I randomly started thinking this when watching "Civil Defence" - the only explanation I can think of, is "The measurements needed would be too complicated for the layperson to describe to a replicator".
From the perspective of making materials, clothes etc, there is clearly a level of craftsmanship that replicators cannot....um replicate, which would appeal to the customer as a luxury item
However, if this is the case (and money doesn't exist) then why wouldn't everyone want these luxury items of clothing.
But clothing isn't a luxury in the sense of status or fashion. It's a luxury of comfort. No amount of...money doesn't exist and we're all happy in the Trek future....can change the fact that people prefer comfort to lack of comfort
I know some people will fight tooth and nail to defend the Trek non-money utopia but if you analyse it more closely, holes start to appear
I'm still trying to work out how Sisko's dad has a restaurant. Does everyone get a restaurant?
Why does Garak get a shop on the station? Are Starfleet charging rent?
The luxury isn't the clothing, it's the tailor. Some people find artisanal goods to be more desirable or special than their mass-produced equivalents.
So? There are plenty of holes in our economic system. The entire global economy nearly fell through one of them in 2008. And now the robber-baron bankers whose greed caused the '08 crash are more powerful and unrepentant than ever, which seems like an enormous logic hole to me. Then there's the whole thing about how the richest 1 percent of the population
will soon own more than the other 99 percent put together. If the current world economy were fiction, few would believe it.
Obviously, not everyone would want one. And nobody said that capitalism is forbidden, just that it isn't mandatory. My take is that the Federation uses a system where the basic needs of survival are guaranteed for everyone, so that you can lead a comfortable life without money, but if you want to engage in commerce or trade or own special possessions like your own restaurant or spaceship or whatever, then you can participate in capitalism as an optional activity.
Basically, the fault with all your questions is that you're treating them all as universal, asking about "everyone." That's a profound oversimplification. Different people want different things. Today, we live in a society where everyone has to work and earn money just to stay alive. In the Federation future, working and earning money are simply optional. They're no longer something that everyone has to do. And since people are different, that means that some people wouldn't do it but other people still would. It's become a matter of choice rather than grim necessity.
It's a Bajoran station. Starfleet just administers it.
So we can all have these artisanal goods at any time for no cost...but most of us just don't fancy them for some delightfully convenient reason?
So? Our economies are constantly reported on and discussed. Show me the Trek episode where they discuss the ridiculous, giant holes in their Utopia and that answer night mean something. The criticism for Trek is that it ignores those holes. Thus, they are worthy of discussion and ridicule, no?
Your take is speculative. We can all speculate. I speculate that LOTS of people would like restaurants, shops, buildings for their own art, projects etc......the question is......do they all get one?
The answer is no
This is what people always say when defending the no money utopia.
Ask a billionaire today why everyone isn't a billionaire and a lot of them will say....they don't want to be....they're happy with what they've got
I'm bewildered. Why do you find it hard to believe that different people have different tastes and interests? That should be axiomatic. Some people devote themselves to collecting fancy wines or coffees -- I can't stand either of those things. And I'm sure there are things I'd love to collect that you couldn't care less about.
Discussion, sure. Ridicule, no, because it's not an economic treatise, it's an action-adventure series. The show doesn't have to discuss the workings of the economic system any more than a cop show has to discuss the workings of the city's sewer system. If it's actually relevant to an episode, then it can come up, but otherwise it doesn't matter.
Heck, that was one of Roddenberry's foundational rules for ST -- that space heroes shouldn't stop and explain the workings of their technology or their society any more than a cop should stop in the middle of a car chase to give a treatise on the internal combustion engine. The characters already know how their world works. And we don't need to know, unless it's specifically relevant to the plot.
And as I've made clear, I'm not saying anything about a "no money" system. I've acknowledged that it's logical to conclude that money does exist in the Federation; it's simply not a sine qua non for basic survival. If you want something more than your guaranteed necessities like housing, food, education, and health care, then you can work for them and earn the money to acquire them; but if you choose not to work, then you won't starve to death or be deprived of medical treatment, and thus can still lead a comfortable life
Okay, you've crossed a line. Don't you dare compare my position to the self-serving rationalizations of greedy billionaires. I'm not saying anything remotely like that, and I'm offended that you'd accuse me of that. You don't seem interested in listening to my actual positions -- you're just ignoring them and spouting your prescripted attacks on what you wrongly imagine I'm saying. And that's not how actual conversations work. So I'm done here.
It seems obvious to me that DS9 is not set in the non-monetized economy of ST:TNG.You're going to force me to use the dreaded words.....a show must follow it's own internal logic. If they're using this paradise society as a backdrop "for the entire show" then I feel that I am definitely entitled to know a little more about it and how it works and I am certainly entitled to to ridicule it when it fails to do so (or fails to do so convincingly)
It seems obvious to me that DS9 is not set in the non-monetized economy of ST:TNG.You're going to force me to use the dreaded words.....a show must follow it's own internal logic. If they're using this paradise society as a backdrop "for the entire show" then I feel that I am definitely entitled to know a little more about it and how it works and I am certainly entitled to to ridicule it when it fails to do so (or fails to do so convincingly)
^Because money and currency are not the same thing. It's possible to pay someone for their works and goods with the latter.
Money is conceptual, currency is measurable. In a capitalist economy, there is usually more money than currency. Anything else you would like to know I think you should look up yourself.^Because money and currency are not the same thing. It's possible to pay someone for their works and goods with the latter.
By what, just printing up a bunch of Ferengi money? Or just telling them to update their account with X amount? does the money the Federation takes in from the outside just sit and collect dust until they use it to buy something from the outside? There is obviously no concept of interest in the Federation economy. There are serious problems with this as an economic model.
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