The next time a fifteen year old steals a helicopter and tries to run away to a foreign country and then manages to avoid serious jail time for it -- let alone being put back into the training program after a stern talking to -- let me know. I am very curious to see what the actual military procedure would be for that sort of circumstance.
Ever see the movie "Iron Eagle?" A boy, a civilian steals a military fighter. He doesn't end the movie in any sort of legal trouble.
Also, as noted earlier, Hogan's Heroes and McHale's Navy portrayed lax military personnel.
For me, even if Starfleet doesn't fit the exact definition of a modern military it still serves many military functions. Which, from this thread, apparently makes it a "paramilitary." Ok, if that terms sautes the masses, whatever, at this point. But, Starfleet is still an official branch of the Federation that operates in defensive and offensive capabilities. So, even if it isn't "the military of the Federation" it serves in that role.
1. Whose definition of modern military are we using? Must we go by the United States military? We have the whole globe to choose from for military examples. It seems the majority of this discussion is using the United States as the sole example.
2. Why are we using a modern definition of military for this discussion? People are showing how different Starfleet is from today's military as evidence Starfleet is not military. Why should or would a military 300 or so years in the future look like today's military? How different does today's military look from the militaries of the 17th or 18th centuries? Imagine the discussion ... "United States officers do not purchase their rank, therefore they cannot be military." or "United States soldiers do not practice standard 17th or 18th fighting styles with skirmish/scrimmage lines or whatnot... they cant be true military."
3. Why is it that people are willing to "reinterpret for the 23rd/24th centuries" definitions of soldiers, paramilitary, etc... but aren't willing to reinterpret the definition of the word military? If we hide behind the rationalization that words will change definitions in 300 years, then that must apply equally to all.
The police fight internal threats to citizens. The military fights external enemies of the state. When the military becomes the police, the citizenry often becomes the enemy of the state.
EXACTLY! So, in the case of Starfleet, how does this apply? Who fights the external enemies of the Federation? If Starfleet is not a military then is this a case where the police have become the military? Should the citizenry be worried?
United Nations Peacekeepers.
Are a military force
http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/
Military
UN personnel are contributed by national armies from around the world
http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/issues/military/index.shtml
Military
United Nations military personnel are the Blue Helmets on the ground. Today, they consist of over 90,000 military personnel contributed by national armies from across the globe.
Military personnel are the backbone and the most visible component of a peacekeeping operation
Hey, that's interesting. The UN is military despite the fact their primary mission is peacekeeping and not waging war. Kinda like Starfleet.
Salutes
https://i.stack.imgur.com/E2ptA.gif
https://i.stack.imgur.com/WJr6E.gif
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