I just saw Oxygen, the episode where DW takes 'dead' aim at capitalism as humankind's biggest mistake. Oxygen is now a commodity for sale and if you don't pay the price you turn into a zombie in a smart suit. Anyone catch the irony here? How much money has Steve Moffat made off this show? But as show runner, he scoffs at the free enterprise system as intrinsically flawed.
And of course, the notion that the Doctor is non violent, never kills in self defense. That mirrors the simplistic naivety of "War is not the answer." Tell that to England when it was being bombarded in WWII.
I still watch the show, despite it's pontificating preachiness. I wish there would be more legitimate philosophic episodes and less monster-of-the week horror plots.
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Reply by MysteryReader
on May 15, 2017 at 8:33 AM
exactly my thoughts
Reply by CaseyJones
on May 15, 2017 at 8:54 AM
ya the jab at capitalism irritated me as well, I miss Doctor 4 and his reasoned Thatcher BBC era speeches that at times smacked of libertarianism
Reply by SkyPowers
on May 16, 2017 at 3:18 AM
Indeed Moffat seems obsessed with a negative dystopian view not only of humanity but the entire universe. It's easier I suppose to elevate the Doctor to an avenging demigod (in Moffat's own self-aggrandized image?) Can't drama be written with a more optimistic view? Show alien worlds that have it together without some hidden grotesque flaw indicting the entire world? Just a bad apple thrown in for conflict?
Reply by SunParakeet
on May 16, 2017 at 5:43 AM
The whole Zombie-genre was political and anti-authoritarian/anti-colonialist from the very beginning, but at the latest since Romero's Night of the Living Dead.
The message is not that the free market is bad, but that capitalism is dangerous. And we see this from the start of capitalism as an intention of this economic system: using the egoism of individuals for the benefit of the community. We can already read about this in Adam Smith's works and this is why capitalism is so successful and has made our world a better place with more wealth, less death and sickness. But I think we can all agree that capitalism has the potential to destroy us all if it isn't regulated. In the scenario in Oxygen it isn't regulated and thus profit is worth more than a human life. If you don't see this trend today in the way big companies treat workers in third world nations, then you surely must inhabit a different reality than me.
Libertarianism is the opposite of authoritarianism. Alternatives to capitalism are communism or feudalism. Capitalism does not equal libertarianism. One is about an economical system and the distribution of wealth, the other is a political philosophy about liberty. Though historically many capitalist systems have also been libertarian, this is not a necessity.
Yes, but drama always needs conflict. I would presume that most DW stories set in the future and/or space are about dystopias. For the RTD era:
For the First Doctor era (I've only seen the serials which are still complete):
Sooo, I don't see that much difference to Moffat today. Do you? Really?
Reply by SkyPowers
on May 16, 2017 at 7:31 AM
Yes there is potential. China blends communism with capitalism. The worst air pollution in the world resides in China. And I wouldn't be surprised if lives have been shortened as a result. Capitalism needs regulation. However "Oxygen" generalized it as an absolute paradigm.
What I meant in my original post re: utopianism is the overall theme of Doctor Who placing the Doctor as the figurehead of what utopia should be. Hitler had his idea of utopia. So did Stalin. So did the Borg. The Daleks. My point is hell is paved with utopian intentions and I wish DW delved more into context and devil's advocacy instead of simplistic preachy absolutes.