I was just trying to point out that the only reason our space shuttles aren't armed only because we have had no reason to do so yet, and that if it became neccessary to we would.
As an aside,I wonder what kind of explorer a Defiant class ship would be.
Huh, I didn't realize that.the Soviet Union stuck a machine gun on one of their old tubs cuz they were afraid the US would use the shuttle to shoot it down.
NEXT!
"I'm a soldier, not a diplomat," James T Kirk.
Yeah, I was really just talking about ideas. I just really doubt that if there was some threat in space, that we would continue to send unarmed ships up there. I'm not trying to be argumentive here I'm just trying to explain my thinking when I posted. If I did a bad job making my point, or if I just don't know what I'm talking about, I'll apologize now so we can just move on.I was just trying to point out that the only reason our space shuttles aren't armed only because we have had no reason to do so yet, and that if it became neccessary to we would.
I don't know about that. We're barely able to make ships capable of going up and coming down again, let alone building accurate weapons systems that wouldn't be damaged beyond all use by launch and/or re-entry.
Two different arguments I see here. Neither of which make much sense, personally.
Argument Primary: That the Luna-class is inappropriate to the setting.
Now, here I'm going to do something heretical and throw any discussion of "ideals" out the window.
Starfleet is an organization. More to the point, it is a bureaucratic organization.
Bureaucracies do not have "ideals", ladies and gentlemen. They do not have higher purposes, or noble causes. They just are. At best, they have roles and missions to perform. From age to age, those roles and missions can change dramatically - new missions being added, old ones being dropped, as times, circumstances, and resources dictate. Along with that comes how an organization likes to see itself.
Now, Starfleet likes to see itself as more "evolved" and "refined" than its antecedents. That does not mean it is really any different.
Up until really the early 1900s, the militaries of the world did a hell of a lot more than simply fight wars. They were explorers (Lewis & Clark's expedition was a US Army mission, for example), policemen, diplomats, scientists, urban planners, civil administrators...you name it, there's likely an example of one of the more recognizable militaries doing it, probably multiple times, just since 1500. The US military and the UK military are prominent examples. It really wasn't until just before the First World War that militaries focused solely on warfighting and tried to get out of the "side businesses" they found themselves handling; it's debatable, given the fact that they went back to doing everything-and-a-half again in the 1920s and 1930s, whether they ever succeeded.
How does this relate? By charter, Starfleet seems to be tasked as the 'miscellaneous' branch of Federation governance. They do *everything*, from warfighting to internal security to exploration to diplomacy to science to colonial support, and on we go.
Funny, that sounds...exactly like a military of up til about 1903.
In short, "inappropriate" is a horrible word to use - it's only inappropriate if you ain't been ordered by competent authority to do it, presuming it isn't a blatantly illegal order.
Argument Secondary: Starfleet is/is not a military.
Here, I'm going to just laugh.
I don't care what some scriptwriter was drinking, or even if he was cold sober, when he tried to pull the trick of proclaiming "Starfleet isn't a military" or "Starfleet's mission is exploration" or whatnot. Or how often it was proclaimed.
Exploration is one of Starfleet's many, many missions. Starfleet's mission is, in any really practical sense, to do whatever the hell the Federation Council tells it to. (And, oh yeah, gives it the resources to do.)
It may not like to think about its warfighting mission, but it's been ordered to do that, too.
In peacetime, the navies and armies of the world would often undertake exploration missions, historically. These may not have been institutional priorities, but that's in a lot of cases because they just didn't think in those terms.
So what defines a military? Posts upthread have made this point well, in my estimation: A military is that force established by a sovereign to have the sole legitimate use of violence within the state. The US Army is a military. Your friendly neighborhood police force, in a sense, is a military, operating under delegated powers at least. (Most US state police forces were actually set up as the State Militias in the 1700s and 1800s (and earlier), for example.)
Now, the Federation is Federal, so there are multiple sovereigns at play here, but the point remains.
Starfleet is a military. Even more to the point, it consciously adopts the language, structure, customs, and habits of the military.
It may be less war-focused than the militaries we happen to be familiar with, but that's really just returning to the mindset of an earlier age.
Jean-Luc Picard may have wanted to see himself as solely a scientist, not a soldier, but that doesn't mean he wasn't doing a soldier's work.
Up until really the early 1900s, the militaries of the world did a hell of a lot more than simply fight wars. They were explorers (Lewis & Clark's expedition was a US Army mission, for example), policemen, diplomats, scientists, urban planners, civil administrators...you name it, there's likely an example of one of the more recognizable militaries doing it, probably multiple times, just since 1500. The US military and the UK military are prominent examples. It really wasn't until just before the First World War that militaries focused solely on warfighting and tried to get out of the "side businesses" they found themselves handling; it's debatable, given the fact that they went back to doing everything-and-a-half again in the 1920s and 1930s, whether they ever succeeded.
Picard isn't speaking for himself and his own perception of his job. He says, unequivocally, what the organization he has spent his life in is and is not. he's either delusional, lying or accurate.
When Sisko unveils Defiant, Quark takes a look at its obviously martial design and says "I thought you Starfleet types didn't go in for warships," or something extremely similar. Sisko's response is something like "the times (Dominion War) dictated we change our normal game plan."
Throughout the various canonical series various characters of various ranks (or no rank at all) express versions of this notion and those officers who behave as if they are in the military, say Shelby or Jellico even Satie, are made to seem out of synch with normal operating procedure or even actually "evil." Herberts, in other words.
Sure, the series' are inconsistent in their depictions of Starfleet and its role vis a vis the Federation but, as the dialog says what it says on the subject so consistently the best conclusion is that, while Starfleet's internal operations resemble what we know of as current military structure, it is some other sort of animal that has been, as yet, unseen. Not a military organization, in other words, but something else that occasionally takes on the chores of a military when pressed.
Picard isn't speaking for himself and his own perception of his job. He says, unequivocally, what the organization he has spent his life in is and is not. he's either delusional, lying or accurate.
Sure, the series' are inconsistent in their depictions of Starfleet and its role vis a vis the Federation
but, as the dialog says what it says on the subject so consistently the best conclusion is that,
while Starfleet's internal operations resemble what we know of as current military structure, it is some other sort of animal that has been, as yet, unseen. Not a military organization, in other words, but something else that occasionally takes on the chores of a military when pressed.
Picard isn't speaking for himself and his own perception of his job. He says, unequivocally, what the organization he has spent his life in is and is not. he's either delusional, lying or accurate.
He's delusional.
Sure, the series' are inconsistent in their depictions of Starfleet and its role vis a vis the Federation
No it's not. It's very clear: The Federation Starfleet is the organization that the United Federation of Planets tasks with exploring the galaxy, defending the Federation, conducting scientific research, engaging in peacekeeping missions, engaging in humanitarian aide, engaging in colonial support, and engaging in diplomacy when in the absence of a dedicated ambassador.
And all of those missions are ones that real-life militaries can be and have been tasked with.
but, as the dialog says what it says on the subject so consistently the best conclusion is that,
The dialogue has consistently indicated that Starfleet is a military. Your citation of Picard is literally the only time the Federation Starfleet is not referred to as a military.
while Starfleet's internal operations resemble what we know of as current military structure, it is some other sort of animal that has been, as yet, unseen. Not a military organization, in other words, but something else that occasionally takes on the chores of a military when pressed.
Um, no.
It's a military. I know you have a personal dislike of real-life militaries and therefore have an ideological reason to not want to call Starfleet a military, but it is, indeed, a military.
It has a system of courts-martial. It enforces martial law when such has been declared by the President. It obeys the President as their commander-in-chief and is subordinate to the state. It is the organization tasked with defending the state in times of war. When Leyton tries to overthrow the government, it is referred to as an attempt to create a "military" dictatorship. When Kirk deals with the Organians, he calls himself a soldier. When Nog speaks to Jake about Red Squad, he calls himself and everyone else a soldier. When David Marcus objects to getting Starfleet involved in Genesis research, he complains about "the military." Etc.
Starfleet is a military. It is not militaristic, but it is a military, and plainly so. Being a military is a legal status, not an ideological one.
To put it another way:
If the Federated States of Micronesia hired five Buddhists, gave them each a batton, and declared that those five Buddhists were now the Army of the Federated States of Micronesia, then those five guys would be the Micronesian military. They may not be aggressive, and they may not be powerful, and they may not actually do anything, but they remain, nonetheless, a military, because being or not being a military is a legal status that refers to an organization's relationship to the state, not an ideological or behavioral status.
I have no feeling about the military one way or the other. I come from a military family. I consider militaries a necessary evil of our modern world. Star Trek isn't about our modern world.
Picard's line is NOT the only time that phrase or some permutation of that phrase is uttered.
The prequel series supports this view also. How many times does Captain Archer describe himself as an explorer rather than a soldier? how many times does he describe his mission, indeed the reason for the existence of his vessel, as exploration? Why didn't the MACOs exist prior to the attack on Earth? because Starfleet was never meant to be a military org.
Sure they're internally inconsistent. Of course they are. Six thousand people had their hands in the batter.
Describe, for instance, how the transporter works. Does it deconstruct a body and then somehow project the original cached atoms to some far destination for reassembly? How then do we get the weird episode with the "bugs" that follow Reg Barclay out of the "matter stream?" How is he even conscious "in there" at all?
Or, if you don't like that, how do we reconcile the use of Many Worlds Theory as a basis for some (often excellent) stories while others rest on timelines that can be "broken" and subsequently "fixed?" We don't reconcile them. We simply ignore the inconsistency in favor of fun. The two concepts are mutually exclusive yet we all accept them within the Trek framework because they are plausible within the broad parameters. Because they are fun.
This military/not military thing is the same.
We're each lifting out our interpretations based upon perceptions of inconsistent data. People keep citing real-world institutions and models in support of the Pro-Military side. I'm citing the show. The canonical material. In this sort of discussion that is the only source that matters.
If Captain Picard, presented as a man with an incredibly disciplined and sober mind, someone who has almost literally grown up within the ranks of Starfleet, describes the organization of which he is a member as not being a military organization, we must take him at his word or find some equally canonical reason for him to be impaired or lying. he cannot be incorrect by virtue of his position and personality.
once and for all, let's call a duck a duck, okay?
Starfleet builds Starships that have weapons to defend against what may or may not be out there. They may not be going out to give some one a bloody nose first, but if they need to, they will give someone that bloody nose.
I don't understand what the debate is all about. Starfleet is a multipurpose organization.
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