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| Deep Space Nine What We Left Behind, we will always have here. |
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#46 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: California
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
The Roman and Greek republics were democracies but the wealthy controlled everything and legalized things like seizing individual lands and slavery. Even the US with its constitution in tact had lots of abuses of human rights. One minor example is prohibition, where alcohol was banned across the country. You can even take an issue with the Federation for violating basic individual rights, like; --not allowing women to attain the rank of captain, blatant legalized sexism. --ordering a Starfleet officer to submit to a dangerous experiment regardless of his refusal. -- later attempting to take away his daughter to a research facility, without his or her consent. I wouldn't trade the Fed's democracy for anything, but it's still interesting to point out. Democracy has to be tweaked a lot in order to truly work. |
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#47 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: Mentone
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
__________________
You perceive wrongly. I feel unimaginable happiness wasting time talking with women. I'm that type of human. |
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#48 | ||
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Admiral
Location: The Red Flag: May Day 2013
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
So, no, I don't think it's fair to call ancient Athens a democracy, even if that's what it called itself. It wasn't rule by the people; it was rule by a certain segment of the male population.
Well, no, they can't -- that's why it's called a dictatorship, because they don't get a choice! That's why democratic mandates come with expiration dates.
__________________
This dream must end, this world must know: We all depend on the beast below. |
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#49 |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
__________________
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#50 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
I think it was an informal, bias, rather then a regulation. |
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#51 |
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Commodore
Location: South Dakota
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
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#52 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
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#53 |
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Commodore
Location: South Dakota
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
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#54 | ||||
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Fleet Captain
Location: Mentone
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
Every "democracy" today is actually a republic. The voters elect representatives, and the representatives make the decisions. Because of the nature of a republic, there needs to be some sort of overriding law that exists outside of current politics (or else representatives would immediately chose to become elected for life, and other naughty things). Republics are better at protecting rights than other forms of government, because the representatives depend on the voters for their jobs, and said representatives can't go past the overriding law, which often also deals somewhat with the rights of voters.
__________________
You perceive wrongly. I feel unimaginable happiness wasting time talking with women. I'm that type of human. |
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#55 | ||
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Captain
Location: At star's end.
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
It must have two features -first, the law and its enforcement represents the will of the majority of the population (hence, the elections) -second, this law applies to everyone; no one is above it, not even the current rulers. There's a relatively recent term - anocracies (or crappy governments). It includes states that call themselves democratic, but really aren't. Why? Because, in such states, the ones that win an election are no longer bound by the law; they can pretty much do whatever they want, much like the princelings and kings of history.
__________________
"Let truth and falsehood grapple ... Truth is strong" - John Milton |
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#56 | |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
You can't take anything Janice Lester says at face value. She was violently jealous of not only Kirk, but all of Starfleet, which rejected her - NOT because she's a woman (indeed, in the perfect utopia envisioned by Gene Roddenberry, it is inconceivable that sexism would be the one thing they'd leave in), but because she's simply NUTS.
__________________
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#57 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: California
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
The main problem is Kirk agrees with her that the situation (whatever it was), was unfair, which suggests there was some type of sex based restriction in place. Otherwise everything else seemed normal to Fed citizens--they considered their government the ultimate in freedom. BTW, Star Wars had The Republic, which was called a democracy. It was sort of like the Federation, prosperous, freedom--the main words thrown around was freedom and democracy. Ironically, that one got manipulated into turning into an Empire with a dictatorship, through the so called democratic process. |
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#58 | |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
If there is anything 'unfair' about this situation, it's that even in such a perfect society, people like Janice Lester still turn out to be cuckoos.
__________________
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#59 |
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Terok Nor
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
__________________
"Trust is good; control is better" |
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#60 | ||||||||||||||
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Admiral
Location: The Red Flag: May Day 2013
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Re: Cardassian society - enforcement or preference?
First off, we're not talking about the protection of civil rights and liberties; we're talking about the definition of democracy. Democracy is defined by the protection of one particular right to all adults in society: The right to vote. Anything other than this universal extension of the suffrage is not democracy. Secondly, there are two kinds of democracy: liberal democracy and illiberal democracy. In a liberal democracy, everyone has an equal vote, but there are strong constitutional protections for the rights of the individual and of minorities against abuses from a majority. The notion that democracy is inherently "rule of the mob" is just absurd.
A republic is a form of government in which the state and its affairs are considered a public concern (it is from the Latin term res publica, meaning "the public thing"), rather than being the private property of the ruling elite. A common simplified version of this definition, therefore, is that a republic is any state that is not a monarchy. A republic may be a democracy, or it may be a non-democracy. Republics encompass everything from direct democracy ("town hall" meetings where everything is put to a popular vote), to representative democracy (e.g., the Federative Republic of Brazil), to apartheid states (e.g., the Republic of South Africa before Mandela), to oligarchical dictatorships (e.g., the Third Reich and the Soviet Union). In other words, the term republic is unique from, but not exclusive from and often overlapping with, the term democracy. What you describe -- the populace voting for elected officials -- is a particular brand of democracy called representative democracy. This and republicanism are, again, not mutually exclusive.
The Republic was transformed into the Empire by greed, corruption, and a willingness to disregard the constitutional limits imposed by liberal democracy. At no point do we see a popularly-elected legislature answerable to the people (rater than to campaign contributors) transform their state into a dictatorship by genuine democratic, or liberal democratic, processes.
Sorry to say, but TOS was rife with sexism. Don Draper from Mad Men, with his sexist beliefs, would fit right in if he were dropped down into the TOS version of Starfleet. In the context of the episode, her lines are perfectly plausible, and there's no reason at all to think that the version of Starfleet envisioned by the creators of TOS didn't exclude women from command. That audiences and producers later recognized how oppressive such a concept is and decided to retcon it out of continuity does not mean that it is not what the producers of TOS intended at the time. We can safely assume that, in the revised version of Starfleet's history, women have always been able to become captains. But we shouldn't ascribed greater progressivism to Roddenberry and company at the time of TOS's production than was actually present.
And, no, the United States was not a democracy for most of its history, either -- not when it denied the franchise first to anyone other than rich property-owning white men, and then to women and minorities, and then to women, and then to women and minorities again, and then to minorities. The United States was not a democracy until the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
__________________
This dream must end, this world must know: We all depend on the beast below. |
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