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History of Star Trek having no "money"

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Warp scale yes ("First Flight" [ENT] even specifically establishes that the TOS scale was used during the show), but the money was established to be pre-TOS, maybe even pre-ENT. Of all the money references in TOS, only one or two I can recall can't be reconciled with this set-up, so I don't see the problem in glossing over them.
That would be the definition of retcon, wouldn't it? That would be the same as if ENT had used the TNG warp scale and said "Of all the warp speed references in TOS, only one or two I can recall can't be reconciled with this set-up, so I don't see the problem in glossing over them."
 
Realistically, once you have replicators and an inexhaustible power supply, any capitalist economy is gone. It appears as though the UFP is a Meritocracy, so those who perform best get the better stuff. Of course Jean-Luc's brother still lives in a gigantic private house, so he must sell some amazing wine - or there are loop-holes...
But we do know that people get credits, Sisko stated he used up all of his transporter credits when he was in the Academy so he could eat at his dad's restaurant. But why go through all the trouble of running a restaurant if no one can pay you for the food? Maybe he got a nicer dacha for being a really good restaurateur. Sometimes I look at Star Trek and think, "They don't have money, just all the stuff that money can buy".
 
Realistically, once you have replicators and an inexhaustible power supply, any capitalist economy is gone.
I've been thinking about this a lot, and it is not true.

If this was true then the losses at Wolf 359 would not be an issue. Even if you could replicate a starship (which you can't), or even a shuttle, how fast can you do it? This starship is valuable because we can only make 20 of them a year.

Picard's flute is unique and has value. It cannot be replicated. Nor can Cochrane's Phoenix. Or the view from Kirk's apartment. You only have one of all of those.

If someone wants to see a live performance of the 24th century equivalent of The Beatles then a 24th century stadium will only contain so many seats. Especially if they only want to perform once a week in an intimate venue of 50 seats. Tickets may be valuable. If people will complain that replicated food is not as good as the "real" stuff then I'm sure there are enough "no holodeck" purists.

There will always be items that will be "scarce" no matter what kind of replicator tech you have.

People in TNG will always have enough food, enough power, probably enough shelter. But there will always be thing that can be bought or traded.
 
The losses at Wolf 359 were an issue because of all the trained crews that were lost more than the ships. There may be trillions of people in the UFP, but it still takes time to train them.

Your other points are very good though. Some things will always have value. A unique flute, really great wine, and a darn good gumbo. I'll also assume that there will always be prostitution and drugs.
 
That would be the definition of retcon, wouldn't it? That would be the same as if ENT had used the TNG warp scale and said "Of all the warp speed references in TOS, only one or two I can recall can't be reconciled with this set-up, so I don't see the problem in glossing over them."

Umm, I don't follow. ENT used the warp scale rules from TOS, so the original system was affirmed (at least until the TNG re-organization). That's not a retcon. And yeah, I agree that the money situation is a retcon. There have always been retcons, and there will be more in the future. It's part of being a long-running franchise.

Are you kidding? That's the one idea he should have kept and developed. There should have been a love instructor assigned to the Enterprise D!

:barf:
 
Re the Eugenics Wars of the 90's? Yeah I'll put some blame there. What in 1966 lead the writers to believe we'd have earth-shattering Eugenic Breeding Wars less than 30 years later?

World War 1 1914-1918 saw trench warfare, widespread use of chemical weapons unseen before, tanks and the use of flying craft in combat for the first time. 25 years later (so, less than 30) World War 2 featured a megalomaniac bent on breeding the perfect genetic race and the use of atomic weapons that, previously, had only been in the realm of Jules Verne or Buck Rogers. In both wars technology that had previously been science fiction was used in reality. You think it's a stretch that they speculated what a future war 30 years hene would be like? Really? From the way the world was heading, a world war would have fit the 25 to 30 year timetable. With Hitler having the goal of a genetically pure civilization, and the writers and makers of Star Trek all being WWII veterans or, at least, living through that time, perhaps it seemed quite plausible a reality. Heck, those same people saw the birth of the space program that started with Robert Goddard's first rockets in 1926 to successfully reaching the moon within 4 decades later and landing on the moon in 1969.

Of course hindsight is 20/20. Of course, to us, it only makes sense that they shouldn't have expected real-world genetics to have advanced that fast in 30 some years from the 60s to the 90s. Likewise, yes, it's silly to have set Blade Runner in 2019, or have Back to the Future 2 depict such an advanced 2015. Still, give the writers of the 60s some credit. They just saw science fiction come to life in front of their own eyes not 20 years earlier. They were living science fiction every day with the space program. The Nazis already had some eugenics ideas in place back in the 30s and 40s. Khan was probably imagined to be the result of superior breeding and not genome manipulation.
 
Arpy said:
How did the DS9 crew buy anything at Quark’s without money?

One of the set decorations on the sound stage where the "Quark's Bar" was, was a mock ATM machine. It got moved around a lot. One of the buttons was labeled credits.

If the system I suspect is in place, the the food and drink served at Quarks to Starfleet and their dependent is charged to people's financial accounts, Quark would likely have a business account the funds would be transferred to. I think it reasonable that Quark would need to have a way of making long distant payments without having to physically ship GPL to suppliers.

Or, Starfleet eats and drinks for free, this is in exchange for Quark not paying rent. Which means that Quark from a certain way of looking at it is in fact paying rent.
I was agreeing with you that they had currency to buy things at Quark’s. It only makes sense given he was operating under Bajoran sovereignty and everyone seemed to use GPL.
Arpy said:
3) They're giving a incomplete description of the Federations economic structure.
Correct: they didn’t mention the foreign credit accounts. Because there’s little time to explain it to Lily in a den of Borg, and everyone one DS9 and Voyager already know about them.

But what you said doesn't go far enough, because it doesn't account for the observed use of money within the Federation, by people whose planets are Federation members.

That's the trick, both Picard (and others) statements that the money is gone has to exist side by side with money still being there. This is where the "incomplete description of the Federations economic structure" comes in. Because if both are equally true, then something is going on beyond simply "there's no money," or "they only use it with outsiders."
Right. The point is, if you’re a Federation citizen, interacting with a trillion other Federation citizens, you don’t use money. Dealing with aliens and their economies is another issue. Some of which may not use money either but barter or something completely different still — again, these are aliens, and I’d like to see more sci-fi dealing with alien economics. It might also be interesting to have multiple economies running under a single government — if you want to play the money game (the latest from Nintendo MMCDXI), have at it. It might also be interesting for them to come across civilization that has multiple governments ruling over a single area, come to think of it. Again: go sci-fi.
Then in the mid 23rd century money use is repeatedly referred to. One possibility is that the non-existence of money wasn't working the way society theorized it would and money was reintroduced.
I’d rather we not go down this path as you then can say anything that changed series to series or episode to episode was set aside then reintroduced. If things are that difficult for the viewer to roll with in a TV show, you might as well have each series or episode therein be a visit to an alternate universe. Also, where does the music come from? Why do all the characters look and talk and act like actors from the real world? Why are they all wearing make-up -- that can change shot to shot in the same scene? Why is the whole thing a TV show? Why have they not come for me for daring to ask such questions? Oh they have? "Corrupting the Youth of Athens," you say. Very well, pass the hemlock. The good Q kind, Nogatch Hemlock, please.

My case here is that you seem to be shifting the weighting of evidence frequently to suit whatever point you are currently making.
Again, my point was that you take Real World intent over In Universe intent. The difference here is that they never have any intent of negating the old no-money thing; it’s just a funny line -- “I just bought a boat.” And there you have fans rationalizing it was a figure of speech ("I’m gonna kill that guy,” doesn't mean you will). With Khan, they’re saying, “Pretend ‘Space Seed’ took place after whenever Chekov showed up, or just don’t think about it, but yes, Chekov was one of the main bastards for Khan.”
The same applies here, money as a loose term for "exchange medium" as we know it has clearly become an antiquated concept. My case would be similar to tenacity's in that we must consider that what Picard means by money may be a very specific concept, much as his concept of military does not apply to organisations where ours almost certainly would. His concept of money need not tally all that neatly with ours.
His concept IS ours as the writer wasn’t thinking of some future concept of a military or of money but ours. The challenge to the viewer is to see if they can fathom it. It’s sci-fi.

According to Ron Moore, everyone on TNG's writing staff realized this, but were required to adhere to it anyway because Gene said so.
Ron Moore is one of my favorites and I especially love what he did with nuBSG, but he and a lot of other writers in the franchise had massive chips on their shoulders over Roddenberry's idealism. It's harder to write, sorry. But you chose the job: quit whining and figure out how it, this concept that moves millions, could work. It's especially odd given he was a co-writer on FC which made a point of bringing it up again. Then DS9 mocked the movie twice. But as much as he rebelled against dad, by the end of DS9 they half-Federationed the Ferengi!?! He wants the better future, just not to have to write for it.

World War 1 1914-1918 saw trench warfare, widespread use of chemical weapons unseen before, tanks and the use of flying craft in combat for the first time. 25 years later (so, less than 30) World War 2 featured a megalomaniac bent on breeding the perfect genetic race and the use of atomic weapons that, previously, had only been in the realm of Jules Verne or Buck Rogers. In both wars technology that had previously been science fiction was used in reality. You think it's a stretch that they speculated what a future war 30 years hene would be like? Really? From the way the world was heading, a world war would have fit the 25 to 30 year timetable. With Hitler having the goal of a genetically pure civilization, and the writers and makers of Star Trek all being WWII veterans or, at least, living through that time, perhaps it seemed quite plausible a reality. Heck, those same people saw the birth of the space program that started with Robert Goddard's first rockets in 1926 to successfully reaching the moon within 4 decades later and landing on the moon in 1969.

Of course hindsight is 20/20. Of course, to us, it only makes sense that they shouldn't have expected real-world genetics to have advanced that fast in 30 some years from the 60s to the 90s. Likewise, yes, it's silly to have set Blade Runner in 2019, or have Back to the Future 2 depict such an advanced 2015. Still, give the writers of the 60s some credit. They just saw science fiction come to life in front of their own eyes not 20 years earlier. They were living science fiction every day with the space program. The Nazis already had some eugenics ideas in place back in the 30s and 40s. Khan was probably imagined to be the result of superior breeding and not genome manipulation.
Bladerunner in 2019, Looper in 2044, etc. Hollywood has a bad habit of thinking only if something will happen in our lifetimes will it resonate with the audience. Maybe for a lot of people that's true. Your points about the the WWs are good ones and I thought about them, but look at many of the predictions of Verne and Wells and Shelley and others that nowhere near panned out. I'll half give it to you, but Hollywood annoys me still.
 
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That would be the definition of retcon, wouldn't it? That would be the same as if ENT had used the TNG warp scale and said "Of all the warp speed references in TOS, only one or two I can recall can't be reconciled with this set-up, so I don't see the problem in glossing over them."
Umm, I don't follow. ENT used the warp scale rules from TOS, so the original system was affirmed (at least until the TNG re-organization). That's not a retcon. And yeah, I agree that the money situation is a retcon. There have always been retcons, and there will be more in the future. It's part of being a long-running franchise.
I said "the same as if". ENT didn't retcon the warp scale. It actually integrated it with both TOS and TNG. Hell, they integrated bumpy headed Klingons, the least needed integration ever. (Nothing about the Klingons's appearance drove plot. The ROMULANS, on the other hand, needed to look just like Vulcans as part of plot in both TOS AND TNG.)

But when it came to money they said "Yeah, there are entire episodes of TOS that make no sense without money but we don't care. ENT doesn't have money either."
 
Khan was probably imagined to be the result of superior breeding and not genome manipulation.

There is no probably about it, he is explicitly referred to as the product of selective breeding. Genetic Engineering was a retcon introduced in TWOK. Interestingly, Khan would have already have been born when the episode was made.
 
One opportunity that "Discovery" has is an opportunity to finally nail down questions like this. Although admittedly the fandom may only take it in the same vein at ENT's retcons, ie debating furiously about them. :D ;)
 
I said "the same as if". ENT didn't retcon the warp scale. It actually integrated it with both TOS and TNG. Hell, they integrated bumpy headed Klingons, the least needed integration ever. (Nothing about the Klingons's appearance drove plot. The ROMULANS, on the other hand, needed to look just like Vulcans as part of plot in both TOS AND TNG.)

Sure (and I really liked that ENT did that).

But when it came to money they said "Yeah, there are entire episodes of TOS that make no sense without money but we don't care. ENT doesn't have money either."

"Entire episodes"? That sounds like hyperbole, at best. Which ones did you have in mind?

There is no probably about it, he is explicitly referred to as the product of selective breeding. Genetic Engineering was a retcon introduced in TWOK. Interestingly, Khan would have already have been born when the episode was made.

The official answer is that he was both selective breeding and genetic engineering, at least according to the official reference material. (Although, to be honest, I think the exact kind of science used to make Khan is about as important as whether the spider that bit Spider-Man was radioactive or genetically engineered.)
 
Genetic Engineering was a retcon introduced in TWOK
Or (my take) Chekov simply had his terminology wrong.
Right. The point is, if you’re a Federation citizen, interacting with a trillion other Federation citizens, you don’t use money
Again, Vulcan has money in the 24th century, and Spock convincingly posed as a interstellar Vulcan trader in the 23rd century.

Do Humans in Starfleet not get paid, while their fellow Starfleet officers from other Member worlds receive regular paychecks?

If it's Earth alone which has no money, how could they possibly interact with the rest of the Members of the Federation? Trade and tourism would be effectively impossible, and how could a Human from Earth study at another Member world's university?
What in 1966 lead the writers to believe we'd have earth-shattering Eugenic Breeding Wars less than 30 years later?
February 1967 (when Space Seed first aired) was at the height of the cold war, so "whole populations being bombed out of existence" would have made sense to the viewing public.

Countries rapidly changing governments was common in the 1960's, major coups were occurring every few months. Loas fell four months before the episode and Greece would fall five week after. So the supermen seizing 40 countries in rapid succession wouldn't be that hard to believe.

Eugenics was just a Nazi thing, there were eugenics programs in the United States as well going back for decades. Plus selective breeding programs were common in live stock and show animals, breeding for preferable attributes.

Robert Heinlein's "Methuselah's Children" was published in 1958. One of the novel's subjects was the selective breeding of Humans to increase the life span.
he and a lot of other writers in the franchise had massive chips on their shoulders over Roddenberry's idealism. It's harder to write ...
One of the reason that it might have been harder to write is that Roddenberry himself was incapable of describing it. Ron Moore said in a interview that the writers approached Roddenberry and asked him about his idea so they could incorporate it into scripts, apparently even Roddenberry didn't know how it was suppose to work.
 
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Or (my take) Chekov simply had his terminology wrong.

In Wrath of Khan, Khan himself attributes the Augments survival to his genetically engineered intellect. "Doctor Bashir, I Presume" (DS9), "The Borderlands," "The Augments," "Affliction," "Divergence" (ENT), and Star Trek Into Darkness also confirmed that the Augments were genetically engineered. So, it had to be both.

Do Humans in Starfleet not get paid, while their fellow Starfleet officers from other Member worlds receive regular paychecks?

If it's Earth alone which has no money, how could they possibly interact with the rest of the Members of the Federation? Trade and tourism would be effectively impossible, and how could a Human from Earth study at another Member world's university?

Good question, for which I have no answer

Eugenics was just a Nazi thing, there were eugenics programs in the United States as well going back for decades.

True enough, sad to say.
 
But when it came to money they said "Yeah, there are entire episodes of TOS that make no sense without money but we don't care. ENT doesn't have money either."
Money wasn't seen in ENT (not that I recall, anyway), but there was no definite evidence for it not existing.
 
Money wasn't seen in ENT (not that I recall, anyway), but there was no definite evidence for it not existing.

"Dark Frontier" (VOY) was where it was said that the 22nd century was humanity switched to the moneyless economy, but there's never been any indication, so far as I can tell, whether that was pre-or post-ENT.
 
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