>>398867
Yes. That's a definite on TOS, TAS, DS9, and Enterprise. Next Gen doesn't get "good" until very late into the series, meanwhile Voyager is a rollercoaster in quality. The movies are good to varying degree, with the sole exception of Into Darkness (It's absolute trash). After that, if you still want some more, there's the various vidya such as 25th Anniversary staring the TOS/TAS cast, the Elite Force series, Bridge Commander, and Academy.
>>398870
>1. pro-multiculturalism
Except there are innumerable episodes about the characters trying to preserve cultures to the point that they handicap themselves in the process with how they come to a solution.
>2. anti-nationalism
In addition to what I just said, the
BIGGEST enemies that the Federation has to deal with are a race of cyborgs intent on turning the universe into one giant hivemind and a race of shapeshifters institing a universe spanning military dictatorship.
>3. anti-biological determinism
How when genetic egineering is outright illegal in the Federation?
>4. defense of neoliberal society of the late 20th century
How when said society is the reason for why WW3 eventually happens?
>5. violence bad
Except half the situations are resolved through violence.
>6. religion bad
Yet the entirety of DS9, not to mention isolated episode from the other series, are dedicate towards religions being proven correct repeatedly.
>7. everyone exactly equal to everyone else
Again, how? Genetic engineering is illegal so people are born different. Nor is there an attempt at any point of the series to create a situation like forcing the Vulkans and the Romulans to live together because they're the same race.
>Subconsciously, the brain can't distinguish reality from visual media.
Never mind, this post is bait.
>>398906
>The Original Series was definitely very atheist. But it wasn't socialist or feminist.
It was, but it wasn't preaching 21st century nor late 20th century Socialism and Feminism. The inclusion of Chekov, Uhura, and Sulu as regular and important characters was progressive in the 1960's. But that also accepted extremely quickly, which is why they never went much further than including different aliens. I guess you could "technically" consider the Trills as being "transgender/gay" stand-ins, but that still doesn't work if you think about it.
>There is one episode where they literally fight Satan, though.
That was the animated series:
https://infogalactic.com/info/The_Magicks_of_Megas-tu
Ironically, this happened because the network refused to let Roddenberry do an episode that depicted God.
>>398917
>as long as there's power and power is basically infinite
Except it's not. In Voyager, the series where they're flung across the unverse, half of the series is spent trying to find a source of energy because they don't have any access to the Federation's resources, with the crew even receiving "replicator rations".
>>398920
>>398924
IIRC, didn't the first season of Next Gen end on Picard literally killing the leaders of Starfleet because they were alien glowniggers?
>and you need some treaty-violating toys on hand in case of some sort of unknown existential threat like The Borg show up one day because some jackass higher-dimensional being decided to throw the fleet's flagship halfway across the galaxy for the lulz
From what I remember seeing in /strek/ autism discussions, Starfleet is already incredibly overpowered. For example, the hand-dandy phasers you see them using all the time are powerful enough to blow a hole in the side of a spacestation if they were actually turned all the way up to their max level. But no one ever really questions stuff like that because life under the Federation is just "that good".