Yeah it's from reading the books. But that is apparent in the first episode of the show as well, the tension between planets and belters has already been introduced.
You're right it may have nothing to do with it, I'm assuming fighting over resources was part of it but there's nothing to support that. That's my assumption on what might realistically lead to WW3 but you're right.
Still if the accumulation of money was truly not the driving force of people anymore, it's natural for Picard to point out how they've moved past it. We'd do the same if some ancient person showed up and acted weird.
Depends on point of view but in this case I'd say so, because they can't just warp around between places, there's limitations and it's a pretty unpleasant ride compared to Trek's warping around.So being more scientifically plausible is being more pessimistic?
How do you figure? Star Trek has never established the cause of the third world war, all we know is the ultimate fatality numbers and the approximate year it ended.Then later he tried to explain that their society moved past the greedy mindsets which led to another world war
What could lead you to believe that "greedy mindsets" was even a minor factor?
You're right it may have nothing to do with it, I'm assuming fighting over resources was part of it but there's nothing to support that. That's my assumption on what might realistically lead to WW3 but you're right.
Still if the accumulation of money was truly not the driving force of people anymore, it's natural for Picard to point out how they've moved past it. We'd do the same if some ancient person showed up and acted weird.
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