The Real Lessons of Starship Troopers by Robert Heinlein (Video Essay #2 Transcript)

Starship Troopers by Robert Heinlein.
A fantastic novel in the genre of military sci-fi, written in 1959.
And also a movie by Paul Verhoeven from 1997. And if you only know the movie, well… we seriously need to talk.

First off: I like Heinlein.
He’s one of those foundational sci-fi authors—smart, provocative, and unafraid to take unpopular political stances. He’s one of my all-time favorites and many of his ideas have shaped my current beliefs.

And Starship Troopers is one of his most important stories. It follows a young man, Johnny Rico, who joins the Mobile Infantry to fight a war against alien bugs.

When you read the blurb, it’s a simple military space adventure. But that’s not all you get from the book. Inside is a thought-provoking idea about how a better society could be structured. On the surface it’s a war story, but beneath that, it’s a manifesto. It delivers a serious argument for a society built on civic duty, personal sacrifice, and the idea that citizenship—true citizenship—should not be handed out freely, but earned through military service.

In Heinlein’s world, the right to vote isn’t a birthright.
It should be a reward for those who serve and sacrifice—specifically, those willing to risk their lives to protect society.
Put simply: no sweat and blood, no ballot.

It’s controversial—especially for modern societies built on universal suffrage. But it’s coherent. And it forces you to ask: Should anyone have a say in how society is run if they’ve never lifted a finger to build or maintain it through self-sacrifice?

Like many, I saw the movie first. I was a kid back then.
I remember the bugs, the explosions, the spaceships, and—yes—Dina Meyer’s shower scene – how could anyone ever forget that…

But when I finally read the book, I was stunned.
Paul Verhoeven’s Starship Troopers doesn’t just adapt the novel—it inverts it.
It turns Heinlein’s serious political philosophy into a cartoonish dystopia, leaving us with nothing but mockery.

Gone is the argument for civic responsibility. In its place, a satire of militarism was put. The movie is a shallow story about propaganda, fascist aesthetics, and the glorification of violence.

The movie says: “Look how ridiculous a militaristic society is.”
Heinlein’s book says: “This kind of society might be the only one that actually works.”

Nowhere does the movie engage with Heinlein’s argument.
It doesn’t debate it. It doesn’t refute it. It simply inverts it.
By inverting it, the film mocks it.

Funny enough, director Verhoeven publicly stated that he never finished reading the book. Quote: “I stopped after two chapters because it was so boring. It really is quite a bad book. I asked Ed Neumeier (the screenwriter) to tell me the rest because I just couldn’t read it. It’s a very right-wing book.”

And there we have it.

Hollywood was given an idea that it categorized as right-wing – and it rejected it without even reading the full story. Unbelievable.

It would have been fine for Verhoeven to read it, disagree, and formulate a counterargument. But he didn’t. Reading two chapters was enough for him to turn a blind eye and invert the story to fit his own beliefs – without them ever being challenged.

The film adaptation is therefore a textbook example of how Hollywood can take an intellectually serious concept and distort it into parody – out of ignorance and arrogance. The movie became a transformation—from a provocative political novel into a satirical action-packed spectacle – void of any argumentation.

It makes you wonder: How many other Hollywood movie adaptations have done this… without us even noticing?

Another adaption is in the works.
This time, Neil Blomkamp is attached—and he claims he wants to stay closer to Heinlein’s original vision. That’s promising.

But will it finally give us a film that stays true to Heinlein’s ideas?
I’m cautious.
Because no matter what Blomkamp states, at the end of the day—it’s still Hollywood.
And Hollywood doesn’t promote ideologies that don’t fit the mainstream narrative.

Even if Blomkamp delivers: Read the book. And see for yourself how Hollywood perverts ideas and arguments of great thinkers like Heinlein.

Why Stories Matter (Video Essay #1 Transcript)

Stories matter.
They matter so much, we’ve built entire multi-billion-dollar industries around them — movies, shows, books, comics, video games… Even religions are basically just built on stories.

But why do they matter so much to us?

It’s a simple question. We read them. We watch them. We grow up with them. But the real power of a story… is what it does to us.

Because when we read a book or watch a film — We become someone else. We become the characters. We feel their fears. We suffer their losses. We celebrate their triumphs. And without even noticing it, we absorb something layered deeper into the stories — it’s the ideas, perspectives, and beliefs.

Even Jesus spoke in parables — because he knew something fundamental:
Stories stick. They stick much more than simple arguments or opinions.

Jesus Christ and his stories survived for two thousand years and counting. Meanwhile, they created entire civilizations. And the ideas within them shaped the thoughts and behavior of countless people.

The stories of today?

They’re no different. They still carry meaning. They still deliver ideas, perspectives, and beliefs. They still shape who we are — and how we think. They even shape our civilization.

Tell a child that power and responsibility are connected… They’ll forget it by dinner. But show them Spider-Man? They’ll never forget: “With great power comes great responsibility.”

That is the power of storytelling.

If it’s done right, a story can teach you something you’ll carry for the rest of your life.

  • Luke Skywalker taught us that hate leads to the dark side.
  • Frodo showed us how power can corrupt the heart, mind, and soul.
  • And Titanic… well, Titanic taught us that even after decades of marriage, Rose would still rather think about the Chad she hooked up with on a cruise ship than her actual husband. – Man, what a hoe that Rose was.

Every story plants a seed. Not all of them grow. But enough do. And those are the stories that shape who we are.

That’s why we need to be careful about the stories we consume. We need to think critically about what those stories are teaching us — Because every writer, every director, and studio executive… is trying to sell us their ideas as the right ones.

Do we want a positive Star Wars that gives us a new hope — or do we want a nihilistic Disney Star Wars that tells us to let the past die and kill it if we have to?

Do we want stories that inspire us? Challenge us? Ground us? Or ones that numb us?

In the end, it’s up to the viewer. The reader. The gamer.

But the most important thing is this: We must never forget that stories are more than just entertainment. Stories are ideas. Perspectives. Beliefs.

Stories matter. They always have. And they always will.