Serving drinks is not a crappy job, and they necessarily won't do it eight hours a day. Most really crappy jobs would be done by some sort of automation anyway. (And it is not like anyone actually needs drinks to be served to them. They can get them from the replicator by themselves just fine.)I don't think it's odd for people to work without pay. I think it's odd for people to work crappy jobs without pay... when they could do anything they wanted (such as work good jobs without pay).
Serving drinks is not a crappy job, and they necessarily won't do it eight hours a day. Most really crappy jobs would be done by some sort of automation anyway. (And it is not like anyone actually needs drinks to be served to them. They can get them from the replicator by themselves just fine.)
Running your own restaurant is a lot of work and a lot of responsibility, not everyone wants that. And not everyone has interest for art (let alone talent.) And if we are talking about people serving drinks at Ten Forward, it is a bloody marvellous way to see interesting places and people without actually having to commit yourself to Starfleet.In a world where you can do anything (architect, painter, musician, run your own restaurant, explore space, you name it) serving drinks most definitely is... a crappy job.
Running your own restaurant is a lot of work and a lot of responsibility, not everyone wants that. And not everyone has interest for art (let alone talent.) And if we are talking about people serving drinks at Ten Forward, it is a bloody marvellous way to see interesting places and people without actually having to commit yourself to Starfleet.
I think replicating starships is beyond the post-scarityness of the setting...And if you want to explore space... replicate a ship. I don't buy this space-waiters nonsense at all.
I think replicating starships is beyond the post-scarityness of the setting...
And therein lies the problem. Some people have pride enough in their hobbies that they do the best job they can, and if necessary to a deadline for people, even now.
Engineers are to build design and repair things...as we see them doing. They do t just replicate whole starships and slap a sticker on.
Paris was in prison on earth. Housebuilding was probably part of his rehabilitation or a course he was taking.
The answers are pretty much all there on screen, and of course have their roots in some things we do today (or did then...when the episodes were made. At no point did Tom Paris Google up an ehow to make the delta flyer or to put up some shelves)
And the energy? Solar? Geothermal? Matter antimatter reactors and efficient battery systems? All of those are seen in Trek. Energy is basically clean and free.
But if people are doing it for fun then why would they limit their fun to the government?
Unless of course, there's an incentive for doing so.
Like the Alaska permanent fund, everyone in Alaksa get a annual check from the state government from taxation on oil production, last year it was just under 2,100 dollars.As a prelude to a post scarcity society, there are now 3--4 countries who are considering basic universal income and one that is adopting it.
How is it "clearly?" Plus how do you fit that in with the inventor of the Solaton Wave, who intended to sell his invention for money?Entertainment, food, clothing, housing, education and transport are clearly all basically free to federation citizens.
Unless what we're seeing are people with jobs that pay, and they have a economy that requires money to make purchases, then they would need to do it.The point is...they don't need to do it.
But if they had the option of doing the exact same thing, for the same number of hours a day, AND get paid for their efforts ... wouldn't people take that option instead of the one where they labor for no compensation?People generally want to feel useful and respected, I don't think it is odd that people would work without pay.
There is no money and no need for the money. The dance club is free, everything is either free or not purchasable with money in the first place (such as starships.)But if they had the option of doing the exact same thing, for the same number of hours a day, AND get paid for their efforts ... wouldn't people take that option instead of the one where they labor for no compensation?
One Earth coffee shop doesn't pay it's wait staff, while the one across the street does AND they make tips. Where would most waitresses desire to work?
It's the same activity, and the same amount of fun (but one earns you money to get into a dance club).
As a prelude to a post scarcity society, there are now 3--4 countries who are considering basic universal income and one that is adopting it.
RAMA
Like the Alaska permanent fund, everyone in Alaksa get a annual check from the state government from taxation on oil production, last year it was just under 2,100 dollars. How is it "clearly?" Plus how do you fit that in with the inventor of the Solaton Wave, who intended to sell his invention for money? Unless what we're seeing are people with jobs that pay, and they have a economy that requires money to make purchases, then they would need to do it. But if they had the option of doing the exact same thing, for the same number of hours a day, AND get paid for their efforts ... wouldn't people take that option instead of the one where they labor for no compensation?
One Earth coffee shop doesn't pay it's wait staff, while the one across the street does AND they make tips. Where would most waitresses desire to work?
It's the same activity, and the same amount of fun (but one earns you money to get into a dance club).
If the piano player on Qualor II gets tips, why wouldn't a piano player on Earth get tips?There is no money and no need for the money.
And then it's stated that there is money, and the mentions of the existance money outnumber the money doesn't exist suggestions.Except it's stated on screen that within the federation, there is no money
And when Sisko refers to Earth as a paradise he says that Earth has no poverty, no crime, no war. He never says no money. Lack of poverty doesn't immediately mean the lack of money.Remember...earth is a paradise. That's hammered in over and over on screen
If the piano player on Qualor II gets tips, why wouldn't a piano player on Earth get tips?And then it's stated that there is money, and the mentions of the existance money outnumber the money doesn't exist suggestions.
Quark required money to purchase transportation From Earth to DS9. And when Sisko refers to Earth as a paradise he says that Earth has no poverty, no crime, no war. He never says no money. Lack of poverty doesn't immediately mean the lack of money.
Except it's stated on screen that within the federation, there is no money. (as opposed to say ds9, where there is. Because it's not in the federation.) So money is no longer a motivation at all within the federation....you don't need it for anything at all so it doesn't exist.
Since the best education etc is now dependent on merit and need, it is essentially available to all. If you choose to spend a few hours a day serving drinks, because you enjoy it...why not? The hard parts are done, there's no cleaning, no barrel changes or delivery unless you are also doing the whole historical reenactment thing that seems to exist, and if you don't fancy doing it..
Don't do it. Someone else will, or a hologram can be whipped up, and it hasn't affected anyone. There's no competition for staff as such, and you don't have to worry about costs...because the product is free. You could ask about renting premises, but thats probably as simple as inherited land in families (like the Picard's) or asking the federation council to use a piece of real estate that's not needed for anything else. Transport isn't a problem, you could open a restaurant in the serengeti and people could still go there....urban sprawl isn't a problem, the population is likely smaller than now planetwide (world war 3, spreading out through the galaxy on colonies etc) and you don't need swathes of farmland or even fresh water supplies to keep everyone alive.
So yeah...I could be an artist in the morning, a writer in the afternoon, and serve drinks in the evening, all safe in the knowledge that there's a good roof over my families head and food in their stomachs, and the education and entertainment is right there.
Sort of like being a rich sod of a celebrity now, owning a pub built onto their country pile.
In terms of the soliton wave guy, wasn't he from a non federation world? He would sell it for money on his own planet perhaps. Or even to the federation from outside it.
Or, if all he said was 'it will make me rich' he may not be talking about money at all.
There's plenty of on screen evidence and dialogue that shows this is exactly how the federation works.
That people don't like that idea, or don't understand why someone would do something for nothing just because it suits them or because they can, is more to do with the individual than the fact it absolutely would work, given the level of advancement we see in trek.
Remember...earth is a paradise. That's hammered in over and over on screen
We just move around and around. The things that you write has been discussed previously by the other posters. So for the sake for us to not return to step one again, please read the previous posts in this thread.
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