Didn't Kirk tell somebody, "We're a combined service"??
Having a uniform and a rank structure is no more indicative of being a military than it is of being a hospital. Or a McDonalds.
Same deal with police and firefighters. Is the Surgeon General required to muster the troops? This is the same "logic" used when folks try to say "Ah, but it's Starfleet." as though it were some kind of trump card.
Same deal with police and firefighters. Is the Surgeon General required to muster the troops? This is the same "logic" used when folks try to say "Ah, but it's Starfleet." as though it were some kind of trump card.
Indeed. At some point in time this dicussion seems to boil down to "If Starfleet is a military it can't do all these other things." Which strikes me as disingenuous, at best, and missing the point at work. Starfleet is a military and exploratory agency. Both things are true.You can say that they are more. They are. And you can say it isn't their only purpose. It's not. But it's the only purpose that when push comes to shove will always become top priority.
Fishing ships have fleets. And Captains. It’s all a bit circular.
Of course the logical thing would be to point out these are all based on the military to some extent, but that only leaves us with Starfleet being based on the military. Which it is, and no one would argue with that. But ‘based on’ is not ‘is’ as in ‘based on characters created by Gene Roddenberry’ who famously based stuff on the military, including at one point helping people bas the LAPD on one, but also made sure Starfleet wasn’t one. XD
Also, there's clearly a cultural bias in play here. Star Trek is a United States series by-and-large enjoyed by US fans; it's hardly surprising that concepts are viewed through a military lens. Even their everyday terminology is skewed towards the martial (e.g., a "war on drugs" or "the war on poverty). The late comedian George Carlin had a brilliant skit on this very subject.
I mean, sure, but Roddenberry himself is the one who deliberately modeled Starfleet on the U.S. Navy and on colonialist military propaganda like the Horatio Hornblower stories when he first created the show. So if fans interpret it through that lens, that's not just because of American culture -- it's because of deliberate creative choices he made in 1964-1965.
Perhaps. However, the purview of Starfleet (and, arguably, its overall temperament) evolved considerably when the franchise leapt forward with The Next Generation and it has continued to adjust as new individual series are continually created.
Not really. Starfleet is depicted as doing mostly the same kinds of missions in TNG as in TOS.
I never said it was their purpose.
They just happen to be the thing for the job in the future. Whilst not actually being a military, because they do not exist for that purpose, any more than the telephone line through which we get our internet was meant to be for watching television. It just worked out that way.
Turns out an expedition group needs weapons, and really good ones when you don’t know if it’s Ocampa this week or Hirogen. Turns out that makes them best suited to functioning as a military when you need one.
Having a uniform and a rank structure is no more indicative of being a military than it is of being a hospital. Or a McDonalds. Unless I have misunderstood the meaning of a four star general, and Sue at the drive-thru is going to call in an air strike any moment.
The SAK is actually a perfect analogy; regardless of what or who it was originally built to accommodate, its purpose has greatly expanded and to call it (exclusively) military at this moment in time would be improper (as the blade is one component of many and in no way representative of the majority). Some folks here are trying way too hard to squeeze anything vaguely related under the military umbrella (as in, if there is a single weapon involved in any capacity, it is apparently automatically fitting the standard of 20th/21st century militaries).
Indeed. At some point in time this dicussion seems to boil down to "If Starfleet is a military it can't do all these other things." Which strikes me as disingenuous, at best, and missing the point at work. Starfleet is a military and exploratory agency. Both things are true.
Also, there's clearly a cultural bias in play here. Star Trek is a United States series by-and-large enjoyed by US fans; it's hardly surprising that concepts are viewed through a military lens. Even their everyday terminology is skewed towards the martial (e.g., a "war on drugs" or "the war on poverty"). The late comedian George Carlin had a brilliant skit on this very subject.
That's why I hesitate to call Starfleet a military.Wikipedia said:A military, also known collectively as armed forces, is a heavily armed, highly organized force primarily intended for warfare. The main task of the military is usually defined as defence of the state and its interests against external armed threats.
Let me know when Willy T. drops everything else to go play trombone.That's why I hesitate to call Starfleet a military.
It's like calling Will Riker a jazz trombonist. I mean, it's absolutely true, but it's not his primary function so it's a bit misleading.
That's why I hesitate to call Starfleet a military.
It's like calling Will Riker a jazz trombonist. I mean, it's absolutely true, but it's not his primary function so it's a bit misleading.
Number of times Riker's dropped everything else to play trombone: they couldn't even get him to stop at his friend's funeral.
Number of times Riker's dropped everything else to go to war: Possibly never. Was the Enterprise even in the Dominion War?
Early TNG at best, eventually Picard even states leading men in battle as one of his accomplishments.I would definitely feel more comfortable calling TOS' Starfleet "military" and leaving it at that (it would still be inaccurate, but at least the rough approximation fits better); from TNG and beyond...not so much.
Indeed.What I am seeing is such a strong bias against stigma of the term "military" that people are building cotton candy castles to stop the evidence raining on them.
I would love to hear the answer this question. I would let go of Starfleet us a military if this had an answer.If Starfleet is not a military, why are they the only one's who go to war on behalf of Earth? Where then, IS the military?
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