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| General Trek Discussion Trek TV and cinema subjects not related to any specific series or movie. |
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#1 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
A democracy that is waging proxy wars against peacefull nations... A democracy that gives financial aid to bad dictatorships... This sort of thing. I cannot recal any from the top of my head. It would be nice to see some more complexity in Star Trek's politics.
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"Die with honour" -- Tosk (Tosk) |
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#2 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Terra 3
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
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"I was never a Star Trek fan." J.J. Abrams |
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#3 |
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Commodore
Location: Unmarked grave, Ekos
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
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"Every time you think, you weaken the nation." --Moe Howard |
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#4 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
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"Die with honour" -- Tosk (Tosk) |
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#5 | |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Terra 3
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
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"I was never a Star Trek fan." J.J. Abrams |
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#6 |
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Fleet Captain
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
Sir Humphrey Appleby: East Yemen, isn't that a democracy? Sir Richard Wharton: Its full name is the Peoples' Democratic Republic of East Yemen. Sir Humphrey Appleby: Ah I see, so it's a communist dictatorship. Romulus is the People's Democratic Republic of Romulus. I'm not sure we've seen any governments where a true democratic vote has resulted in invading another planet. |
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#7 |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
Except we've never seen the Federation Council democratically vote on anything.
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#8 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: Mentone
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
![]() Heck, the Klingons aren't exactly the nicest dudes around, and they are ALLIES with the Feddies.
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You perceive wrongly. I feel unimaginable happiness wasting time talking with women. I'm that type of human. |
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#9 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: In pre-production
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
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John |
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#10 |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
Then there is the TNG episode The Outrageous Okona, the Enterprise Dee entered the the Omega Sagitta system seemingly without the permission of either of the two governments of that system. These were not a technologically primitive people, but rather a species with interplanetary travel and the ability to communicate. The Enterprise Dee sailed in like the locals had no say in who could enter their system.
Last edited by T'Girl; May 11 2013 at 11:03 AM. |
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#11 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
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#12 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: In pre-production
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
Events never got beyond negotiation. Kirk was authorized to take "whatever steps are necessary" to stop the Klingons from using Organia as a base, but he only took certain steps. Namely, he laid it all out to the Organians when he spoke to council. Kirk was inflexible and insistent in the negotiation about a Federation presence on Organia only because the Klingons would have invaded in the true sense of the word. In fact, the Organians agreed that Kirk was genuine in his concern, while at the same time denying that Federation involvement was necessary. Then, the Klingons arrived. We'll never know how things might have played out if the Klingons hadn't arrived when they did. I'll concede that one of the possibilities might have been invasion in true sense of the word, but only with the Enterprise and/or other Federation ships safely in orbit at least long enough to beam down troops (infantry). Now, if you want to argue that Kirk and Spock engaged in guerrilla activity on Klingon-occupied Organia, that's a different question, and they did, and, by the way, with phasers returned to them by the Organians. But that's not "invasion", either. On the other hand, if, in the first place, Kirk had beamed down with a platoon of armed red shirts, "invasion" might have been the thing to call it. But Kirk was sensitive to that, and only he and Spock came. Kirk made peaceful proposals to the Organians devoid of euphemism, and again, the Organians regarded him as genuinely concerned, even if misguided. "Invasion" is much more apt in The Enterprise Incident.
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John Last edited by CorporalCaptain; May 11 2013 at 04:22 PM. |
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#13 | |
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Commodore
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
Let's take Romulus. The little we saw in Unification indicates that it is an authoritarian society, ordinary people fear those who wield power. In addition to that it is probably very dogmatic like Vulcan society, strong emotions gotta be channeled and the Romulans do it via conquest. If you want your society to be stable the method of channeling of emotions, be it Romulan imperialism or Vulcan orthodoxy, must not be questioned. Whether the Romulans have a Senate or not matters little. Having formal democratic institutions doesn't make you a democracy yet.
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The illegal we do immediately; the unconstitutional takes a little longer. - former US Secretary of State and unconvicted war criminal Henry Kissinger |
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#14 |
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Lieutenant
Location: NCC-0500
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
But onto Star Trek: The Romulan Empire has a senate, and it's politicians behave like those in an imperial democracy, as far as we can tell - spin, double talk, etc, as seen in Unification Part 1/2. They probably use the age old justification of national security to launch imperial wars, expand the Romulan Empire, and justify it to the paranoid Romulan citizenry. The Romans did as much, with their justification of the Gauls being a threat, etc. The Klingon Empire probably operated similarily at it's height in the Original Series, as even a oligarchic dictatorship requires some way to justify it's wars to the common military servicemen and servicewomen of the Klingon Defence Force. The later notion that Klingons are an unthinking horde who love war is ridiculous and racist, and belongs in a parody setting like Warhammer 40,000, not a rational and thinking show like Star Trek. I'm sure the Federation's opponents would also classify it as one too: - Various original series era antagonists complained that the Federation encroaches on their empire's interests and resources. This may indicate competition for rare minerals (essential in advanced technology like transporters, warp cores, etc?) - The terrorist leader in The High Ground told Beverly Crusher that the Federation continues to trade with his planet's government, despite them fighting a protracted war against his people's continent. This may indicate a certain degree of cynical 'ends justify the means' politics in some circles of the Federation, even if many citizens like James Kirk and Jean Luc Picard are extremely just and idealistic men. - The existence of Section 31 as well as the militarists of Admiral Cartwright era, suggests that even if the Federation is beyond the idea of the 'rat race', and no longer exploits it's citizens as labourers, using romantic notions like work and duty, it may still have a long standing reactionary/militant undercurrent that can burst out when good men like Jean Luc Picard are not looking. It's clear that the United Federation of Planets is a much more moral and equitable society than any we have had on Earth so far - it may even be something like a post scarcity communal society, or incorporate elements of anarchism in terms of people's rights and liberties. But it is not without it's critics. Perhaps we can assume that certain rare minerals still exist in the 24th century, not found abundantly, and that the rivalry between states is largely focused on the control of these natural resources - the Federation using culture, trade and diplomacy to achieve them. Every planet that the UFP seduces into membership is one less source of vital isolinear chip minerals for Romulan Warbirds. The fact is we don't have a consistent picture. Sometimes the Federation seems almost Utopian (and a society to be admired) - one cannot see what problem the Romulan Star Empire or Klingon Empire would have with it..... other times, it seems to suffer from some of the darker reactive elements of current society. Probably it's institutions are less inherently corrupt than our own, due to the absence of the profit motive, wage slavery, and need or want. It can therefore never be as appalling as current states. But even a post-scarcity society where money is optional, can suffer from fear and reactionary politics, and competition for natural resources. |
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#15 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: Had we ever seen imperial democracies in Trek?
__________________
"Die with honour" -- Tosk (Tosk) |
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