Heck, I don't even drink bear. But apparently my ethnic / genetic background is obvious to some people.
I suspect the bear might object to you trying to drink it.

But yes sometimes ones genetic heritage is obvious.
Heck, I don't even drink bear. But apparently my ethnic / genetic background is obvious to some people.
The figure of nine billion was only cited in Star Trek: First Contact when Data scanned the Borg-altered Earth. I don't think we know the exact population in the normal timeline.
Kor
Somehow I got the idea that the population of a prosperous, non-Borgified Earth would be higher than nine billion.
Kor
Beer. Ale. Liquid bread. {sigh} You know what I meant.I suspect the bear might object to you trying to drink it.![]()
Then in universe that should be reflected on Starfleet vessels.Not to sound like a knob but I thought that the whole point of Trek was that it didn't matter if you were from Iowa,India or Vulcan...
Or was I wrong?
Then we would have to assume that all those TOS colony worlds that only showed a few folks living in a village were really populated by millions, if not billions of humans off-screen. Or the USS Enterprise only visited colonies that had just started up.If human birthrates in the 21st and 22nd century in fictional trek are anything like human birthrates in western countries today, the population would be very low by the 23rd/24th c.
Then in universe that should be reflected on Starfleet vessels.
ROFLOLYou mean, like it is reflected in our modern societies that everyone is equal before the law, and hence everyone has equal opportunities in life, regardless of his/her ethnic background?
Miranda Jones said that she had never been to Earth, so not all Humans come from Earth.I'd love it if Lorca, or Garrett or someone else without a backstory, were born on Andor or Berengaria or ...
Remember, this isn't about ethnicity. It's strictly about in-universe nationality, regardless of race, accent, eye color, or body odor.I'm an American, and I'm beginning to wish there were fewer of us as well as the Brits and Irish. With Captain Lorca, how many white Anglo straight males is that playing father? Archer, Lorca, April, Pike, Kirk, Decker, Harriman, Picard, Riker, etc? And both Garrett and Janeway were white Anglos. Thank God there was some diversity of nationality with Picard being "French" and maybe with April being English.
What I'd like to see, beyond there being more for-rin-ers represented, is more extraterrestrials. Crusher being born on Luna is kinda nice, but I wonder if that would ever make it past the screenshot, given how far young Picard's hair did, among others.
I'd love it if Lorca, or Garrett or someone else without a backstory, were born on Andor or Berengaria or Jupiter, or on a station that's alone in space or that is part of an orbital country. Or if some future character was born on PIcard's friend Louis's New Atlantis continent. Did we ever find out where Pike was born?
They do mention the population of a number of colonies. The most populous is likely the moon, at 50mil.Then we would have to assume that all those TOS colony worlds that only showed a few folks living in a village were really populated by millions, if not billions of humans off-screen. Or the USS Enterprise only visited colonies that had just started up.
Since 22nd to 24th century Earth seems to have a standard of living that is deemed upper middle class compared to today, we can assume the average number of children per family is around 2. The higher the living standards the less kids folks have OR since its no longer expensive to have children, people might have 4 kids per family. Colonies would be expected to have large families to help the population increase and keep the gene pool as diverse as possible (e.g TNG Up the long ladder).
If Star Trek is ever rebooted again from scratch than that '60 million' died in WW3 figure needs to revised upwards to 3 billion instead, it would be more dramatic.Also such a massive loss of population would explain the Eugenic Wars, Colonel Green and why the Enterprise NX01 is not dominated by Indian and Chinese humans. I doubt any Chinese, Russian and Indian government would want the Americans dominating the first space exploration, (unless they were expecting it to fail).
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