Robau is disappointed in you guys for letting this thread go off the rails. Say 100 Hail Robaus and think about what you heathen just did.
I'm not sure if it even counts as such if there are no funds changing hands in the moneyless utopian future.I'm a theist and I'm comfortable with safe, sane, and consensual prostitution.
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I'm not sure if it even counts as such if there are no funds changing hands in the moneyless utopian future.
Kor
The future belongs to Lorca.Robau is disappointed in you guys for letting this thread go off the rails. Say 100 Hail Robaus and think about what you heathen just did.
Another Starfleet as military argument? Oh, joy.
This is the final and definitive word on the matter, straight from the 1967 Star Trek writer's guide:
Now let's change the subject and try to decide whether Earth and the Federation use money in the era of Star Trek: Discovery, and how that would fit into Roddenberry's Vision (tm).
Kor
Well Kirk says they don't use money in the 23rd century. Oh sure, he said "you've earned your pay" in one episode, but I'm going to be selective and ignore that phrase just like others who ignores Picard's "Starfleet is not military" comment to fit their views.
Joking aside, I always took Starfleet to basically be NASA that also doubles as a necessary military. There are some posters here suggesting that Starfleet being a military is their main priority and that science and exploration is just a small part of Starfleet. Ok, if that were true I think the Captain's Oath would be more like "peace through superior firepower" rather than the hippy liberal pinko "seek out new life yada yada yada".
Like others said, it all depends on who's running Trek. Sometimes it leans on exploration (early TNG), sometimes it leans more military (TWOK), and most of the time it's a nice balance of both and I'm pretty much in preference of that. I'm not one extreme or the other. But I get why there are two factions of fans that clash about what Starfleet is because it has absolutely nothing to do with nuTrek emphasizing PEW PEW PEWs. Has nothing to do with that at all.![]()
Sisko is more the midnight toker.Sisko, on the other hand, definitely feels more like a soldier. Picard is certainly the philosophical diplomat. Janeway is the scientist in a command uniform. Then there's Archer, the gazelle
I also think "We don't have money in the future" is also a loose description. I think they have CREDIT in the future.
Lord I hated that episode.
Then there's Archer, the gazelle.![]()
I think you're being a little simplistic here about GR's vision. TOS was full of unstable, unsavory, and even criminal characters. Harry Mudd was a swindler, Ronald Tracy, Matt Decker and Garth of Izar were all psycho. Just because general norms have progressed, it doesn't follow that human nature has changed. Even in TNG not every person in command was a Picard. Look at Admiral Nachayev or Admiral Dougherty. Even if those characters arose after Roddenberry passed away, they fit into the TNG that he started. In TNG, Enterprise is first a ship of exploration. Picard's style of command works there, but he is quite capable of being the military commander. Sisko is forced to be a real hard core military commander. Lorca is in a situation more like Sisko's, and we have yet to see how his personality will play out. Is he more like Matt Decker? That seems quite possible, but I am not convinced yet one way or another. There may be real method to his "madness." I use quotation marks because I am not at all convinced that he is mad at all. He is very determined, for sure. Is he obsessed like Decker became? We'll see.Especially on the 3rd episode most characters, even the leads are often depicted as extremely cranky like a regular crime show on any regular tv script. Roddenberry's vision is not a fixation, it's what genuinely made TNG a phenomenon.
Agreed. I *love* TNG (and our man Gene), but IMO it succeeded in spite of some of Roddenberry's edicts.
Discovery presents an opportunity to see how some deeply flawed but perhaps idealistic people strive to do better, against the impossible. That's a more compelling storytelling environment, IMO.
That's why the Kelvin universe was so different. They lost Porthos' influenceWe all know Porthos was the real drive behind that command.
Atheists don't have churches.How would these future atheist churches feel about love instructors, another innovative aspect of Gene's utopian vision?
Kor
"Way to Eden?" Yeah, it's one of the few I'll pass on. "And the Children Shall Lead" is my all time least favorite across the entire Trek franchise. I cannot stand that episode. But then, most episodes of TOS that I don't like are from the third season, though there are a few in that season I really like, such as "All Our Yesterdays" and "The Turnabout Intruder." Both of those I didn't like so much as a kid. Zarabeth caught my attention more when I was a teenager.Lord I hated that episode.
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