wahrk DalekFlay Darkzone
I find myself agreeing with different things you have all said.
If politics is downstream of culture, as the phrase goes, then culture is downstream of religion/philosophy probably. As Darkzone said most of the problems with Star Trek: Discovery to me seem rooted in the cultural and philosophical assumptions of the writers - their thoughts on society. They could never write Star Trek in a "Horatio Hornblower" or "Master and Commander" way unironically because they don't believe in it. Instead they must mock such values, because their worldview is at such variance.
Like wahrk said, I certainly agree not every show needs to be a DS9. On a certain Star Trek forum (that is packed with woke people), there is a split between people who see TNG as the epitome of Trek and people who see DS9 as the epitome of Trek with the latter generally seeing TNG as naive. So I can understand the reasons why there is now a backlash arguing DS9 was grimdark and began the slide into edgy. There is the case that TOS was optimistic, but it was more nuanced in showing the human condition than TNG - this unfortunatly gets used to defend DSC which is hardly worthy of being in TOS's shadow.
At the end of the day the reason I think DSC is so repulsive is exactly as Darkzone said: everything, from trained military behavior to scientific integrity to human nature goes against the woke post-modern worldview of the clique that was inexplicably given Star Trek despite their terrible professional record and horde of past Golden Raspberry awards. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds will be no better unless they suddenly change personal philosophy and have a revelation mid-career.
This is the DNA change wahrk - the old writers like Naren Shankar were scientists, humanists and modernists - the new ones are post-modern anti-humanists. Humanism shares something important with Tolkien's Christianity or Lucas's Buddhism/Christianity - it believes truth exists, and thus art has something to reach towards.
I don't think so. I worked with a jew guy IRL once and he seemed okay, if a little weird. Star Wars and other works also had Jewish producers, but when you notice formerly good works becoming shit, over, over and over, and there's almost always the same kind of people behind, you start seeing a pattern.
I would put that down to the factors above, i.e. general culture's current state which accelerates the process of each simulacra being a redacted copy of the original. Afterall, it's not like Anglo-Saxon Americans aren't producing hordes of woke writers too.
Seth MacFarlane interviewed four of the most prominent staff writers of TNG for the blu ray release -
Ronald D Moore (always seemed the most outspoken about going away from Roddenbury's lack of character conflict - did a lot of DS9 and made Battlestar Galactica),
Narendra Shankar (started as a scientific consultant, has a PhD in Applied Physics - now runs The Expanse), together they also work on For All Mankind,
Brannon Braga (used to be criticised for presiding over the decline of VOY and ENT but they look like gold in hindsight compared to what we have now - helped MacFarlane make Neil Degrease Tyson's Cosmos and The Orville) and
Rene Echiavarra.