn’t directed with enough care but I always thought it was the correct choice.

    • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I don’t think it’s the correct choice at all to kill someone to bring two back from the dead.

      If a doctor could murder me and use my organs to save even 10 people’s lives, I’d still want to live and that murder would still be disgusting.

      Personally I don’t see how someone could possibly think Janeway made the right choice, it was absolutely evil. But I don’t want to get into another Tuvix debate, star trek communities have 500 of those a month, and it’s always the same stuff said over and over, so I’m leaving it here

      • Teal@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        It’s all good. Your opinion is totally valid and I also don’t wish to rehash the same debates that have been done over and over already.

        Live long, prosper and may the Great Material Continuum carry you.