You actually might have hit the nail on the head there.Rush Limborg;4951810On the main topic: Since stardates are used in the [I said:Trek[/I] universe, the debate over AD vs. CE is basically moot.
Still...whenever references to "years" are made, it appears that the Gregorian calender is being used--doubtless, out of tradition.
The question, however, is why parts of the Gregorian tradition should be acknowledged, and others abandoned. Despite the now acknowledged innaccuracy of the dating of the appropriate origins of the calander, the traditions of the calender are as they are.
(Takes a bow.)

Maybe some aspects could be observed merely out of a long-practiced cultural tradition, even if the tradition itself is historically inaccurate.
Exactly. Frankly, I see no reason why a calender based off of Christ's birth (despite, again, the fact that they got the date wrong*) should not be used in conjunction with the appropriate reference to that tradition.
(*Interestingly enough, I've recently come across a theory that the "Star of Christmas" was an historical allignment of Jupiter, the planet of the kings, with Regulus, the star of the kings. Narrowing down the appropriate time period, the true exact date of Christ's birth would seem to be...September 11th, 3 BC.)