Poop gets made into boots.
And the urine would be made into coffee.
Poop gets made into boots.
And coffee back into urine (inside the body), thereby completing the endless cycle.And the urine would be made into coffee.
Defective children in the mirror universe would be destroyed in the womb or soon after birth by the state (or by the Bashir's themselves). As many repeated pregnancies as it took to product a normal child, who would be named Julian.
And if you want to upgrade to a fancy house, beachfront property or a vineyard, then you earn mega extra credits, trade in your basic citizen income for a career in Starfleet and climb the ranks to Captain or Admiral or start a business and becme rich like TAS Carter Winston.My basic idea is that in the Federation, all your basic needs are met - you're given rent-free accomodation, food, clothing, education and medical care.
However, you would still have some form of commerce for non-essentials. For example you'd have artists to buy unique paintings from and chefs to prepare unique and exotic dishes to eat.
As society and technology have come to the point where there isn't a need for people to engage in wage slavery jobs or difficult, poorly paid labour, theoretically people would work in the fields they want to and not take the first job available to them.
I think (head canon) that it would be more endless employment possibilities. The populace would enjoy near 100% employment. then you would then use your wages to obtain housing, essentials, transportation, medical care, advanced education, etc. So many opportunities that businesses would have trouble finding enough people, labor would be in demand.My basic idea is that in the Federation, all your basic needs are met - you're given rent-free accomodation, food, clothing, education and medical care.
I wrote this for recently for a similar question on Quora, but I'll repost it here:
Well, maybe yes…and no. This is what I think:
Okay, there is no “money” (certainly not physical money, which was likely what Kirk was referring too) - nor is there a *need* for money, physical or otherwise, to get by.
But “credits” of some kind do exist, and have been referred to. Doubtless something electronic, like Bitcoin.
Okay, let’s step back. See, we are thinking in terms of the *current* economic paradigm. But Star Trek is 200, 300 and 400 years in the future - current economic systems like capitalism and communism will seem as quaint and outdated - and barbaric - as feudalism is to us today.Trek exists in what is called a “post-scarcity” economy. This is possible because automation and synthesizers and replicators can make anything needed. And in space, resources are far from scarce - raw matter can be found in any asteroid…water…metals…carbon…organic molecules even (forget that old scifi trope about advanced star-traveling alien races needing to conquer Earth for our water and other resources and such, that’s just silly.) You just need robots - that can make more robots - to mine and shape those resources.
So, as a Federation citizen, your *basic* needs are met, you have “free” housing and education and clothing and food and medical care and some travel credit. Federation technology is just so bloody advanced, that this costs virtually nothing for society to provide - and doesn’t benefit society as a whole NOT to provide. (Poverty = social instability.)
But, if, say, you want more…say a nice big house, or your own private spaceship or private asteroid…or you want to buy an expense work of art, or something artisanally made (hand crafted) - such as a bottle of Chateau Picard to enjoy over a dinner at Sisko’s…you would exchange credits for them. (Or your would barter.)
I’ll bet that every Federation citizen also gets some base allotment of credits every so often. A “guaranteed minimum wage” of some sort, like some Democratic presidential candidates are talking about now. (Jake mentioned using up all his “transporter credits” once.) Note: this would “cost” the Federation virtually *nothing* to provide. They are that “wealthy”. Resource wise.
And Starfleet officer very likely earn even more credits for joining Starfleet (but you aren’t going to get *rich* on the job, you aren’t doing it for the money, you are doing it because it’s what you love.)
But like I said, you don’t NEED credits to survive. And if you want credits, well, you create things yourself, to trade for either credits, or something else someone has. Or you work for someone who needs your skills, so you can earn more credits. Credits to get the extra things. (Like handmade food and clothing, instead of just replicated knock-offs.)
It’s very likely that as automation takes over more and more manufacturing jobs…and new technologies like robots and 3D printing and nanotechnology and biotechnology come online, we may have to adopt such a system ourselves. People will still be able to work - and likely many people will choose to; to become artists or artisans or explorers or protectors or doctors or statespersons or to just own their own vineyard….or just to get more stuff. But nobody *has* too.
This system isn’t socialism *or* capitalism…it’s “post scarcity”.
A post-scarcity economy runs into an inflation problem with scarce objects (land, art, the non-robotic service industry), although people will fight back against any artificial scarcity.
Art in general won't be scarce. But there would certainly be discerning collectors who are dead-set on acquiring specific one-of-a-kind pieces, such as a newly discovered Picasso, a lost Surakian Kir'Shara, a 4D telekinetic sculpture by the late Zqfmgb of Xjjxxjjxjxjj, or an android with a positronic brain.
What are we calling "art"? Art isn't scarce now.Art in general won't be scarce. But there would certainly be discerning collectors who are dead-set on acquiring specific one-of-a-kind pieces, such as a newly discovered Picasso, a lost Surakian Kir'Shara, a 4D telekinetic sculpture by the late Zqfmgb of Xjjxxjjxjxjj, or an android with a positronic brain.
Kor
Another thing I just thought of that is scarce: People. For some reason Jean-Luc Picard is scarce and is sought after. As is Beverly Crusher. These people are at the top top top of their game. Wasn't Picard going to die when he was having his heart replaced until Pulaski rushed in to save him? Weren't there lots of other doctors who could perform this (we were told) routine procedure?
Which makes them scarce. And does Earth have too many?Expertise is more scarce on the frontiers of space than it would be on Earth or Vulcan or another Federation heartworld.
Which makes them scarce. And does Earth have too many?
We keep saying "scarcity" instead of "supply and demand". And we keep coming up with non-replicator-able things that have greater demand than supply.
Also: If Cashless = post-money, are we post-barter?
Which makes them scarce.
We keep saying "scarcity" instead of "supply and demand".
And we keep coming up with non-replicator-able things that have greater demand than supply.
Also: If Cashless = post-money, are we post-barter?
What are we calling "art"? Art isn't scarce now.
But yes, you should be able to make as many absolutely authentic Mona Lisas as you wish. Would someone prevent this? If I worked my whole life on a sculpture would someone be able to replicate it? And of course one could visit the Sistine Chapel in a holodeck. So say there is some throwback fanatic who wants the REAL one. How would they go about getting it?
That wasn't bartering that was haggling. At no point was the bartender going to give Cyrano something in trade other than credits.Evidently not, because we've seen that barter is alive and well at least on the frontier (e.g. Cyrano Jones and the K-7 bartender).
I wasn't sure if it was mentioned on DS9 or it was mentioned by someone talking about DS9: Suing someone. (It was when Quark was trying to get a Kira copy in his holosuite.) But since we're brushing up against that here: What's the penalty for copyright abuse? Nowadays someone can go to court over using someone else's art or writing. And that can be settled with money. If you don't have money (or it doesn't matter) then what's a useful deterrent? Jail? If you took my one-of-a-kind work of art and replicated it and released to the masses, your jail time doesn't help me, can I get damages? If I'm an engineering whiz kid and Starfleet takes my idea and I don't want them to, what's my recourse?Even in a society that doesn't have money (which may or may not be true in 24th-century Earth or the Federation), it's still the prerogative of the artist as creator of the work, to be in control of how/if their work is reproduced and distributed, for whatever reasons they may see fit.
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