Communism - now there's science fiction.
^Not from a Marxist viewpoint, iirc.
The real difference between strains of socialism/communism is between the tactics of those like Vlad Lenin and those of people like Eduard Bernstein.
A lot of people bandy about the term "post-scarcity" economy but I'm not really sure what that's supposed to mean. Yes, they have replicators--so what? That merely makes things cheaper, not free. If they're run on fusion or antimatter power, scarcity is merely moved up the economic food chain to the energy regime on which their society is based. Practical fusion may utilize fuel plentiful enough to be almost free, but even so our deuterium resources are quite finite and may be calculated, and given the outrageous energy expenditures transporters, replicators, and holodecks must have, I submit fusion may not be practical. Antimatter would fit the bill but it is of course not plentiful at all in this neck of the woods and must be produced somewhere from other energy resources. I positively reject standard solar power as a means to energize atomic reassemblers on a worldwide scale.
But regardless of source, no supply is infinite, but only conscious limitations keep demand from being so. In the Federation, either those limitations are innate, a result of our "evolved" sensibilities, or they are externally enforced, by a bureaucracy that oversees energy quotae for Federation citizens. In likelihood, a combination of both is evoked.
If the UFP is Communist, how & why would Joseph Sisko, Captain Benjamin's pop, OWN a profitable New Orleans restaurant![]()
A lot of people bandy about the term "post-scarcity" economy but I'm not really sure what that's supposed to mean.
Then why are their starships powered by antimatter? Seems a little overcomplicated when they have magic energy boxes at home.
It's pretty clear that many in this thread are just too profoundly disturbed by the thought that the Federation might be a communist society.
I'm far from a believer in communism, but the idea has been horribly tainted by the attempted implementations in recent history. I very much doubt that when Karl Marx did his thinking that he considered brutal oppression, gulags, and long lines for simple things as bread to be core principles of ideal communism.
I'm far from a believer in communism, but the idea has been horribly tainted by the attempted implementations in recent history. I very much doubt that when Karl Marx did his thinking that he considered brutal oppression, gulags, and long lines for simple things as bread to be core principles of ideal communism.
Bully for him. Communism inevitably leads to those things. The ideal is very far away from the reality.
I wrote a paper on how I thought Gene Roddenberry was a communist sympathiser many years before anyone had asked this question it seemsI'm a big Star Trek fan, the Federation is a perfect society, where money, and greed do not exist. This could represent a perfect communist society as the famous theorist Karl Marx suggested. Communism is a failed society, but could it work in the future as utopia?
I would be happy to read people's opinions.
I agree with this!I'd say they've evolved beyond ideological doctrine, so they're neither communist/capitalist or whatever.
But then again, the Federation society as presented in TNG onwards does not strike me as realistic either - for similar reasons.![]()
But then again, the Federation society as presented in TNG onwards does not strike me as realistic either - for similar reasons.![]()
The DS9 writers agree with you, there. They went to great lengths to show that the Federation wasn't gleaming all over.
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