while others, such as Vulcan, favor nationalizing the Coridanite mining industry ...
Sarek: "Under Federation law Coridan can be protected. And its wealth administered for the benefit of its people."
Exactly. Administered for the benefit of its people, not for the benefit of a corporation or wealthy elite (who are no doubt already profiting from illegal mining operations).
Once Coridan is a federation member, Starfleet will be able to protect the Coridan planets from illegal mining operations, there by allowing the Coridan people to administer their own dilithum wealth, for their own benefit.
Which means nationalizing it. (Most likely on the Member State-level rather than the Federation level, though; it seems more probable to me that the Federation would want the Coridanite government to take ownership rather than to take ownership itself.)
Where do you see the Vulcans wanting the federation to steal/nationalize the Coridan people's national resources? Are we talking about the freedom loving federation here, or socialist Venezuela under the tyrannical Hugo Chavez?
There is no contradiction between freedom and nationalizing an energy industry, particularly one that has already been established to be rife with corruption and under foreign control. Nationalizing an energy industry would help prevent private companies from becoming so powerful that they threaten democracy and would simply place the industry under democratic control.
Hugo Chavez is not a tyrant because he nationalized his energy industry, he's a tyrant because he does things like repress free speech and imprison political opponents.
Absolute nonsense. You don't go to all the bother of finding a neutral location to enact a conference of ambassadors who are literally assaulting one-another if this is the normal situation.
Oh please, politcians leave their capitals and travel to political retreats for meetings, it not that unusual.
No you're just getting ridiculous. If it's just a luxury retreat, they wouldn't give a shit about being "neutral." They're picking a
neutral site because anything else is viewed as inflammatory because the political situation is too unstable.
What I meant was, why would a Vulcan representative support a measure outlawing arranged marriages in the federation? Why would a Tellar representative vote a measure disfavorable to Tellar's dilithium mining interests? When it's not in their respective home worlds best interests.
By that logic, no Member of Congress would ever have supported unionization, since it's against the financial interests of whatever major industries happen to be established in their home states. Sometimes legislators
are able to recognize when something is in the national interest, or morally right, even if some giant corporation opposes it.
And why do you assume that the freedom-loving Federation is uniformly under the same sway of the plutocratic elite that so-called "democracies" are today?
There might be some disagreement on how representatives get on the federation council, but you really think they can't be recalled and removed?
I don't think we have any information whatsoever on Federation impeachment or recall elections processes, if any exist.
Ambassadors were literally assaulting one-another. That's not something that happens if there isn't the potential for literal warfare.??
<SNIP: Video of Ukranian MPs assaulting one-another>
Bad example. Those are MPs who all legislate for the country, not ambassadors from states that are foreign to one-another. The latter demands a far more formal and peaceful forms of official interaction, because it's inherently more dangerous. Assaulting an ambassador is potentially an act of war.
In 1850, during an argument over Senate procedural rules, Senator Henry Foote drew a pistol and pointed it at Senator Thomas Benton, at that point the United States Senate was adjourned for the day.
May 1856, Congressman Preston Brooks severe beat Senator Charles Sumner with a cane on the floor of the United States Senate, after Senator Sumner's floor speech in which Senator Sumner compared Congressman Brook's relative Senator Butler to a pimp.
Bad examples, since those are both examples of the extreme political tensions that helped lead to the American Civil War.
No, "Attached" and "Rapture" made it clear that new worlds are admitted by the Federation Council in its sessions on Earth.
Journey to Babel takes place in the 23rd century, the episodes you sight are both in the 24th.
So now, to maintain your made-up pretense that the Babel Conference represents normal constitutional practice -- even though the episode itself makes it clear that it's a break from the Federation's norm -- you're making up MORE detail about how the standard process supposedly changed between TOS and TNG/DS9.
There no canon references as to where the council meets in the 23rd century,
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home makes it very clear that they meet on Earth.
How many cities has the US Congress been located in? Seven, or is it eight?
Really, really awful example, since all of the cities other than D.C. used as the seat of the United States government were used within the first few decades of the existence of the U.S., and most were from before the ratification of the United States Constitution. (The legal entity called "the United States of America" which existed under the Articles of Confederation was in fact not a sovereign state, but a loose alliance of sovereign states; in other words, it was a separate legal entity than the United States that exists today, in spite of popular perception.)
Since the ratification of the United States Constitution, exactly
three cities have served as the capital of the United States: New York City, New York; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Washington, D.C. The government set up shop in the District of Columbia on 17 November 1800, 12 years after the Constitution's ratification, and (barring a session of Congress that convened in New York City after 9/11 as a gesture of support for NYC) has never left since.
By contrast,
Star Trek IV took place around 125 years after the Federation was established in 2161. The idea that they would have changed capitals at that point is just silly.
It was the Federation President who set Federation policy towards the Klingon Empire after the Praxis explosion in Star Trek VI.
But it was Vulcan that initiated the contact with the Klingon Empire, at the Vulcans behest (order or command)
No. There is no evidence that the Vulcan government initiated that dialogue. The exact line is that Spock contacted the Klingon High Council "at the behest of the Vulcan Ambassador." As we've already established in this thread, there's some ambiguity about what "the Vulcan Ambassador" means. Further, "behest" can also just mean
request, not "order" or "command." It's entirely plausible that the Vulcan government may simply have petitioned President Ra-ghoratreii to take that policy but had no more capacity to order him to than, say, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts gets to order the United States President to maintain good relations with the Russian Federation.
It has embassies with at least two foreign political entities,
Yes, and the State of Ohio maintains offices in Ottawa, Canada
No, the State of Ohio does not receive a Ambassador from Ottawa, like Vulcan receive Ambassador Kor from the Klingon Empire, this was in the DS9 dialog,
True. As I've hypothesized earlier, it may be that the Federation does possess certain legal traits unseen in the modern era, up to and including the existence of formal bilateral relations between its Member States and foreign states within the context of Federation law.
and there is no indication that Kor was a "pretend" Ambassador.
Actually, the entire
point of "Sword of Kahless" and "Once More Unto the Breach" was that Kor had long been relegated to a meaningless, powerless position because he was out of political favor with Chancellor Gowron. So that strongly implies that, yes, the position of Klingon Ambassador to the Confederacy of Vulcan is a "pretend" post.
The preponderance of evidence we do have is that it's a sovereign state in its own right ...
Let's go..
A coalition, or a trade and defense alliance, doesn't get to make foreign policy ... Coalitions and alliances of sovereign nations do come together to form collective policies that they all agree to. At the Yalta conference Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin arrived at policies for reorganizing and reforming the nations of Europe. How that for "foreign policy." The representatives of the three nations did most of the detail work.
Yes, but they retain sovereignty and can change their minds at any time. The
coalition or
alliance doesn't make foreign policy, the
individual members make and must agree to that policy. We've explicitly seen the Federation make foreign policy without consulting its Member States, so that strikes down your argument here.
doesn't get its own currency (a Federation credit, established in TOS) ...
TOS establishes a credit, not a federation credit.. During TOS we only see Humans using the credits,
Spock refers to Starfleet as having invested 122,200 credits in him in "The Apple," so, once again, false. And since you're so keen on using computer screens, a computer screen created for TNG's "The Price" refers to the UFP as offering to pay Federation Credits for access to the Barzan Wormhole.
It's a Federation Credit.
it might be the monetary unit of a currency union, with a small group of federation members actually sharing a currency.
If the existence of the Federation Credit were the only piece of evidence in favor of Federation statehood, I'd agree. But the existence of the Federation Credit, combined with every other piece of evidence for Federation statehood, makes the idea of a mere currency union improbable.
doesn't get its own military (Starfleet) ...
You're fond of referring to the novels, Diane Duane's novels "establishes" that there is no federation Starfleet, but instead independent branches associated with various worlds, The Enterprise in TOS is in the Earth Branch.
And both later novels and later canon contradict this. I'm fond of referring to novels when there's no contradictory canonical information. It's the Federation Starfleet, and it's the Federation's military.
doesn't get to declare states of emergency and put its military on its Members' streets ("Homefront"/"Paradise Lost") ...
We only see a state of emergency on the member world that hold the federation council, there no dialog that the state of emergency extend to any other planets. The President ability to declare a similar state of emergency elsewhere is non-existent from the show.
1. Saying that maybe he can't make a declaration of a state of emergency on other Federation worlds has no evidence to support it.
2. Real-life coalitions or alliances or intergovernmental organizations
still don't get to declare states of emergency in their headquarters' cities. The United Nations does not get to declare a state of emergency in the City of New York. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization does not get to declare a state of emergency over Brussels. The Organization of American States does not get to declare a state of emergency over Washington, D.C.
doesn't have its own Federation-wide law enforcement agency (Federation Security from ST3) ..
Federation wide? We saw less that a dozen guys, perhaps they were the security guards from the lobby of the federation embassy to Earth.
If they were security guards from an embassy, they would have had absolutely no authority whatsoever to arrest McCoy away from the embassy. They're clearly the Federation's FBI.
doesn't have its own Constitution guaranteeing specific rights to everyone within its territory ("The Drumhead," "The Perfect Mate") ..
Wow, just like some international laws, similar to the Geneva Convention right?
No. Treaties are statutory law that can be passed or repealed by a legislature and are only binding so long as a sovereign state is party to that treaty. Constitutions, on the other hand, are inviolate, are not international treaties, and cannot be changed in the manner statutory law can be changed. The United States Constitution, for instance, cannot be amended through a simple majority of Congress and a presidential signature the way the United States Code can, and it is not an international treaty.
doesn't have its own defined territory ("The Best of Both Worlds") that it can expand or give up at its own pleasure, without consultation from its Members ("Journey's End") ...
The colony that the federation didn't want established in a disputed area in the first place, was a federation member?
No. It seems to have not been a Federation Member State; it was a colony that seems to have been under the direct jurisdiction of the Federation government (in the same way a U.S. territory is under the jurisdiction of the U.S. government) and which the Federation gave away without consulting the Member States' governments.
The NATO alliance had a defined territory it defended, it's member state's territories.
False. NATO does
not have territory of its own. It is an intergovernmental organization, not a state. It has a legal obligation to help its Member States defend
their sovereign[/b] territory, but it has no territory of its own.
doesn't have its own citizenship status that it can, again, terminate or grant at its own pleasure ("Journey's End") ...
Name one person in that particular episode that had their "citizenship" removed by the federation..
The entire point of the end of "Journey's End" was that the Native American colonists who stayed on that world once it came under Cardassian jurisdiction would lose their Federation citizenship.
doesn't convene its own grand juries ("The Ascension") ...
international court at the Hague.
You are either monumentally ignorant about the differences between international and national law, or you're being deliberately dishonest here.
A
grand jury is a completely different legal entity from an international tribunal. Each individual international tribunal must be convened through separate international treaties negotiated between sovereign states -- it's a HUGE legal undertaking that only occurs for major problems. A grand jury, on the other hand, is a domestic court that can be convened for violations of domestic law, including relatively minor ones such as the charges described in "The Ascent." Intergovernmental organizations do not get to convene grand juries.
doesn't have the authority to pass binding laws upon all of its Members and territory ("Force of Nature") ...
A "law" or recommendation
"Force of Nature" was very explicit. This was not a recommendation, it was a law; no one would be able to travel faster than Warp 5 in Federation territory without authorization from the Federation government. Period.
that applies only in interstellar space and not on member planets.
... yeah, and federal laws governing behavior on interstate buses only apply on board those buses. That doesn't mean that the United States Congress lacks the authority to pass binding law. A warp drive speed limit doesn't apply on a planet because
no one goes to warp on a planet.
The way I envision (and have written of before) the federation's council's authority, it would be over things like interstellar traffic.
"Force of Nature" makes it clear that you don't get to go to Warp 6 without permission, period, no exceptions. Not even for intra-star system warping rather than interstellar warping.
doesn't get to declare war or conclude peace ("Errand of Mercy" and DS9) ...
Name one incident of the federation formally declaring war.
The Federation Council declared war upon the Klingon Empire in "Errand of Mercy."
The Federation is a state. Period. ... Not necessarily, an alliance with a central organizing council works quite well too, really even better.
No, it doesn't, and putting a smiley face at the end of legal nonsense and self-contradictory arguments doesn't make it right. Every single argument you made against the preponderance of evidence indicating that the Federation being a sovereign state is nonsense.
And, frankly, there's one final reason to think the United Federation of Planets is a sovereign state in its own right:
It's called the United
Federation of Planets, not the United Coalition of Planets or the United Alliance of Planets or United Customs Union of Planets.