I see what you’re saying, but ultimately I think it doesn’t have to do with the violence itself and more to do with the overall way in which we frame things. For example, no matter how hard a creator might try to make something seem “brutal” or “anticapitalist,” there’s gonna be people that interpret it completely the other way. Kind of like the “Squid Game is actually pretty cool! Also it’s pro capitalist and anti communist!”
Same thing for violence I think. Like past and current indigenous cultures are very close to “violence” when it comes to things like hunting and slaughtering livestock for food, but you didn’t see the kind of brutal violence you’re talking about until things colonialism/imperialism.
I could see a future communist society that doesn’t have issues with real life violence but still has action movies and video games. It doesn’t really seem like a contradiction to me.
I dunno, I don’t really see her caste status as a big factor in her political rise/career. Also, she’s not really the “settler” since she was born here right? It would be her parents that are the “settlers”? But wouldn’t “immigrants” be more appropriate for her parents? It’s not like they came here to dispossess the natives of anything. I think you’re really stretching your analysis here with both the “Brahmin” and “settler” thing. She’s bad, but not because of those reasons.