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How would a society with no money work?

Puns? What puns? Somebody say puns? Reporting for dooty!

Funny you should say that, I recently introduced my girlfriend to DS9. She is very particular about enunciation in her televisual experiences and was very amused by many of the characters in the show discussing their doodies.
 
Puns? What puns? Somebody say puns? Reporting for dooty!

Funny you should say that, I recently introduced my girlfriend to DS9. She is very particular about enunciation in her televisual experiences and was very amused by many of the characters in the show discussing their doodies.

What's her opinion on Avery Brooks' tendency to wildly over-enunciate at random intervals?
 
To be fair, a society with no money would need to consider such concepts as basic sanitation and infrastructure.
People who advocate a no money system sometimes say that those who oppose one simply can't imagine how such a system would work. PicardSpeedo mentioned infrastructure, much of our modern day and historical infrastructure was built to serve the purposes of commerce and commercialism. A good example of this would the transportation network.

Another would be the internet, when the internet was in it's infancy it simply connected a relatively small numbers of sites, and debateably it would have stayed quite small if commerce and commercialism hadn't grab on to it and converted it into what we have today.

With no mass market in existence, where would hundreds of millions of holodecks/suites come from?

IIRC, the guy who invented the solaton wave was looking to make money off of his invention.
 
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To be fair, a society with no money would need to consider such concepts as basic sanitation and infrastructure.
People who advocate a no money system sometimes say that those who oppose one simply can imagine how such a system would work. PicardSpeedo mentioned infrastructure, much of our modern day and historical infrastructure was built to serve the purposes of commerce and commercialism. A good example of this would the transportation network.

Another would be the internet, when the internet was in it's infancy it simply connected a relatively small numbers of sites, and debateably it would have stayed quite small if commerce and commercialism hadn't grab on to it and converted it into what we have today.

With no mass market in existence, where would hundreds of millions of holodecks/suites come from?

IIRC, the guy who invented the solaton wave was looking to make money off of his invention.

I agree with this, and it really stretches credibility to think that everyone on the planet suddenly got a charitable streak and decided to start building everything a super-futuristic society needs just to be nice.
 
Money is a human invention and isn't technically necessary for compensation. But Star Trek is basically a pseudo-communist future, and communism is the total negation of the need for compensation. I don't believe in communism myself (a totally stateless society) but I do believe that socialism can make money "obsolete". "Money" or currency isn't the logical conclusion of something, it's origins and current usage show otherwise.

Sorry to get all political, but that's my take.
 
I'm not sure its fair to call Star Trek a "communist" future. We're not talking about a dystopia here, and (as far as we're aware) the United Earth government doesn't mandate its philosophies on the public against their will (although admittedly, its hard to see from our limited 21st century perspective how their society could possibly function the way it does without that kind of strong-arming going on behind the scenes -- but I disgress :p).

But it certainly has tendencies towards Marxism, without any of the corrupting influences which later became communism as we tend to understand it today.
 
Well I'm getting it from this commie magazine which I read a lot:

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2011/12/four-futures/

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/03/leonard-nimroy-spock-obituary-star-trek/

That and the Picard spiels against money and in favor of working for yourself and humanity, which is exactly what Karl Marx said 150 years ago.

I'm not sure its fair to call Star Trek a "communist" future. We're not talking about a dystopia here, and (as far as we're aware) the United Earth government doesn't mandate its philosophies on the public against their will (although admittedly, its hard to see from our limited 21st century perspective how their society could possibly function the way it does without that kind of strong-arming going on behind the scenes -- but I disgress :p).
Well, you're loaded with misconceptions. If anything, "Communism" is utopian, not dystopian. Communism is a totally stateless society where individualism reigns supreme due to total lack of coercion from the state and other actors. I don't think that's possible, but clearly Trek is a pseudo-communist future, which other socialists and communists and others have already said.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communist_society

Communist state is a state that aims to achieve Socialism and then achieve Communism. Most communist states have been states with a form of government characterized by single-party rule or dominant-party system by a party which claims to follow communism, usually with a professed allegiance to Marxism-Leninism as the guiding ideology of the state. None of these states achieved communism, and the term is used no matter to what degree that state or the movement associated with it actually follows communism, if at all.[1] The label is the source of controversy, especially among the left; according to many communist and Marxist tendencies, the system in use in the Soviet Union and the states modeled after it (i.e., "communist states") - which claimed to have reached socialism, not communism - was not socialism but rather state capitalism.[2] Some argue that term "Communist state" is an oxymoron as a communist society is stateless,[3] therefore the term Marxist-Leninist state usually is more appropriate, while "communist state" is a Western term.[1]
The states called themselves socialist states, because they claimed to have established or aim at the establishing of the socialist society, i.e., a society based on the principles of scientific socialism.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communist_state


No socialist state has ever claimed to reach communism so we can't talk of "actually existing communism".
 
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Well they don't negate one another, you don't have individual rights and freedoms without a collective defending them. But Communism is the total individualization of relations, quite literally it calls for "free association of individuals" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_association_%28communism_and_anarchism%29 This would be achieved via automation in a socialized framework. Again, Star Trek wrote this (at least the part about people working for themselves and humanity freely without compensation or coercion) without even knowing it :P

Again, don't think it's possible, but strawmanning communism as some totalitarian ideology of the state is just false. Also I don't like playing that game in any case given our current socio-political system is oppressive and extremely violent.
 
Communism is ...
There is communism as a theory that exists solely in text books, and then there is communism that manifests itself in the actual world.

Which is real, and which the illusion?

In reality communism is just another form of totalitarianism, a method for a relatively small number of people to exercise a large degree of control over a population, without even the pretense of their consent.

The strict textbook form of communism doesn't fit in with what we've seen of the Trek universe. One example of this would be the existence of political states and governing bodies. The exact form of the Federation's governing body isn't all that clear, but it is clear that there is something, and some kind of democracy is in play.

We seen and heard of the Federation's Membership having their own governments. Ardana certainly did and it (imho) is a aristocracy. We hear direct mentions of Vulcan's government, so it does have one (again the form is unclear). In TNG Picard is seen to communicate with Federation Member's indigenous governments in some episodes.

Also, private corporations within the Federation directly own entire planets, in a strict communist system I believe this would be forbidden/impossible.

Robert Picard and Joseph Sisko both would seem to privately own their respective "means of production."

We've heard of people within the Federation being, or becoming, rich. This would suggest the existence of a wealth class.
 
I can only imagine that defecation and urination must be accomplished with assistance from a transporter aboard starships

At what stage does it get beamed out?

As soon as it hits the bowl? After it's flushed? Once it's congealed into a mass of excremental arse cake?

In any event, it would require plumbers (unless it's considered part of Geordi and the engineering departments remit). Once again, this would require that the plumbers do it because "it betters them"

I'd rather "better myself" as a licentious painter who travels numerous worlds, seducing alien women of various attractiveness (that's just me though)

Communism is

Never having to say your sorry. No wait, that's love isn't it.
 
In reality communism is just another form of totalitarianism, a method for a relatively small number of people to exercise a large degree of control over a population, without even the pretense of their consent.
Well, no, that statement doesn't make sense. There's communism in theory, and then there's efforts to reach communism (socialism) in practice. You can't say "communism" is this if its never been achieved and doesn't purport to be this. Of course not all socialist experiments went this way and not all even had the goal of communism, but this is just a matter of accuracy of terms. Both "actually existing socialism" in the past and "actually existing capitalism" in the present are totalitarian and oppressive, yet this doesn't negate goals or change definitions, that's just not how language and political theory works.

I'm not a communist anyway. Though the Star Trek universe ironically is more unrealistic given it has FTL travel and universal translators and such but that's okay because it's fiction :)

The strict textbook form of communism doesn't fit in with what we've seen of the Trek universe. One example of this would be the existence of political states and governing bodies. The exact form of the Federation's governing body isn't all that clear, but it is clear that there is something, and some kind of democracy is in play.

We seen and heard of the Federation's Membership having their own governments. Ardana certainly did and it (imho) is a aristocracy. We hear direct mentions of Vulcan's government, so it does have one (again the form is unclear). In TNG Picard is seen to communicate with Federation Member's indigenous governments in some episodes.
I said pseudo-communist for a reason :P Also communism is total democracy.

Anyway, as Peter Frase said:

But getting past wage labor economically also means getting past it socially, and this entails deep changes in our priorities and our way of life. If we want to imagine a world where work is no longer a necessity, it’s probably more fruitful to draw on fiction than theory. Indeed, many people are already familiar with the utopia of a post-scarcity communism, because it has been represented in one of our most familiar works of popular culture: Star Trek. The economy and society of that show is premised on two basic technical elements. One is the technology of the ‘replicator’, which is capable of materializing any object out of thin air, with only the press of a button. The other is a fuzzily described source of apparently free (or nearly free) energy, which runs the replicators as well as everything else on the show.


The communistic quality of the Star Trek universe is often obscured because the films and TV shows are centered on the military hierarchy of Starfleet, which explores the galaxy and comes into conflict with alien races. But even this seems to be largely a voluntarily chosen hierarchy, drawing those who seek a life of adventure and exploration; to the extent that we see glimpses of civilian life, it seems mostly untroubled by hierarchy or compulsion. And to the extent that the show departs from communist utopia, it is because its writers introduce the external threat of hostile alien races or scarce resources in order to produce sufficient dramatic tension.
Star Trek is the most raging pinko fiction in popular culture, and it's why I like it.

We've heard of people within the Federation being, or becoming, rich. This would suggest the existence of a wealth class.
There's no money in the Federation though, so I don't see how they can be rich and wealthy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TOcKGREiY30

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQQYbKT_rMg

Never having to say your sorry. No wait, that's love isn't it.
No, that's being a parent.
 
I can only imagine that defecation and urination must be accomplished with assistance from a transporter aboard starships

At what stage does it get beamed out?

As soon as it hits the bowl? After it's flushed? Once it's congealed into a mass of excremental arse cake?

In any event, it would require plumbers (unless it's considered part of Geordi and the engineering departments remit). Once again, this would require that the plumbers do it because "it betters them"

I'd rather "better myself" as a licentious painter who travels numerous worlds, seducing alien women of various attractiveness (that's just me though)

If it's achieved by means of transporters then it by definition doesn't require plumbing, and therefore doesn't require plumbers....

There would have to be some crew members whose job it was to oversee the central reclamation/purification facility, which would likely be not all that unpleasant as long as the system was working properly. Those moments in which it isn't working properly would be the price you pay for all the other great experiences you can get out of serving on a starship.
 
I can only imagine that defecation and urination must be accomplished with assistance from a transporter aboard starships

At what stage does it get beamed out?

As soon as it hits the bowl? After it's flushed? Once it's congealed into a mass of excremental arse cake?

I would imagine that, if it wasn't beamed directly out of the rectum (or rectum analogue, in the case of some species), that there would be a general collection device containing a dematerialization grid that would periodically sweep the excrement into a transporter buffer, and then relocate it to the "solid matter tank," much in the way that a replicator works.

In any event, it would require plumbers (unless it's considered part of Geordi and the engineering departments remit). Once again, this would require that the plumbers do it because "it betters them"

Yep, and unless they're into self-flagration, I can't see a lot of people lining up to take jobs scraping the insides of a plumbing system designed to carry the excrement of hundreds of species to "better themselves."

I'd rather "better myself" as a licentious painter who travels numerous worlds, seducing alien women of various attractiveness (that's just me though)

This.
 
I'd better myself by just being a lecherous pervert smoking weed all day, but I don't need a futuristic utopian society for that I guess, except I have to deal with a job and school in this society and economy. Damn :P

Yep, and unless they're into self-flagration, I can't see a lot of people lining up to take jobs scraping the insides of a plumbing system designed to carry the excrement of hundreds of species to "better themselves."
At that level of technology you'd just automate crappy jobs like that. Hey, more communism in Trek...
 
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I'm sorry, but I don't know that I could overcome the mental hurdle of knowing that the beef stew that I'm eating today in Ten Forward might have been Worf's grunting and screaming diarrhea session in his quarters yesterday.


At times throughout history, some were disgusted by the thought of indoor toilets and resisted them but now we take it for granted and accept them without much thought.


What's her opinion on Avery Brooks' tendency to wildly over-enunciate at random intervals?


She seemed to think of him as one of the actors who could enunciate better than the others in fact.


People who advocate a no money system sometimes say that those who oppose one simply can't imagine how such a system would work.


Whilst I disagree with you on the possible of a money-free society, I agree that this kind of statement is unproductive at best. Unfortunately, it is very easy to slip in such patterns when someone starts to feel that a conversation is feeling more like a personal argument than in intellectual debate. (Also, don't take that as me accusing you of making it that, it's just very easy to feel like that when your personal opinions are being challenged... a continual bane to human communication).


Well they don't negate one another, you don't have individual rights and freedoms without a collective defending them. But Communism is the total individualization of relations, quite literally it calls for "free association of individuals" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_association_(communism_and_anarchism) This would be achieved via automation in a socialized framework. Again, Star Trek wrote this (at least the part about people working for themselves and humanity freely without compensation or coercion) without even knowing it :P


Again, don't think it's possible, but strawmanning communism as some totalitarian ideology of the state is just false. Also I don't like playing that game in any case given our current socio-political system is oppressive and extremely violent.


Agreed, except I believe it is possible but not sure whether or not it would be within the time scales of the Star Trek universe (more to do with human disagreement than technology though).


At that level of technology you'd just automate crappy jobs like that. Hey, more communism in Trek...


I would think that too. Many tasks today are only performed by people because they are often cheaper to employ in the short term than to invest in the development and production of such things. Also, that it means greater levels of technological unemployment. If money and resources are not such a great issue in this time, then those would not be problems either. However....


In any event, it would require plumbers (unless it's considered part of Geordi and the engineering departments remit). Once again, this would require that the plumbers do it because "it betters them"


...does anyone remember that Rom's first job for the engineering section in the Bajoran Militia was in “Waste Extraction”... this always felt to me like a polite reference to the sewage/plumbing.
 
Agreed, except I believe it is possible but not sure whether or not it would be within the time scales of the Star Trek universe (more to do with human disagreement than technology though).
As a Marxist and a socialist, I concede that in a socialist context, automation and productivity gains can and probably would eventually make money and compensation superfluous, I don't see how this would lead to a stateless society where no laws and rules would be necessary and no governing bodies of any kind and we'd all just be associated free individuals. It just seems too pie in the sky for me.

I would think that too. Many tasks today are only performed by people because they are often cheaper to employ in the short term than to invest in the development and production of such things. Also, that it means greater levels of technological unemployment. If money and resources are not such a great issue in this time, then those would not be problems either. However....
Agreed, we have the capacity now to automate all kinds of shitty jobs and lower the work week and increase wages (tying them to productivity gains for one), etc. So yeah, we don't disagree on much.

Better methods of compensation exist than money, which btw didn't originate due to convenience or efficiency which is a common misconception.

Except when there is, which is the majority of the time.

Except not, according to canon:


  • When Lily Sloane asked how much the USS Enterprise-E cost to build, Picard tells her "The economics of the future is somewhat different. You see, money doesn't exist in the 24th century... The acquisition of wealth is no longer the driving force in our lives. We work to better ourselves and the rest of Humanity." (Star Trek: First Contact)

  • When Nog suggests that Jake should bid for a baseball card in an auction, Jake says "I'm Human, I don't have any money." Nog replies "It's not my fault that your species decided to abandon currency-based economics in favor of some philosophy of self-enhancement." Jake says "Hey, watch it. There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity." Nog then replies "What does that mean?" Jake responds "It means we don't need money!" Nog quickly points out, however, that Jake wouldn't be able to bid or borrow. (DS9: "In the Cards")

    Of course Star Trek contradicts itself, as any major franchise that has existed for decades has, but the canon clearly states its an economy that doesn't require currency. http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Money

    "
    Human society has evolved massively since they achieved warp capable flight in 2063 and first contact was made by the Vulcans. They are known to refer to Earth in the 24th Century as "paradise", and enjoy a longer average life span of 120 years. On Earth, war, disease, poverty, and famine have been completely abolished; the basic biological needs of every citizen are met without compensation. Humans therefore no longer strive to acquire wealth, and instead work to better themselves and their society. As such, there is no base form of currency." http://sto.gamepedia.com/Human

    Again, basically communism :P
 
Once again, this would require that the plumbers do it because "it betters them"
Years ago while driving I saw a crew of men working a broken sewage line, one man was down in a hole with his arms reaching down to fix something. His head was tilted back as far as it would go because the liquid Human waste in the hole was up to his earlobes. I hope he was making a whole lot of money.

In reality communism is just another form of totalitarianism.
Well, no, that statement doesn't make sense. There's communism in theory, and then there's efforts to reach communism (socialism) in practice.
If you look at a textbook definition of democracy, it doesn't exactly match what existing in the "real world." Does that mean that there a no countries that can accurately be referred to a democracies? Of course not, there are multiple democracies around the world today.

Has there ever been a country that perfectly matches a textbook description of a communist state? No, never. But the old soviet union was in fact a communist state. Just as democracy comes in slightly different forms and favors, so true with communism, for example marxism is one of the forms of communism.

Communism (the way it manifests itself in the real world) is totalitarianism.
 
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