Voles got in the wiringWell, the lighting on the station was noticeably dimmer than say, the Enterprise-D.![]()
Voles got in the wiringWell, the lighting on the station was noticeably dimmer than say, the Enterprise-D.![]()
And even in Season 3 of TOS and in one of the absolute worst episodes of that series the children living on a Federation research outpost lose all their parents to the Gorgan entity and proceed to bury their grief and follow their new benefactor on a mission to destroy the population of another Federation world. The episode concludes with the children viewing images of their parents' grave markers and crying in sadness and anguish over losing their loved ones.
As awful as that episode is that scene is still very sad to watch and the kids did pretty commendable acting jobs conveying their grief.
You forgot a big one - "Arena" - an entire Federation Colony (with women and children as stated by the one survivor who ultimately died in Sickbay) wiped out by the Gorn AND the 1701 lured there by fake messages for a test of combat abilities. Yep light and family friendly material here.Yeah, but I don't think that was intended to be the takeaway there.
"Good news, Spock! You'll get more screen time later. Shame about Mitchell and Dehner, though . . . "
And, seriously, let's look at season one of TOS. Just off the top of my head: "Mantrap" is about McCoy discovering that his former sweetheart has been killed and replaced by a Salt Vampire--and ends with Kirk lamenting that they had to kill the last of its species. "Charlie X" ends in with poor, tragic Charlie doomed to live apart from other human beings for the rest of his life. "Balance of Terror" ends with Lt. Martine weeping over the death of her fiancee on their wedding day. "Conscience of the King" ends with poor, crazy Lenore being shipped off to a mental hospital after she accidentally kills her own father, the guilt-ridden war criminal. And need I mention Edith Keeler?
But STAR TREK didn't get "dark" until DS9?
(And none of those episodes were about life in a "post-scarcity" economy.)
No - supported by dialogue across many TOS Episodes:
TOS - "Mudd's Women":
http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/4.htm
TOS - "Errand of Mercy":
http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/27.htm
TOS - "I Mudd":
http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/41.htm
^^^
And yes, I can find MANY MORE examples of the Federation and it's citizens using money (aka Federation Credits) in more episodes. So sorry no, it's canon that the Federation used money in the 23rd century. It was TNG that tried to retcon that fact.
I used to think the Federation had no money, based on things from TNG/VOY, but I guess upon examination, although most things are post-scarcity, there seems to be currency used for those few resources that are still scarce. Also given the different attitudes seen in TOS to TNG, it's quite possible that the Federation economy became more post-scarcity after TOS.
This fits well with a progressive democracy, in which more and more things are seen as basic rights.
In some countries today, education up to university level is free, and a basic right, in others it isn't.
If I was to guess, I would say that during TOS the Federation still had more vestiges of the capitalism of eras past than in later eras, but by TNG, the Federation's currency is largely used for luxury goods, with food/accommodation being entirely free, and a basic right.
Kind of important.
Something between Mitchell and Kirk.
Chekov wasn't yet serving on the bridge. We weren't with Khan every moment he was on the Enterprise. They could've met while taking a piss in the men's room at the same time.
Close to the age of the refit. Which Will Decker calls an almost totally new Enterprise.
Those are all single data points. That detail about money repeats a lot. Uhura buys a Tribble. "Permits many. Money, more." Kirk sells his house in Generations.Details. Like the R. in Kirks name. Chekov meeting Khan on the Enterprise. The Enterprise being 20 years old in Star Trek III.
DISCO (the revised Old Testament ) has brought money back to the 23rd Century. Mudd's father-in-law is an arms merchant and seems to be quite wealthy.
As does the detail about no money. Picard unequivocally states that not only money doesn't exist, but that they don't get paid and the pursuit of material wealth is no longer their driving force. Difficult to argue your way round that one. And there doesn't seem to be a dramatic societal shift anywhere between TOS and TNG resulting in the sudden withdrawal from a monetary economy.Those are all single data points. That detail about money repeats a lot.
Why is that always an answer? "Oh, it's from outside." If you can have anything you want, then how can you go "outside" to get MORE of anything you want? What is it that makes the Disco crew recognize Stella's dad as "rich"? Mudd, Cyrano Jones, and The Outrageous Okana were all shady money grubbing rogues. But only "outside the Federation".Perhaps garnered from other non federation cultures, to be spent with non federation cultures?
Why is that always an answer? "Oh, it's from outside." If you can have anything you want, then how can you go "outside" to get MORE of anything you want? What is it that makes the Disco crew recognize Stella's dad as "rich"? Mudd, Cyrano Jones, and The Outrageous Okana were all shady money grubbing rogues. But only "outside the Federation".
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