And it's almost certainly probable that the various universities of the Federation would need to set up exchange programs to spread knowledge of one-another's histories, cultures, languages, arts, sciences, etc.
The UN can barely function because it's hopelessly corrupt and internally mismanaged, by managing the flow of money into the UN the member nations exercise control over the UN leadership.The United Nations can barely function within its boundaries today because so many of its member states withhold money, and the U.N. doesn't have any of the powers of a federal state that the Federation has.
Those Members who are democracies (most) would have their policies toward the Federation and it's actions set by their populace through their representatives. If the Federation is in conflict with a worlds population and it's collective views, then that population can express it's displeasure through political means. Their Federation Councilperson would be the first step, protesting the Federation's position, maybe openly condemn it in council. Next step would be the voice of the Member government, using it's economic and diplomatic position with other Members to bring increasing levels of pressure on the Federation council.And what if the Federation government is in conflict with the majority of its Member State governments but not the majority of its overall citizens?
Good question.Who does the Federation work for, anyway
I think you're all thinking too much in 20th Century terms.
I don't think that there will be taxation in the 24th Century.
They have large amounts of relatively free power and food replicators. It has been stated numerable times that they have eliminated want. They don't have an economy based on buying and selling. (Vonda Mcintyre's ST4 novelisation). They're not as aquisitive.
Yeah, that's absolute nonsense.
Sci:
Your article proves nothing. If you can replicate just about anything at low cost, you have no need for money,
Want is eliminated,as anyone can get the just about anything they need, at low cost.
There are still class structures and still power structures and still millionaires, but the average Joe can feed himself, clothe himself,house himself, educate himself, travel and do all the things only middle class people can do today. If you want to buy a starship, you would need a few bucks, but it may be possible to travel even off planet, for the average Joe, in ST times.
'But the idea that there's no more money and people don't want stuff anymore?'
Again, it was stated in the Neutral Zone episode that the challenge is to improve yourself.
'And I'm not sure how calling into question the ability of Americans to envision a money-free future supports any argument a respectable person would care to make. '
Aren't Americans presently champions of the free market? Is that a respectable view?
And it's almost certainly probable that the various universities of the Federation would need to set up exchange programs to spread knowledge of one-another's histories, cultures, languages, arts, sciences, etc.
Good point, access to other cultures and civilizations would be a prime reason to join any interstellar organization. A species without curiosity most likely would not create a warp drive and without a warp drive Starfleet wouldn't permit contact (after the prime directive).
The United Nations can barely function within its boundaries today because so many of its member states withhold money, and the U.N. doesn't have any of the powers of a federal state that the Federation has.
The UN can barely function because it's hopelessly corrupt and internally mismanaged,
And what if the Federation government is in conflict with the majority of its Member State governments but not the majority of its overall citizens?
Those Members who are democracies (most) would have their policies toward the Federation and it's actions set by their populace through their representatives.
Under my idea of the Federation government being a servant, not a master, the final step in a profound dispute would be the Federation council being simply dissolved and reconstituted.
Good question.Who does the Federation work for, anyway
Why doesn't the federation just give all it's member states replicator technology and have done with it? If they're widely available to humans, why not aliens
I hate to tell you this, but replicators don't create matter out of nothing. (Nothing is created from nothing; that's an essential law of physics.) They create matter out of energy, and that energy has to come from somewhere.
Aside from currency, I'm not sure what these other ways might be.They may have credit, but I don't think they have money in the way that we have. There would be other ways of trading, and not barter.
And that's basically what we've all been saying from the start.And they certainly wouldn't be as obsessed with the possession of it. Maybe only the biggest things, like starships and boats and luxuries, wold have to be paid for. There'll still be crime and death and you'll still have to go to the toilet, but life will be a lot different.
'And that's basically what we've all been saying from the start.'
Really?
![]()
'And that's basically what we've all been saying from the start.'
Really?
![]()
Yes. You're the one who's been trying to twist our words to make us sound like we're all Milton Friedmanites.
'And that's basically what we've all been saying from the start.'
Really?
![]()
Yes. You're the one who's been trying to twist our words to make us sound like we're all Milton Friedmanites.
The overwhelming opinion seemed to be, at first, that human nature would not be changed by man and that people will have exactly the same interests, motivations and government structures as people today and there would be no change. You seem to have come a little towards my thinking, and GR's. Good.
The overwhelming opinion seemed to be, at first, that human nature would not be changed by man and that people will have exactly the same interests, motivations and government structures as people today and there would be no change. You seem to have come a little towards my thinking, and GR's. Good.
The overwhelming opinion seemed to be, at first, that human nature would not be changed by man and that people will have exactly the same interests, motivations and government structures as people today and there would be no change. You seem to have come a little towards my thinking, and GR's. Good.
Uh, we did? Somehow, I don't see that.
GR believed his own propaganda of life imitating art. That's all it was - propaganda. Advertising puffery put out to satisfy an early Trek fandom who, in some cases, had a frighteningly tenuous grip on the difference between reality and fiction.
Swallowed it hook, line, and sinker. Despite the fact that it has no basis in reality or rationality.
Put plainly, it does not ring true. At all. It does not begin to.
Look, I don't like the replicator as a tech for a lot of reasons - it kills the drama of the show in a lot of ways, and makes innumerable plots, including plenty of plots shown on TNG, basically wall-bangers in logic terms - but what I especially dislike is being asked to presume that in less than 100 years (because a capitalist economy seemed incredibly well-entrenched in TOS, only...80 years before EAF?), human nature changed drastically. In 80 years, less time than one's *grandparents* would live according to TNG lifespans, the basics of human nature are supposed to have "evolved". Not subtly at all, but in a very drastic way.
To which I reply: BS, total and utter BS. Not merely in terms of just how much we're being asked to presume, but how fast it's supposed to have happened and how amazingly frictionless it's supposed to have been.
Here are some basic constants about social change over any group of planetary scale, to say nothing of larger scales:
1. Mass communication speeds up the process, but it still takes time - measured in decades at a minimum - for even the most subtle of changes to societal norms to take place. The larger the group, the longer it takes. The more drastic the change posited, the longer it takes. Overturning capitalism and basic economics would not take 80 years. It could not be completed in 300 years. It would be the replacement of thousands of years of accumulated structures, lifestyles, and even ways of thinking. (Yes, I know modern capitalism began pretty much with Adam Smith in 1776. But Smith was describing forces that had exerted influence upon human society since basically the dawn of civilization.) It would take a millennium at minimum, regardless of the cataclysms you visit upon human society to speed things up.
2. Change is never frictionless. Ever. Drastic changes in the social order are generally how civil wars happen in countries. (Or are the result of civil wars.) They are how wars break out between countries. Within societies, even changes as subtle as (and this is a really subtle example until maybe 50 years ago - it used to take technologies decades to go from intial introduction to full adoption, until after WW2, pretty much) the arrival of new technologies brings friction. Not always violent, no, but more often including violence than not. The rise of automation in the workforce was a process that still goes on today...And still provokes friction. Quite often violent friction; just look at the regular battles on picket lines to see an example. It started centuries ago. It's how we got the Luddites, people who destroyed machinery in an attempt to stop the mechanization of the workforce, in the 1800s.
3. Plus ca change.... Trite but true. You do realize why Winston Churchill made his comment about democracy being the worst of all systems, except all the others which had been tried?
Because humanity has at some point tried every system of government imaginable, and a few that would probably make your head spin. (They made my head spin.) Nany have been tried within the past 200 years.
Sure...Democracy sucks. It may not seem "futuristic" enough. It's messy as hell.
But here's the thing. Humans are an innately conservative species when it comes to government. It takes a lot to topple even the worst governments.
Plus...Look at the near future Trek posits.
The Eugenics War, first. Which by TOS's estimates was at least as deadly as WW2 a few times over.
Then...World War 3. *Including nuclear exchanges*.
Even with the Vulcans coming, we're supposed to believe that humanity somehow crawled out of the irradiated ashes and threw away all it knew?
Whiskey. Tango. Foxtrot.
That is not what humans do when disaster strikes. They look for strong men. They cling to old habits and old traditions.
It defies all of human history. All the thousands of years of it. I can see some pretty striking political changes happening after World War 3 and First Contact, which is why I don't entriely reject Trek's future history wholesale.
But I'm supposed to believe that after all that, humanity's basic nature somehow changes.
Again....WTF? Not how people work. Not how human psychology works.
There's more than this 3, but these 3 are fairly basic.
To believe GR's propaganda requires me to ignore human nature.
That, to me, is insane. It's not a storytelling conceit, because it strangles storytelling.
It's insane. It's ignorant.
Hence, I can't swallow it.
So why would I use it in trying to posit and explore what I believe to be a workable structure for the Federation Government?
Why are you watching ST if you think it's all propaganda? You're remarks are insulting. [SNIP]
That's Star trek.Your knowledge of history is good, but please stop trying to turn ST into something it's not. you couldn't have thought of it. The fact that it is so popular shows that the average Joe believes, or wants to believe in all that 'propaganda'. You're just trying to jump on the bandwagon and steer it into a ditch.
The Theory of the Leisure Class is a book by Thorstein Veblen that I read years ago. Some of your posts, both here and on the colony thread reminded me of it, Veblen argued that capitalism and conspicuous consumption were a form of barbarism. Veblen, in 1899, was actually the first person to coin the term "conspicuous consumption." Veblen advanced the theory that society could "better itself' and "improve" by moving away from consumerism. He had a poor view of money too. Cheapjack you might enjoy it.please stop trying to turn ST into something it's not
<SNIP>
Why are you watching ST if you think it's all propaganda?
You're remarks are insulting.
Everyone knows that technology has changed things for man. You apparently can't.
Yes some power structures will be recognisable, but they will be derived from structures all over the world, not just American. British, Japanese, African,maybe even the American Indian's power structures will be used
You still haven'tNobody here, apart from myself, has addressed that.
T'Girl, it states quite clearly in 'The Neutral Zone' ...
This is blatantly false, people in the 24th century will still possess material needs. Food. Shelter. Clothing. Even if these thing are completely free, the need for them still exists. This statement by Picard is wrong.PICARD: This is the twenty fourth century. Material needs no longer exist.
Last night on SyFy The Inner Light was shown, in the last scene of the episode, Picard walks his quarters, examining his nick-nacks. Looking at the things he had accumulated over the course of his life. Perhaps what people discarded was the obsession, kept the things.PICARD: People are no longer obsessed with the accumulation of things.
That first addition William Shakespeare that Picard keeps open and under glass in his ready room says otherwise.PICARD: the need for possessions
Three hundred years, they've learned to grow food. Bravo.PICARD: we've eliminated hunger
I'll be the first to admit, Star Trek in general isn't the most innovative SF I've ever come across, it rarely takes chances. In terms of the economics of the future there is a lack of continuity, but this is true in a lot of in-universe areas.This is Science Fiction we're talking about here.
Cheapjack, from what I understand, Gene Roddenberry was very interested in the accumulation of wealth.GR has said so.
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