No, but you can take the money that you yourself have earned, and purchase food. Then you have something to eat. Isn't money wonderful?
Lol.
Then how about the following:limited resources you could use, and you have $50 billion dollars.
Do tell how exactly do you intend on survive in such a scenario and what good is your money in such a situation?
Oh and... its hardly an extreme example.
By that same token, colonies on Mars for example would have to be completely self-sufficient and able to grow their own foods seeing how the astronauts cannot simply go to a supermarket and buy any.
You have to design it all in into an environment you will be living in.
Money on Mars or on a deserted island is utterly useless.
You need resources.
Not money.
Problem there is, just like money, you can't eat imagination.
Not my problem if people are stuck in a paradigm that limits their perceptions.
However, one cannot nor should expect the minds to change.
We can only expose people to education.
You're ducking the question, how would you allocate limited resources?
Limited resources like what?
As I said before, 'wants' are generated by culture.
Not everyone wants a mansion, or a villa, or a beach house.
Those are quite frankly stupidities of consumer based society that makes people think they want things they really have no use for.
Give everyone relevant general education by exposing them to as much of it as possible so they couldn't be manipulated, and a massive shift in 'wants' will probably occur.
As for how you might allocate materials that are scarce... carefully.
Use them sparingly, and intelligently.
Right now we don't do anything of the sort except expend rare minerals on moronic stupidities that have 0 practical use to society as a whole.
In the last movie, what mechanism decided who lives in the the penthouses of those tall towers in San Fransisco, and whose apartment windows faced the wall across the alley?
I've seen latest Trek movie and that thing was effectively turned into a Star Wars wannabe.
It also has humans behaving like ones today.
Utterly wattered down and dumbed down version from what we saw in regular Trek even.
Based on action only.
Also... as for what mechanism decides who lives in the penthouses... uhm... you do realize we can create penthouses for every person on the planet today.
People simply live wherever there's space that satisfies most of their 'expectations'.
That doesn't mean everyone wants a penthouse in a specific location.
You are assuming that if 1 person lives in a penthouse or a 2 story house that EVERYONE wants the same thing on the same location.
That doesn't even happen today that much... so why would it happen in Trek where humans are supposedly beyond us in behavior?
When Picard said "We've eliminated hunger, want, the need for possessions," how big was this "we" group? Everyone in the Federation, seems unlikely. Was it "we" as in: we are having a dinner party this weekend. a more likely size.
I would imagine Picard was talking about majority of the Human race.
Plus Picard's statement was a out and out lie. Consider one of the last scenes in ST: GEN, Picard and Riker are sorting through the wreakage of Picard's ready room, eventually they find Picard's big book of Shakespearean plays, supposedly this isn't a replicate item, but is a historical antique. Why was it important to Picard? Why not simple replicate a brand new one?
Because it's a treasured possession and Picard wanted it.
Inconsistency is a part of Trek and writers simply had 0 idea on how to represent such humans properly.
That's why Trek degenerated into 21st century in space more and more after Roddenberry's death.
And obviously, the notion of 'private ownership' apparently survived with Trek humans more or less... however, that wouldn't be the case in real life with Resource based economy.
Trek kept numerous elements from today.
Oh please, urban/suburban areas alone acount for three percent of the land area on Earth, agricultural crop land is around eleven percent of Earth's surface, and pasture range land is another twenty-five percent.
And the rather large piece of private property that Robert Picard grows his grapes on?
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http://www.disclose.tv/forum/percentage-of-land-on-earth-is-dominated-by-humans-t66685.html
As for Robert Picard...
Seeing how he liked growing grapes and had sentimental feelings about traditions (however unrealistic in that day and age) why wouldn't he be allowed to grow them on a specific portion of the land... especially if that land was intended for that use since the time when money and private property still existed?
I would imagine that no one would want to force them out of that portion of the land if they hold attachment to it.
But Jean Luc didn't hold that land in any special regard, and Rene probably didn't either.
Sometime, however currency has a very definate meaning. So while money can mean any medium of exchange (including currency), currency only means currency, a particular form of money. Nog being a Ferengi would understand the differences.
Would he now? Nog was still not part of Starfleet at that point and he was in his Ferengi mentality.
So to him... currency and money could be interchangeable terms.
We don't know what Ferengi exact definition of those terms suggests. But currency is not just 'tangible' money (such as coins and paper) - it can and does extend to electronic currency.
Now on the surface, this is a falsehood on Kirk's part. Because we have examples of money use in the TOS movies, both before TVH, and after.
Of course... but seeing how the Federation allows races (that operate within boundaries of monetary economics) into its part of space, its not a stretch to think that as infrequent such use of currency was, it was mostly with such people that were operating outside of regular economics as Humanity and the Federation has.
In TSFS, McCoy wishes to charter a starship. McCoy said "... price you name, money I got." This is from Earth to another point inside the Federation.
After TVH, in TUC, Scotty mention that he had recently purchased a boat.
What can I say, except... writers are stupid for allowing these kind of glaring idiocies?
McCoy's chartering a starship is easy. He could have been dealing with someone who operates on monetary based economics as he wanted to avoid 'official' channels - and these kind of 'underground' deals are stereo-typically connected to monetary based economics to add more 'drama'.
As for Scotty saying he had recently 'purchased' a boat.
Uhm... he also could have been joking.
However, as I said before, the notion of private ownership was extended to Trek only because its something that exists in real life today - doesn't mean it would be the same when we eliminate money.
Trek is limited and only an extremely vague representation.
Plus you are using a movie that also has the Enterprise crossing 30 000 Ly's in a matter of hours all the way to the center of the galaxy.
In the next movie, Kirk states that he owned (private property) a house, and also that he sold it at some point. The usual definition of sold is, to transfer (property or goods) to or render (services) for another in exchange for money.
So what was Kirk talking about? Earlier in TVH, Kirk and company witnessed a woman deposit coins into a vending machine and extract a newspaper. And he said, " They're still using money. We've got to find some." Given that there is money use in the future, Kirk was referring to a certain type of money, the coins, the currency use.
Later in the restaurant with Gillian, the waiter arrives with the bill, Kirk (I'm assuming) no longer has enough of the money he acquired earlier to handle it, he no long possesses enough US currency circa 1980's to pay. Kirk can't access his 23rd century account, and it doubtful the waiter would accept it anyway.
Gillian: "Don't' tell me they don't use money in the twenty-third century." No, they don't use US government banknotes anymore. They don't use anything that Kirk could use to pay for the pizza and beers.
Already explained this above. But sufficed to say that apparently Trek used the notion of private ownership as something that survived... only because its a TV show and had writers with a concept that didn't know (or didn't want to) flesh out properly because they thought that some things need to be kept as they are so they wouldn't alienate the audience.
As for TVH... Kirk was rather to the point when he said that they don't use money.
And no... not just 'US gov. banknotes' but 'money' (as in everything it might imply).
Private ownership could exist without money.
Who obviously hadn't the slightest idea what he was talking about. Again, there was money use in the Federation and on Earth after the time period he mentioned.
As opposed to you, who lived in the Federation and experienced it first hand?
Sounds to me like mr. Paris is an expert compared to everyone on this board - yourself included.
But its only expected you would claim he had no idea what he was talking about.
This one is easy.
Beverly said that all three people had died. People who are cryogenic frozen are considered dead by current legal definitions. If Offenhouse had business partners, family, heirs, they would have inherited, or his mentioned ex-wifes.
If no one else claimed his wealth, then the money would have been taken by the government. This is called escheated. Nearly four centuries after his death, of course his money was gone.
Except that you are ignoring everything that Picard said to these people (for the sake of perpetuating monetary based economics because its something that 'makes sense' to you) and Offenhouse for the other thing was a rather prime example of a capitalist who would do whatever it takes to keep what he 'earned'.
One could say that Picard initially found this man utterly irritable and somewhat pathetic.
I wouldn't call Picard a liar because he was quite consistent in his reasoning time and time again.
A massive shift in social structure and the way we do things as was indicated in early TNG (which was more in line with Roddenberry's ideas in the first place) would probably cause such a thing to occur in the first place.
I'm still not convinced. I'm not saying you are wrong about any of the stuff you said, its just unconvincing for the argument at hand. What you describe isn't at all the society that exists in Star Trek. Its more of the society that exists in Judge Dredd (the comic book, which is actually a very good read). The only difference is that in Judge Dredd money does exist.
For those who have no money (for example, the setting is Mega City 1, which has 98% unemployment. So out of a city of 400 million, thats a lot of people without work. And this was caused by automation, not the war) they are assigned homes by the Justice Department. They are also given money (called credits) to spend on the resources they need. Everything is recycled (even the dead, who are processed into their base elements). The problem with this world is boredom. Which is why the comics (and the movies) always depict the world is violent.
Now of course in what you say, I assume people have no sense of property, and the State provides something for them to do. Right? Artistic pursuits, maybe? Human nature, even if the money motive is removed, will not allow this world to function. While these robots build houses and plow the fields, people will have to come up with some way to keep themselves busy.
And I won't even get started on the environmental disaster that a wind farm the size you're talking about would be.
Ignore every movie and media representation of a money-less economy.
Those are woefully inadequate and inaccurate.
Also, ignore Terminator and similar stupidities.
Machines taking over and turning against Humanity and exterminating us is one of the worst stupidities that came from Hollywood - its one of the reasons why some people 'fear' technology from being unleashed completely.
Besides, I'm not proposing we recreate what was seen in Trek.
Trek was a VERY (read, extremely) vague representation - and numerous things it incorporated simply wouldn't exist in a true money-less economy.
I'm proposing that we make something BETTER.
But in order to do that, we need to educate the general population of our abilities and expose them to relevant generalist information.
That way they won't be prone to manipulation, and when Capitalism crashes again (and it will)... people will start looking towards creating something new (and not just a variation of an existing system like it was done before) because it will be then that they will loose their 'confidence' in the current system, their leaders (because the general population will in turn start loosing everything they have and will be fundamentally unable to survive, let alone do anything else).
Patching up the system won't work.
You are effectively treating the symptoms and not the cause (just like pharmaceutical companies do) - and that, is only a temporary solution.