How do we know this? The last time we saw her, she had only been in the future a short time.Apparently Gillian Taylor got along just fine
(Data pauses, gives no response)SONNY: Wrong? Only that your computer here fixed about the best martini I have ever had. I just might get to like this place. Let's see if the Braves are on. How do you turn on this teevee?*
RIKER: TV?*
SONNY: Yeah, the boob tube. I'd like to see how the Braves are doing after all this time. Probably still finding ways to lose.
DATA: I believe he means television, sir. That particular form of entertainment did not last much beyond the year two thousand forty.*
SONNY: Well, what do you guys do? I mean, you don't drink, and you ain't got no TV. Must be kind of boring, ain't it?*
PICARD: That's what this is all about. A lot has changed in the past three hundred years. People are no longer obsessed with the accumulation of things. We've eliminated hunger, want, the need for possessions. We have grown out of our infancy.
RALPH: You've got it all wrong. It's never been about possessions. It's about power.
PICARD: Power to do what?
RALPH: To control your life, your destiny.
PICARD: That kind of control is an illusion.
PICARD: Here's what I propose. You can't stay on the Enterprise, but I have arranged for us to rendezvous with the USS Charleston, bound for Earth. They will deliver you there.
RALPH: Then what will happen to us? There's no trace of my money. My office is gone. What will I do? How will I live?
PICARD: This is the twenty fourth century. Material needs no longer exist.
RALPH: Then what's the challenge?
PICARD: The challenge, Mister Offenhouse, is to improve yourself. To enrich yourself. Enjoy it.
Picking up a tread with many of the postings on this subject. There's accessing stored literature, or getting a tiny tropical island, and several people have written of the holodeck.
For some people, is a big part of traveling to and living in the future the appeal of being by yourself?
How do we know this? The last time we saw her, she had only been in the future a short time.Apparently Gillian Taylor got along just fine
I'd totally live on Earth. I'd want an easy life, no dangerous Starfleet life.
As for entertainment we know there's tons of literature including lots of 20th/21st century authors. There's lots of classic tv and movies saved, as we've seen Tom Paris watching old tv shows, as well as all the newer media, and of course holodecks. I'd be a total holodeck addict.
I think I'd adjust to the different time just fine. Assuming that I had traveled forward in time somehow. I could write books about my life and probably tour around talking to college classes about history, write a blog about observations on modern life from a very unique perspective. Never having to worry about money, health care, etc would be a huge relief.
Nah. If I had a choice, I'd rather live in Equestria: ponies, magic, benevolent rulers, ponies. Also, ponies.
There are a few other examples where humans from the past weren't too enthusiastic about staying in the 24th century.
Rasmussen was a failed inventor from his century. He was struggling there. He would rather steal objects from the future and bring them back to his time to get rich rather than stay there.
Those three humans from the Neutral Zone weren't all that enthusiastic either.
And why or why not?
YES. Without a doubt. Sure there is the occasional intergalactic war or serious alien threat, but the 24th century is a much better world than the one we live in.
I think I'd last about a week before introducing the 24th century to 21st century America's national pastime of mass shootings.
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