See, here's the thing about the politics of the Federation:
We authors just make this shit up out of whole cloth.
What a coincidence. That's similar to how most politicians come up with policies. Except they come up with shit out of more shit ...
See, here's the thing about the politics of the Federation:
We authors just make this shit up out of whole cloth.
So, where does Section 31 work into all this? Supposedly, they were established in the Federation Charter. Or was that Starfleet Charter? I think Enterprise provided some insight on this....
Yeah, but, by your standards, Rush, even the pursuit of happiness ought to only be a privilege, not a right. After all, you don't need to pursue happiness to survive.
But if the pursuit of happiness is a right, then so ought to be the right to leisure -- or, as it should perhaps be put, the right to rest.
By my standards? Hardly.
The right, is to pursue leasure. Which means you have the right to look for and pic jobs that give employees times off. If the company feels you will benifit them, they will hire you--and you will get those off-days with the job.
No, the right is to leisure itself. You know how it's a right? Because it's enumerated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which we agreed to 60 years ago.
And if you only give people the right to leave a job that doesn't give them time off, all you've done is created a situation where people who desperately need a job are stuck working for a job that can legally deny them time off while giving the employee no legal options to protect themselves against that economic predation.
And, no, "you can quit" is not sufficient protection, because in the real world, sometimes you can't quit because you cannot afford to lose the job.
That's why there has to be a legal option to force companies to give time off if they're too stupid -- or too evil -- to recognize that time off is in their own economic self-interest.
Needless to say, men have a right to orginize into unions, provided no one is forced to join. Unions can have value as fraternal orginizations, or as a means of keeping members informed of current market conditions, or as a means of bargaining more efficiently with employers--particularly in small, isolated communities.
It may happen that an employer is paying wages that, in the overall market context, are too small; in such a case, a strike, or the threat of a strike, can compel him to change his policy, since he will discover that he cannot obtain an adequate labor force at the wages he offers.
But the employees are not neccessarily entitled to having resort expenses paid for by the employers.
And no one said they are, and having a right to leisure no more leads to that than a right to a trial by jury inherently leads to everyone being found not guilty.
I suspect the Federation Starfleet Charter was pretty much copied from the UESPA Starfleet Charter.
So, at least fourteen articles in the Starfleet Charter, eh?
But given Trek's money-free future economy, I suspect Federation law is several steps beyond this level of reasoning.
Isn't this Starfleet Charter stuff likely going to be worked out in the Romulan War series?
So, where does Section 31 work into all this? Supposedly, they were established in the Federation Charter. Or was that Starfleet Charter? I think Enterprise provided some insight on this....
So, where does Section 31 work into all this? Supposedly, they were established in the Federation Charter. Or was that Starfleet Charter? I think Enterprise provided some insight on this....
The United Earth Starfleet Charter Article 14, Section 31, was the original inspiration for The Bureau; it called for the legality of bending the rules during times of crisis. (ENT)
The Federation Starfleet Charter, Article 14, Section 31, had, more specifically, provisions for "an autonomous investigative agency" with non-specific discretionary powers over unspecified matters. (Section 31 novel: Cloak)
By my standards? Hardly.
The right, is to pursue leasure. Which means you have the right to look for and pic jobs that give employees times off. If the company feels you will benifit them, they will hire you--and you will get those off-days with the job.
No, the right is to leisure itself. You know how it's a right? Because it's enumerated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which we agreed to 60 years ago.
And if you only give people the right to leave a job that doesn't give them time off, all you've done is created a situation where people who desperately need a job are stuck working for a job that can legally deny them time off while giving the employee no legal options to protect themselves against that economic predation.
And, no, "you can quit" is not sufficient protection, because in the real world, sometimes you can't quit because you cannot afford to lose the job.
That's why there has to be a legal option to force companies to give time off if they're too stupid -- or too evil -- to recognize that time off is in their own economic self-interest.
Not neccesarily.
Under those circumstances, when workers feel they are being abused, they therefore can form a union, and this union can negotiate with the employer.
But the employees are not neccessarily entitled to having resort expenses paid for by the employers.
And no one said they are, and having a right to leisure no more leads to that than a right to a trial by jury inherently leads to everyone being found not guilty.
Perhaps not...in theory. But governments have derived wierder
I'm sorry, but all private companies simply cannot be trusted to behave honorably on some issues. There has to be a mechanism in place to use the power of the state to force them to respect the rights of their employees -- and, yes, when the simple fact is that you need something to be healthy, that makes it a right under any reasonable conception of liberal democracy.
I'm sorry, but all private companies simply cannot be trusted to behave honorably on some issues. There has to be a mechanism in place to use the power of the state to force them to respect the rights of their employees -- and, yes, when the simple fact is that you need something to be healthy, that makes it a right under any reasonable conception of liberal democracy.
Absolutely. The idea that the free market can be counted on to protect the rights of workers is bizarrely naive. For most of history, workers have had few to no rights precisely because their employers -- or owners -- have had license to exploit them as much as they wanted. The only thing that changed that situation was government enacting laws to protect workers' rights.
After all, the market is about people looking out for their own interests, not the interests of others. It takes something other than the profit motive to get people to defer to other people's needs.
The idea that the free market can be counted on to protect the rights of workers is bizarrely naive.
The conservative idea of dumping all government oversight of private companies because in the free market everyone acts responsibly is just not what happens in the real world. There needs to be government oversight to protect investors, workers, the environment, etc because that's not going to happen in a total free market world.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.