The "no money" thing on earth never made sense. William Shatner's old Trek novels used to parody it, by having Kirk (resurrected in the 24th century, and ignoring the "no money" reference in STIV) ask Spock what's stopping him from just walking into the best appartment or a newly built house and claiming it, or going to a shipyard and leaving with a brand-new starship. Every time Spock starts explaining, something happens and he never gets it out![]()
fitcoin. When Picard says, we work to better ourselves, every Federation citizen's neural connections, physical health, etc. are tracked.The "no money" thing on earth never made sense. William Shatner's old Trek novels used to parody it, by having Kirk (resurrected in the 24th century, and ignoring the "no money" reference in STIV) ask Spock what's stopping him from just walking into the best appartment or a newly built house and claiming it, or going to a shipyard and leaving with a brand-new starship. Every time Spock starts explaining, something happens and he never gets it out![]()
I always wonder what poor people of the future would look like? Are we not supposed to relate to these people on some level? So why make it so alien?
Yes, they are...not sure how that relates to what I said but I am grateful that poor people, including the ones I work with, are better off than in past history.Poor people now are better off than rich people 400 years ago.
introduced large segments of the Federation population to scarcity they had never known before.
There's a balance in good science fiction / fantasy. Elements aren't so foreign that they have no grounding in our own relatable reality, but at the same time you want things that are different and imaginative which is part of the reason we like Sci-Fi and fantasy in the first place.I always wonder what poor people of the future would look like? Are we not supposed to relate to these people on some level? So why make it so alien?
Yeah, sorry, I don't see it with Raffi. She strikes me more as the isolationist stereotype that poverty. Though, to be blunt, none of these thoughts went through my head as I watched the episode.There's a balance in good science fiction / fantasy. Elements aren't so foreign that they have no grounding in our own relatable reality, but at the same time you want things that are different and imaginative which is part of the reason we like Sci-Fi and fantasy in the first place.
In the Expanse they put thought into portraying poverty and socio-economic classes in the future. In Picard Raffi is a generic stereotype of a lower economic class person of today.
There will always be scarcity of land in desirable places, and non-replicated items, which we would assume will always have cultural cachet.
It doesn't taste the same though, according to some people.But if the replicated stuff looks exactly like the "real" stuff to the naked eye then... who cares?
Whether it's poverty or isolationist, my issue was that she feels like she's from present day rather than a person from a different time.Yeah, sorry, I don't see it with Raffi. She strikes me more as the isolationist stereotype that poverty. Though, to be blunt, none of these thoughts went through my head as I watched the episode.
And, for my money, Picard balanced alright for the most part You had outrageous facets with the synths, and explosions and phasers at the chateau. You cool it off a little and try to sympathize with Raffi (mileage will vary on that effectiveness) and back in to space and adventure. Reminds me of a lot of books I would read as a kid.
Don't know about the expanse; don't care either.
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