The implication was he's selling arms to the Federation.Perhaps garnered from other non federation cultures, to be spent with non federation cultures?
The implication was he's selling arms to the Federation.Perhaps garnered from other non federation cultures, to be spent with non federation cultures?
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.
The implication was he's selling arms to the Federation.
I'm not happy with TNG's "Hey we don't have money" (one, I don't believe it and two they aren't consistent with it) but I get that that was where they planted their flag. The times they mention "credits" or any such in TNG was usually a little glitchy.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.
In short, wildly inconsistent, irreconcilably so. We just need to accept it. Like the military thing. It's Schrödinger's Canon. The federation simultaneously both uses and does not use money while it's Starfleet is simultaneously a military, and not. Quantum continuity.
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.
In the previous movie McCoy was trying to buy passage on a spaceship.
Mudd talked about being able to buy a moon. Can he do that in the Federation? How?."
Picard was also subjected to: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.
In short, wildly inconsistent, irreconcilably so. We just need to accept it. Like the military thing. It's Schrödinger's Canon. The federation simultaneously both uses and does not use money while it's Starfleet is simultaneously a military, and not. Quantum continuity.
Just to torture the Biblical analogy further, given that DISCOVERY takes place in the 23rd century, are we surprised that it leans more toward the Old Testament (TOS) than the New Testament (TNG)?
In other words, who cares what Picard said? That's a hundred years later.![]()
But TOS never even hinted at not having money. In Star Trek IV it was that they didn't have 20th century US currency and it's the only time in all of TOS that "not using money" was even suggested. In the previous movie McCoy was trying to buy passage on a spaceship.
My point is that if we have money in the 23rd century, and no money in the 24th, that's a major societal change - one of the biggest in human history, in fact. Yet it doesn't seem to have changed much at all. Other than tighter uniforms, fewer buttons, and more pompous captains, Starfleet and the Federation doesn't seem to be any different. They can just make earl grey tea out of thin air. Nothing to indicate the seismic social changes that would come with inventing a replicator.But there had to have been one. Because "no money" is a definite TNG addition to the franchise. Much like the shift in the Prime Directive and how Starfleet sees itself.
I suppose even in the future govt is run by assholes.
It could happen nearly overnight with the invention of the replicator rendering the concept of material value nearly irrelevant. It's not the timescale that's unrealistic. It's the changes that a society goes through in such circumstances that are just not evidenced on screen. Think about the way the world has changed as a result of the internet in 30 years, and then imagine the scale of societal and political change that would result from ending the existence of money and scarcity of material. Yet the Federation and Starfleet of the 24th century are essentially the same as that of the one where Scotty was able to buy a boat. A bit more up themselves perhaps, but fundamentally unchanged.Shuttles and space stations, for example, didn't exist 100 years ago, they were pure science fiction, yet now they are part of our reality. Drastic changes can and do happen in such relatively short periods of time. It's not unimaginable that in the Trek universe all those things - a complete elimination of money, implementation of technology such as replicators, etc. - could've happened within a relatively short time-span of ca. 80-100 years.
That’s a failure of the imagination of the writers more than anything else.It could happen nearly overnight with the invention of the replicator rendering the concept of material value nearly irrelevant. It's not the timescale that's unrealistic. It's the changes that a society goes through in such circumstances that are just not evidenced on screen. Think about the way the world has changed as a result of the internet in 30 years, and then imagine the scale of societal and political change that would result from ending the existence of money and scarcity of material. Yet the Federation and Starfleet of the 24th century are essentially the same as that of the one where Scotty was able to buy a boat. A bit more up themselves perhaps, but fundamentally unchanged.
Welcome to Star Trek.That’s a failure of the imagination of the writers more than anything else.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.