I find it interesting that fantasy advances in physical sciences that facilitate warp drives, transporters, and so forth are somehow easier to swallow than socioeconomic advancements that facilitate improvements of the human condition.
Perhaps if you were to go ahead and also label the "socioeconomic advancements" as a complete fantasy, they would be easier for others to accept as is the technology.
Why is there so much faith that people will be able to overcome physical limitations, but no faith that people will be able to better themselves?
Part of that might be coming from the fact that there are people here who don't see the socioeconomic future world you're advocating as "better."
Yeah, you gotta wonder whether people really regard a lack of strife as an improvement.
I haven't seen anyone here saying that there shouldn't be some kind of low level minimal social safety net. But it's the going
beyond that, and saying that people who contribute nothing to their own society should reap the exact same rewards as people who work and push and strive, that's where the disagreement seems to come in.
I just don't see this daycare future. Where grown adults live as children their entire lives.
So many people who, contrary to apparent evidences in the series ...
According to the series,the presence of a replicator in a private home is about half and half. So they are in no way ubiquitous through-out Human society, nor are they the source of all things.
Jason Vico is someone in the future who is directly refer to as being not employed. Picard seem to be somewhat shocked to hear that Vico didn't have a job. Keiko O'Brien is seen to be occasionally unemployed. When it is directly mentioned, with a few exceptions people in the future have jobs, or are the spouses of people who do, or are children.
As well, all of the corporate bullshit and environmental degradation would most likely be destroyed by a world government that would bring the corporations to a heel and make it easier to clean up the planet.
How would a world government do that? While there is a chance that a world government would be different that what we have now, most likely it would basically be more of the same, with the same kind of leaders and the same (if not more) bureaucracy. There is even the potential for it to be worse.
The individual who became the mayor of Toronto, could also be the individual who becomes leader of the world government.
Sure, there will be people who want to sit on the couch and do nothing all day, let them.
"Let them," as in enable them? No.
And who said that they're getting a couch?
