Like most people who like the government system presented by Heinlein, you're breezing right past the obvious problems with it and totally buying into the "it works satisfactorily" authorial fiat bullshit. We're talking about a government run by a small minority of people, all of whom by definition submitted to a term of several years service to that government, involving sustained training, indoctrination, and isolation from civil society, and who on their release from service had many of the best jobs reserved for them. It's also possible, but not clearly stated, that servicemen had extraterritoriality in civil jurisdictions (the deserter from Rico's training unit murders a child far from the camp, but rather than being dealt with there, he is turned over to military custody). There's obviously no potential for abuse in this system!Darth Hoth wrote:Then you admit that the Federation is not fascist, or even dictatorial?
Heinlein dictates to the reader that this system of government is awesome and works perfectly, with no serious corruption, but this really tests suspension of disbelief. He also has a neat sideline in presenting semi-retarded criticisms of Marxist ideology (as in "lol people have different skills thus Marxism is dumb!") and proclaiming that liberal society is decadent and depraved, but poorly-thought-out political bullshit is Heinlein's stock in trade. In his formula, the way to prosperity and stability is to turn all power and responsibility over to a handful of military professionals and subject all offenders against order to punishment by summary violence. Things will work out great.
The best way to read Starship Troopers is as a work of biographical propaganda commissioned by the Federation government. Otherwise it is pretty stupid and unrealistic. The most obvious problems being the neat full circle of Rico's father (who at the end of the book has changed his mind about the military and by random chance become Rico's platoon sergeant, which is just astonishingly improbable) and the lack of sex, heterosexual and otherwise. Seen as this kind of satire, although it wasn't written as satire, it's actually a rather good work.