Hey, LePage seems like he's got shit figured out, rate he's going now, he could end up being the republican candidate in 2020, might need to shit out some reality tv (which is distinguished from actual feces strictly in the rate at which it is actively consumed) and failed businesses first, but he's got the rest down pat.
Back to vaguely political derails as opposed to the... whatever the hell all this has been derail, Star Trek is described as a utopia, at least originally intended as one, and in some cases resembles definitions of one.
Then you look at it and ask why they talk about not using money, and then use money.
They talk about being peaceful explorers in a ship that can go toe to toe with enemy battle fleets, and could probably annihilate planetary populations of surprisingly close tech levels.
Personal weaponry seems to default to "disintegrate" and has to be "set to stun", or this should be interpreted as an order "hey, don't vaporize everyone", but I'm not sure which is more unsettling.
They mention seeking new civilizations but all the ones they are supposed to interact with already know them basically, as warp capable civs would.
While the ones they and others wouldn't or even couldn't know are often specifically forbidden with a vague handwave of "well we know better than to meddle", but if I was in a race without ftl space travel, magic item boxes, deathrays, and instant deployment capability I'd be pretty damn worried if one showed up to hang around quietly and observe my planet.
Are they not meddling because it would be tempting to just take over these savages?
Some people are capable of deciding to associate with them, but others just aren't quite there yet, though they're still totally equal and valued... but it is better to let them suffer and strive against scarcity based economics, trivially contrived racial conflicts, or generic catastrophe because maybe they'll become really equal like us?
Why are they forbidden from trying to actually offer the same sorts of choices and freedoms to new civilizations, but it happens all the time in the show?
Obviously because they wanted to add conflict and drama, but it still seems rather sketchy or even lazy.
They've got magical technologies in a post-scarcity setting but everybody is a baseline human, lots of diseases are eliminated, but everybody still dies of old age.
If the most powerful and important members of this society are dying because they just decided to let their body wear out, is this the same for the other members?
We don't know.
They present the greatest existential threat to their society as transhuman eusocialists, but we never see transhuman socialists, or even transhuman capitalists or neocapitalists or whatever flavor you want to pick.
Is transhumanism bad?
Star Trek sure seems to suggest that it is incompatible with their utopia, to the point that they won't do anything beyond using magical medical technology to extend unmodified lifespans out to a couple more centuries than we get now.
Is this equality?
If everyone is super, nobody will be, but what if everyone could be super but is kept mundane?
The other iconic villain (ignoring the space-blacks and space-asians and space-jews) is a genetically engineered superhuman, and if you look you can see that him and his buddies did do some messed up shit, but then the implication is left that all genetic engineering to produce superhumans or even just slightly improved humans is bad.
If the society is so free and advanced, why are people trying to blow it up, tear it down, take it apart, or twist it to their own ends?
Are people just that fucked up that we can't have nice things?
I mean, yes, we are, but if you ignore that it is done for drama again, the implications remain rather fucked up.