<SNIP!>
Jake(exasperated): "it means we don't need money!"
Nog(smug): "well then...you don't need mine"
<SNIP!>
That's brill, nice work!
<SNIP!>
Jake(exasperated): "it means we don't need money!"
Nog(smug): "well then...you don't need mine"
<SNIP!>
PhoenixIreland, I don't think I'm clear on what you're trying to say.
Capitalism and ownership are concepts fundamental to our individuality and freedom.
Capitalism and ownership are concepts fundamental to our individuality and freedom.
I gotta call BS on this.
Capitalism and "ownership" are LIMITS on our individuality and freedom, because the system that sustains them requires us to give up BOTH in order to obtain basic sustenance.
The 21st century worker is as much a slave as an 19th century negro, only now we are slaves of Corporations and "Captialists" who control the resources we need to live.
What is the episode in TNG where they come across three frozen people from the past. I think the people were from a time not so far off from our current time frame. Anyway, that episode has several lines about the economic situations of the past compared to TNG time. There was one point where the "capitalist" was told that people do not work for profit any longer and when he asked what they do work for, he was told they work to improve themselves.
Sorry I cannot remember the name of the episode, it has literally been close to six or seven years since I have seen it. Can someone help me out?
Capitalism and ownership are concepts fundamental to our individuality and freedom.
I gotta call BS on this.
Capitalism and "ownership" are LIMITS on our individuality and freedom, because the system that sustains them requires us to give up BOTH in order to obtain basic sustenance.
The 21st century worker is as much a slave as an 19th century negro, only now we are slaves of Corporations and "Captialists" who control the resources we need to live.
Except we can quit
move from place to place
speak freely
copulate freely
own property, own businesses
vote...
What is the episode in TNG where they come across three frozen people from the past. I think the people were from a time not so far off from our current time frame. Anyway, that episode has several lines about the economic situations of the past compared to TNG time. There was one point where the "capitalist" was told that people do not work for profit any longer and when he asked what they do work for, he was told they work to improve themselves.
Sorry I cannot remember the name of the episode, it has literally been close to six or seven years since I have seen it. Can someone help me out?
"The Neutral Zone". Season 1 finale, which also reintroduced the Romulans. The "capitalist"'s name was Ralph Opphenhouse.
I agree.More like a heavily nurtured meritocracy with Laissez Faire leanings.
Capitalism and ownership are concepts fundamental to our individuality and freedom.
I gotta call BS on this.
Capitalism and "ownership" are LIMITS on our individuality and freedom, because the system that sustains them requires us to give up BOTH in order to obtain basic sustenance.
The 21st century worker is as much a slave as an 19th century negro, only now we are slaves of Corporations and "Captialists" who control the resources we need to live.
I agree.More like a heavily nurtured meritocracy with Laissez Faire leanings.
Actually, in the political sense, the UFP seems highly Laissez-Faire Capitalist.
Despite questions of whether or not the Federation has money, per se, recall, that Adam Smith, the father of the free-market system, described it as being based on production, i.e., contribution to society, with the promise of reward (profit).
Whether that reward is "money" or not, production and reward (which are both catergorized as "self-interest").
In a Laissez-Faire society, there are strict limitations on Government authority, limiting it to National Security, Internal Security, A Legal System of Justuice, and (to a certain extent) Public Goods (Infrastructure and Safety Departments).
The UFP fits this pattern nicely.
It's capitalist--politically, at least.![]()
The Federation is an example of a post-scarcity society. The replicator (or indeed any other form of matter fabrication) would mean the end of limited resources as we have now, so ideas which involve hoarding things such as capitalism would be ended, or modified towards social enterprise.
Economically the Federation (well, Earth, since that's really what we're talking about) is a "communist" in the same sense that that the United States is a feudal serfdom. It works kind of by analogy, but not really.
Except they are not post-scarcity, because they appear both 1)unable to create new planetary real estate and 2)unwilling to live in fabricated space housing.
Like Lex Luthor says, it's the one thing they're not making more of.
And colonies exist because there is demand for a scarce resource, specifically land on an M-class planet.
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