As is "humanity," which is identified in this exchange as "the people who don't use money." It has nothing to do with his relationship with Starfleet, it has everything to do with the fact that a member of a civilization that abandoned the use of money for the regulation of the means of exchange.
So Tom's favorite bar - Sandrine's - just gives drinks away, for free? It's not synthehol she's serving, and it's pretty plain in the alt-universe episode where Harry hauls Tom out of the bar to help him get back to Voyager, that Tom has basically become an unemployed bum who's reduced to scrounging for drinks and has nowhere he actually lives.
Tom is one of the people who fell through the cracks in Picard's oh-so-perfect Earth. I'm not saying it's anyone's fault but Tom's, but the fact exists that there are homeless bums on 24th-century Earth - even ones who are the offspring of Starfleet admirals.
Sometimes they do. Depends on who setup the colony and how well they planned the venture in the first place. It also depends quite a bit on what PART of the frontier you're on; the galaxy is pretty well inhabited, it turns out, so none of those "frontier" colonies are actually in unsettled space, just areas far from EARTH. Deep Space Nine, for example, is technically far out on the Federation frontier, but it's also right smack in the middle of the Bajoran home system, and once they repair the damage the Cardassians did, it's pretty comfortable too.
Yeah, Julian and his "wow, I always wanted to be a frontier doctor!" struck me as rather condescending, since the Bajorans were a reasonably advanced society. That said, Deep Space Nine wasn't an
Earth colony, nor was it even originally a Federation colony. It was a military installation run by hostile aliens. Going by all the complaining Keiko was doing, it was a pretty grungy installation, too.
When she rejected the fundamental dogma on which her entire civlization was founded and ran away with her talaxian husband with a bunch of wandering vagabonds from the other side of the galaxy. It's a self-imposed exile, to be sure, but it's an exile born out of the fact that she hates the way her people live and thinks they're all a bunch of suckers for depending on the caretaker as long as they have. They, in turn, pretty much assume she's going to get wind up as a Kazon comfort woman and bid her good riddance.
"Talaxian husband"?
WTF?
Kes and Neelix were never married, so what is this "talaxian husband" thing?
And I would hardly describe the Voyager crew as "vagabonds."
Except that when it comes to EARTH, he's actually right about this, and he's not the only one who says this. Troi says the same thing to Zephram Cochrane, and Picard and many others explain this to Offenhouse and his collection of castaways too. Sisko goes on an angry rant about this after Nechayev struts out of his office and he describes Earth as "paradise" which is actually part of the problem.
Troi, Picard, and Sisko are all career Starfleet, and in their ordinary working lives, none of them ever knew any serious lack of the basic necessities of life or wondered where their next meal was coming from. They were raised to think of the Federation (and Earth) as this wise, enlightened place where everything was perfect, and the people were perfect. It takes the Borg and Deep Space Nine for Sisko to start waking up to reality. Picard is still clueless even after his captivity with the Cardassians, when he is literally stripped of everything.
So no, it's not just Picard. Earth really IS that post-scarcity society where nobody goes hungry and nobody ever wants for anything ever.
Nope. There are reasons why prisons exist, and most people are in them because there was something they wanted and they broke the law when they tried to get it. The "it" doesn't have to be something tangible, it just has to be a lack of something the person perceives and they made wrong choices in trying to remedy that lack.
In the case of Tom Paris, his life was spiraling down even before he was kicked out of Starfleet, and he didn't join the Maquis for any other reason than they gave him food, a place to sleep, and the chance to use his piloting skills. He got caught and was sent to the penal colony in New Zealand, on Earth.
But when you get far enough away from Earth, you run into places like Turkhana IV where civil wars and/or poor planning have ruined the economy and reduced the population to something that resembles 1990s Sarajevo. I would place a wager that those folks probably use some form of currency on those backwards failed colonies, but I'm from Earth and therefore don't HAVE any money.
You don't have to have money to make wagers. Just bet some tangible object you own or some service you could perform for someone. And yeah, I very much doubt that anyone gives stuff away for free on Turkana IV - by the point that Tasha and her improbably-fashionable sister describe, that planet would run on the barter system, and likely organized crime would bring in whatever money they would use.
I don't have to. The burden of proof is on YOU to find evidence that some humans on Earth do not think this way. It shouldn't be that hard, it seems to me. We got a pretty good look at Earth in Deep Space Nine.
I don't own any of the DVD, and don't get any channels that currently run Star Trek. If I did have the time to go through what's on Netflix I could likely come up with people on Earth who don't just accept that it's a moneyless paradise.
Oh, wait... Vash. Tom Paris. Kassidy Yates. All of them are well aware that life doesn't just hand them everything from the nearest replicator.
OTOH, the few humans we've seen with serious mental issues and/or overwhelming ambition that would make them NOT content to stay on Earth... for some reason we find them in surprising abundance way the hell out in deep space. I can't imagine that's a coincidence.
There are some Starfleet officers with overwhelming ambition. They end up as smug admirals who can't imagine the realities outside the grounds of Starfleet headquarters.
Besides, this is Star Trek we're talking about. We've seen planets whose entire populations were modeled after 20th century Chicago gangsters, planets inhabited by space nazis, planets populated by indians, planets whose entire destinies apparently were decided by wheather or not a bunch of hillbillies had better rifles than the city slickers. Meanwhile we have the Klingons, an ENTIRE SPECIES that believes in a nebulous and ever shifting warrior ethos based on the teachings of Khaless; we have the Romulans, who apparently cling to the tenets of fascism planet-wide; we have the Cardassians who worship their global military junta, and even the surprisingly dynamic Bajoran monoculture only possesses a single major religion (two if you count the Pah Wraith cults) and a single line of social tradition based on it. Every planet you will EVER encounter in Star Trek is only ever big enough for a single ideology and a single defining feature, and apparently "We don't need money and everyone is taken care of because we're too rich to give a shit about that kind of stuff!" is Earth's defining characteristic.
You're comparing apples and jelly beans. TOS was full of references to money and getting paid. It wasn't until the fourth movie that there was even the hint of a moneyless society. And even then it was perfectly reasonable to assume that what Kirk actually meant was that it was a
cashless society, not that there was no money at all.
Fast-forward to TNG, and suddenly the Roddenberry Vision of Paradise and Enlightenment takes over. It's nice, but completely unrealistic to expect humanity to change that fast - and yes, a few centuries in this case is
fast, unless you can basically rewire everyone's thought patterns to never want anything tangible that they own for themselves or have exclusive use of.
Take the fact that most RL western countries have some kind of social programs to help people who are out of work, have trouble paying the medical bills, etc. Does that mean everyone approves of them? Not in the slightest.
tl;dr: The galaxy is full of "planet of the funny hats." Qo'nos is the planet of the warriors, Romulus is the planet of the backstabbers, Romulus is the planet of the fascists, Cardassia is the planet of the autocrats, Bajor is the planet of the formerly oppressed but still somehow spiritually optimistic, Ferenginar is the planet of the stereotypical space jews, and Earth is the Planet of the Sanctimonious Rich People.
Change that to "Mostly Sanctimonious Rich People" and I'd agree with you.
As sad as that part of the plot was it was unbelievable, you mean that large house had not one single fire alarm in it? The fire suppression systems of the 24th century must be worse than my smoke alarm for my small maisonette. Either that or Mrs Picard murdered her family to get away from too perfect, smug Earth, collect the life insurance credits and go live with her Andorian lovers on Andor in a group marriage.
That makes more sense.
Having a sprinkler and fire alarms doesn't guarantee that someone is going to get out alive. All that needs to happen is that you get trapped by a wall of flames or the ceiling falls in on you.