Had ever seen a succesfull enterpeneur shown in positive light in Trek?
Well, to start with, the miners in "Mudd's Women" were depicted in a relatively positive light. Rough and lonely and wrong to be helping Mudd, but not as bad people. Their work was depicted as necessary and admirable, and their loneliness understandable, and it was quite clear they were doing it for money.
Similarly, once the miners in "The Devil in the Dark" had learned to get over their fear of the Horta (and the Horta its fear of humanoids), it was clear that both expected to be able to work together and earn great profit doing so. This was depicted in a positive light.
Spock's disguise as a merchant in "Errand of Mercy" was seen as quite acceptable and common for a Vulcan.
Cyrano Jones was depicted in a humorously obnoxious light in "The Trouble with Tribbles," but the bartender was portrayed in a very sympathetic, long-suffering light.
Bashir's father is depicted as a
failed entrepreneur who used to own his own shuttle business, and its failure is one of the things that is supposed to mark him as being a bit of a loser.
And, of course, Quark is depicted in a very sympathetic light much of the time, even if he is also depicted as someone who has a lot to learn.
Both Captain Picard's brother and Captain Sisko's father would fit that bill. I know that some this board have posted that their businesses are actual own by the state (United Earth) and both of those men are just being permitted to operate them. But I believe they both outright own their respective commercial businesses.
Agreed. There's no evidence that either one's business is owned by the state.
In fact, I also believe that part of Captain Picard's attitude concerning money and "we seek to improve ourselves" comes from his adversarial relationship with his brother, who is a successful and talented business man who has become quite wealthy.
Well, I'm not sure if I'd go that far. We don't know how successful Robert Picard was -- in point of fact, he probably inherited the vineyard and the business. They're getting along, but that's not the same thing as being "quite wealthy." They struck me as a very traditional, upper middle class sort of family (insofar as our class system today can be applied to a classless future).
I don't understand why they don't have economy in the future.
They have an economy. Even if they had no money, there would still be an economy. And economy is simply the sum of all things owned and traded for.
I'd personally theorize that the Federation and/or United Earth has some mechanism in place to eliminate inherited wealth ...
How would that jibe with the Picard vineyard? I impression I got was that it, house and lands, were inherited by Robert Picard. Land is of course a form of wealth.
Pardon me. I should have said
vast wealth. The Picard family lands are big, but they don't look huge, and while Chateau Picard seems a well-respected brand, Robert didn't exactly look like he was living in the lap of luxury, either. They seemed pretty middlin' to me.
You seem to be suggesting that each generation should begin from scratch.
Not from scratch. But neither do I think it is just for someone to be born wealthy and grow up rich and never do anything to really
earn the place in society into which they were born. There needs to be some balance.
If you're born the son of the Federation's equivalent of Bill Gates, and you want to maintain that status in society, frankly, I
do think you should have to mostly start from scratch. Sure, your family should get to keep its home or homes, and I don't even have a problem with you inheriting enough to maintain your homes and keep yourself fed and comfortable. But (to speak of things in our terms), there's no reason for you to inherit $80 billion. You can stand to lose the vast majority of that wealth and still be quite well-off for life, and, frankly, you shouldn't be able to hold such exorbitant wealth that you did nothing to earn. That way lies aristocracy, economic domination, and tyranny of the rich over the common man.
...but there are no Federation Paris Hiltons or Donald Trumps.
And the thousands of people who work for the Hilton's and Trump's?
What makes you think that's the only way an economy can be organized? Why not have the workers
fire the owners? Those workers may employ
themselves instead of relying on the wealthy elite to keep them afloat as we do in the modern world.
Human survival does not depend upon economic inequality.