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Starfleet as a military orginization

Nobody said it was. I said that those concepts, by at least the 23rd century, have been subject to such a huge degree of modification that they are no longer intelligible as such by OUR standards.

Provide evidence of such modification, not assumptions.

A good analogy, since the idea of a military is a SOLUTION to a complex problem much the way a bureaucracy is a solution to an organizational problem. But then, the Federation doesn't seem to be a bureaucracy either.

Have you just been not watching Star Trek or something? Because that claim flies in complete opposition to what Trek has actually established in numerous episodes in films.

The Federation has:

  • an Archaeological Council
  • an Astronomical Committee
  • a Bureau of Agricultural Affairs
  • a Bureau of Industrialization
  • a Bureau of Planetary Treaties
  • a Central Bureau of Penology
  • a Department of Cartography
  • a Department of Temporal Investigations
  • a High Commission
  • a Naval Patrol
  • a News Network
  • a News Service
  • a Science Council
  • a Science Bureau
  • a Starfleet
  • a Terraform Command

and goodness knows how many other bureaucratic entities. The Federation has bureaucracy up the wazzu.

Actually, considering the alarming lack of major Starfleet training centers anywhere but EARTH,

A quick check with Memory Alpha would have let you know this is not true. The canon has established that the Federation Starfleet (FSF) maintains training centers on several worlds:

  1. The Academy Flight Range, near Saturn
  2. Marseille, France, Starfleet base
  3. Starfleet Academy, Beta Aquilae II Campus
  4. Starfleet Academy, Beta Ursae Minor II Campus
  5. Starfleet Academy, Earth Campus
  6. Starfleet testing area, Relva VII
  7. Starfleet Academy, Psi Upsilon III Campus

On top of that, I would be supremely surprised if there are not Starfleet Academy campuses on Vulcan, Andor, and Tellar (though that is speculative).

Then why has Star Trek repeatedly referred to Starfleet as a military?

I was not aware that television shows were capable of referring to themselves. Could you be more specific?

1. Thank you for taking my sentence far more literally than was intended, Mister Data.

2. I have already cited numerous episodes and films in which the FSF is referred to as a military.

You have also ignored the other legally distinguishing characteristic of militaries that I listed: The possession of courts-martial.

20th century legalisms were, again, rendered irrelevant by the year 2079.

There is no evidence that the "legalism" of noting the a military is the only institution in society that has the legal right to use force to enforce its internal code of conduct was done away with. Are you going to argue that Hungry Horta's Pizza and Rock Delivery Service is allowed to lock up its employees if they violate the Pizza Delivery Code?

Um, no, actually I call bullshit on those instances.

You're free to do so. As long as you are aware that this is, in point of fact, a disagreement between you and Star Trek.

Star Trek has been notoriously inconsistent on the question of whether or not the Federation uses money. Sometimes it is depicted as using money, sometimes it isn't. To claim that I "disagree with Star Trek" on that issue is a complete non sequitur, because Star Trek disagrees with Star Trek on that issue.

Suffice to say: whatever the Federation uses is different enough from what WE use that it is not referred to, regulated, governed or accumulated the same way. It is "money" by analogy only, in exactly the way Starfleet is a "military" by analogy only.

Again, there's inconsistent evidence with that regard, and there's no evidence that the Federation currency, if it exists, is "different enough from what WE use" that it's not referred to, etc., the same way. Sometimes there's money, sometimes there isn't; there's no consistency on the issue at all. The nature of the Federation economy changes on the whims of the writers.

Whatever a particular culture/state/language chooses as a way to define "military." This will vary from culture to culture and even century to century in the same culture. The concept is not specific enough or special enough that it must always exist, nor that it cannot be superseded by other concepts.

:rolleyes:

Of course it is. It may not be called by the same word, and we all agree that additional functions may develop or be abolished, and we all agree that the way in which it approaches its basic function can evolve over time, but the basic concept of an institution legally empowered to use violence in the defense of the state and to use force on its members has existed as long as civilization has, and will exist until civilization disbands.

And I'm not even saying that plays don't exist in the 24th century, nor do militaries not-exist in the Federation. Just that Starfleet is no more a military than Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet is a play.

Then why is it called a military by David Marcus in Star Trek II? By Benjamin Sisko in "Homefront"/"Paradise Lost?" Why are its internal courts called courts-martial? Why is Starfleet the institution empowered to enforce martial law as declared by the President?

there is no evidence that the definition of the term has evolved by the 24th Century.

Are you kidding? It's evolved enough since the 18th century. Why would it be the only concept in the human race NOT to evolve in the same amount of time in the future?

Give me evidence that the basic meaning has evolved, not your assumptions.

Anyway, Archer doesn't really count, at that point I believe Starfleet (and that's Earth SF, not UFP SF, which are completely different organizations, as Sci will nodoubt remind us ) really wasn't a military, it only became that later.

That's alot of assumptions for one sentence. First of all, I'm not so sure it IS a different organization considering its academy,

There was no United Earth Starfleet Academy during ENT's era. Sato and Co. were established in "Observer Effect" as graduates of "STC," which apparently means "Starfleet Training Command" or some such. Starfleet Academy was never established to exist in ENT.

headquarters,

The layout of United Earth Starfleet Headquarters, seen in "Demons"/"Terra Prime," is completely different from the earliest Federation Starfleet Headquarters seen in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (or, for that matter, this year's Star Trek). The only thing they have in common is being based out of the San Francisco Bay.

terms, technology and even practices are exactly the same.

Yeah, and the U.S. Navy and U.K. Royal Navy share a lot of terms, technology, and practices. Doesn't make them the same institution.

Actually I'd more readily accept the 24th century organization as "Earth Starfleet" before the reverse proposition.

It's been called the Federation Starfleet on numerous occasions; it was never called the Earth Starfleet.

And anyway, how exactly does stating "our mission is peaceful exploration" prevent them from also being a military?

That appears to be the overall mission of STARFLEET, not just individual commanders.

No, they're both the overall mission of Starfleet. Defending the Federation -- and, yes, Starfleet has to permanently assign much of its fleet to defense, given the presence of continually-hostile neighbors -- and exploring the galaxy. If you were to ask a Federate which one was Starfleet's "primary" mission, they'd probably look at you like you were daft and explain to you in very slow sentences that they're both Starfleet's primary mission and that it's a completely artificial choice to pick between the two.

No one's arguing, after all, that this is a military that functions exactly like modern militaries or that doesn't have another additional primary function. Just that it shares the defining trait of a what we today call a military and that it is therefore a military, even if they use a different word for the concept.

It is the most important thing, and if not for the fact that the Federation's headquarters is on Earth, this would be a major difference. It seems like the Federation actually absorbed Earth and therefore took over the administration of it's Starfleet.

There is no evidence that the Federation actually absorbed United Earth or its starfleet, and in fact Ronald D. Moore noted that when writing "Homefront"/"Paradise Lost," they had intended to include a reference to the Federation President overriding the UE government before cutting it for simplicity's sake.

Why is then SF also tasked with fighting the Dominion War and all other Federation's military engagements?

Because the Federation wanted it to.

Which makes it a military.

small scale terorist attack is much more a threat to internal law and order and individual civilian lives than a real threat to the whole nation.
I agree. Now get someone to explain to me why the U.S. military has been increasingly preoccupied with trying to prevent that sort of thing.

Because George W. Bush was an asshat who didn't understand or care about the line between law enforcement and national security, and thereby undermined the separation of powers that's central to American governance.
 
Nobody said it was. I said that those concepts, by at least the 23rd century, have been subject to such a huge degree of modification that they are no longer intelligible as such by OUR standards.

Provide evidence of such modification, not assumptions.
I have already done so in past posts. Please review them.

A good analogy, since the idea of a military is a SOLUTION to a complex problem much the way a bureaucracy is a solution to an organizational problem. But then, the Federation doesn't seem to be a bureaucracy either.

Have you just been not watching Star Trek or something? Because that claim flies in complete opposition to what Trek has actually established in numerous episodes in films.

The Federation has:

  • an Archaeological Council
  • an Astronomical Committee
  • a Bureau of Agricultural Affairs
  • a Bureau of Industrialization
  • a Bureau of Planetary Treaties
  • a Central Bureau of Penology
  • a Department of Cartography
  • a Department of Temporal Investigations
  • a High Commission
  • a Naval Patrol
  • a News Network
  • a News Service
  • a Science Council
  • a Science Bureau
  • a Starfleet
  • a Terraform Command
And these commands share resources and personnel in such a dynamic and varied way I am reasonably sure at this point that the Federation is an adhocracy. It or its members and agents will create and destroy new organizations based on need and circumstances wit varying degrees of centralization and an extremely diverse set of directives and protocols. How it it be otherwise for what is, by definition, a massive interplanetary alliance between hundreds of different cultures on hundreds of different worlds?

A quick check with Memory Alpha would have let you know this is not true. The canon has established that the Federation Starfleet (FSF) maintains training centers on several worlds:

  1. The Academy Flight Range, near Saturn
  2. Marseille, France, Starfleet base
  3. Starfleet Academy, Beta Aquilae II Campus
  4. Starfleet Academy, Beta Ursae Minor II Campus
  5. Starfleet Academy, Earth Campus
  6. Starfleet testing area, Relva VII
  7. Starfleet Academy, Psi Upsilon III Campus
Good to know people are still updating Memory Alpha.

Three are in the Sol system, three others all come from Okudagrams in Eye of the Beholder without giving further details. I am not entirely sure, however, if these are academy campuses or starbase facilities that train officers (like Relva-VII, which is only an exam room and a simulator). It would be nice to finally see them up close though.

On top of that, I would be supremely surprised if there are not Starfleet Academy campuses on Vulcan, Andor, and Tellar (though that is speculative).
If there were, surely Spock would have attended--and later been an instructor at--the one on Vulcan. And I'm still puzzled by the lack of Andorians in Starfleet; their absence is conspicuous enough that I think they still have their own fleet.

I have already cited numerous episodes and films in which the FSF is referred to as a military.
Asked and answered: BY ANALOGY ONLY.

There is no evidence that the "legalism" of noting the a military is the only institution in society that has the legal right...
Heh... The only institution that has--if you could only hear yourself--legal right to use force. That's an EARTH law from 400 years in Star Trek's past. Starfleet is not a 20th century Earth organization.

Are you going to argue that Hungry Horta's Pizza and Rock Delivery Service is allowed to lock up its employees if they violate the Pizza Delivery Code?
You'd have to ask the Horta. It basically depends on how serious pizza delivery is to their culture, and how their culture and psychology work. For example there are races--the Hiroddan, for example--who would prosecute and imprison some of their members for mispronouncing a greeting.

To claim that I "disagree with Star Trek" on that issue is a complete non sequitur,
It's as simple as this: CHARACTERS in Star Trek insist that Earth does not use money. YOU have claimed that it does. This is a disagreement between you and the characters in Star Trek, is it not? Depiction notwithstanding, and even then you'd have to take those examples of "apparent money use" and take the argument to James T. Kirk and Jean Luc Picard to tell them "Yes you use money, you dope!"

The nature of the Federation economy changes on the whims of the writers.
As does Starfleet.

Of course it is. It may not be called by the same word, and we all agree that additional functions may develop or be abolished, and we all agree that the way in which it approaches its basic function can evolve over time, but the basic concept of an institution legally empowered to use violence in the defense of the state and to use force on its members has existed as long as civilization has, and will exist until civilization disbands.
Sure, "an organization legally empowered to use violence" will always exist. At issue here is whether or not "an organization legally empowered to use violence" always will--or even always has--referred exclusively to "the military." In this case, the Federation has legally empowered its exploration agencies to use violence. They probably have a pretty good reason for this, not least of which may be something implicit in Starfleet that all Federation members find sufficiently trustworthy. That "the organization legally empowered to use violence" is defined as "the military" is an idiosyncrasy of the English language and a convention of international law that, again, I would not expect to be universal, or eternal.

Or let's put this another way: the Vulcan High Command was legally empowered to use violence. Was the Vulcan High Command their military?

Then why is it called a military by David Marcus in Star Trek II?
It's not. David is COMPARING Starfleet to the military, and his mother disagrees.

By Benjamin Sisko in "Homefront"/"Paradise Lost?"
Does he? You'll need to quote that line for me.

Give me evidence that the basic meaning has evolved, not your assumptions.
For that you would have to find an example of where "military" is actually defined in the 24th century. The only explicit reference to it at all is in the 22nd, where Starfleet is shown independent of the MACOs.

Until we can find the 24th century's MACOs and determine who they answer to, there's nothing much to analyze here.

There was no United Earth Starfleet Academy during ENT's era. Sato and Co. were established in "Observer Effect" as graduates of "STC," which apparently means "Starfleet Training Command" or some such. Starfleet Academy was never established to exist in ENT.
I do believe there are references to it in Trip Tucker and Jon Archer's background, being also located in San Francisco.

The layout of United Earth Starfleet Headquarters, seen in "Demons"/"Terra Prime," is completely different from the earliest Federation Starfleet Headquarters
And the VAB at Cape Canaveral looks totally different from any of the buildings used during the Mercury-Gemini program. The only thing they have in common is being at Cape Canaveral.

Yeah, and the U.S. Navy and U.K. Royal Navy share a lot of terms, technology, and practices. Doesn't make them the same institution.
Indeed. On the other hand the U.S. Air Force is the same thing as the old Army Air Corps, and the U.S. National Guard is (basically) the same thing as the militia.

No, they're both the overall mission of Starfleet.
Absolutely. And they are both the overall mission of the WHOLE Starfleet. Exploration, however, has always been depicted as its primary mission, which makes sense since Starfleet spends alot more time doing that then anything else. It's a bit like how space exploration is not the primary mission of the air force, though they have gotten pretty good at it over the years.

No one's arguing, after all, that this is a military that functions exactly like modern militaries or that doesn't have another additional primary function. Just that it shares the defining trait of a what we today call a military and that it is therefore a military, even if they use a different word for the concept.
What we disagree on here is whether "military" is just another word for "the organization legally empowered to use violence against your enemies." It's a question of whether we're arguing legalisms or word usage; that definition is a matter of legal parlance, where actual word usage is less concise and--especially in English--the concept of "military" has connotations far beyond mere legality.

There is no evidence that the Federation actually absorbed United Earth or its starfleet, and in fact Ronald D. Moore noted that when writing "Homefront"/"Paradise Lost," they had intended to include a reference to the Federation President overriding the UE government before cutting it for simplicity's sake.
That's sort of what I meant. Earth gave up control of its own Starfleet and handed it over to Federation control. If they did NOT do so, then you have to wonder--if they are two different organizations--where Earth Starfleet is today.

Of coruse, like alot of people I'd be much happier of Jonathan Archer actually worked for UESPA, but... eh.

Which makes it a military.
Fine. Whatever. Anyone who carries a weapon and kills people when ordered is part of the military. You win, I must be crazy.:rolleyes:
 
Nobody said it was. I said that those concepts, by at least the 23rd century, have been subject to such a huge degree of modification that they are no longer intelligible as such by OUR standards.

Provide evidence of such modification, not assumptions.
I have already done so in past posts.

No, you have not, you have merely repeated an assumption.

And these commands share resources and personnel in such a dynamic and varied way I am reasonably sure at this point that the Federation is an adhocracy.

Please describe to me the manner in which the numerous bureaucracies of the Federation share resources and personnel.

It or its members and agents will create and destroy new organizations based on need and circumstances wit varying degrees of centralization and an extremely diverse set of directives and protocols. How it it be otherwise for what is, by definition, a massive interplanetary alliance between hundreds of different cultures on hundreds of different worlds?

It could easily end up being extremely centralized and rigidly regulated. The size of the Federation has no bearing on that, especially since it's so easy to transmit data from one side of it to the other.

On top of that, I would be supremely surprised if there are not Starfleet Academy campuses on Vulcan, Andor, and Tellar (though that is speculative).

If there were, surely Spock would have attended--and later been an instructor at--the one on Vulcan.

No, because his whole reason for joining Starfleet in the first place -- as revealed in this year's film in a scene that would not have been affected by Nero's temporal incursion -- was to get away from a Vulcan society that he had recognized would never accept him as an equal.

And I'm still puzzled by the lack of Andorians in Starfleet; their absence is conspicuous enough that I think they still have their own fleet.

I don't consider that remarkable at all. DS9 established with the Dominion War that Starfleet literally has hundreds and hundreds of ships and starbases, yet we've only ever seen four Federation crews up close. Meanwhile, references to all-Vulcan crews in TOS ("The Immunity Syndrome") and DS9 ("Take Me Out the Holosuite") establish that the FSF practices some degree of species segregation for its crews. So it's not too surprising that between only seeing a small fragment of Starfleet and Starfleet practicing species segregation that we might not run into any Andorians, or Tellarites, or Ullians, or Zakdorn, even though they all have officers in Starfleet somewhere.

I have already cited numerous episodes and films in which the FSF is referred to as a military.

Asked and answered: BY ANALOGY ONLY.

No, Starfleet was explicitly referred to as a military. You especially cannot rationally claim that they'd call it a court-martial if it wasn't actually martial. That's like saying that it's not actually a starship, it's a boat.

There is no evidence that the "legalism" of noting the a military is the only institution in society that has the legal right...

Heh... The only institution that has--if you could only hear yourself--legal right to use force. That's an EARTH law from 400 years in Star Trek's past. Starfleet is not a 20th century Earth organization.

Are you seriously going to argue that Hungry Horta's Pizza and Rock Delivery Service has the legal right to imprison a pizza delivery employee who breaks their internal code? Are you seriously going to argue that any non-Starfleet organization other than the Federation government itself has the right to use force on its members?

Are you going to argue that Hungry Horta's Pizza and Rock Delivery Service is allowed to lock up its employees if they violate the Pizza Delivery Code?

You'd have to ask the Horta. It basically depends on how serious pizza delivery is to their culture, and how their culture and psychology work. For example there are races--the Hiroddan, for example--who would prosecute and imprison some of their members for mispronouncing a greeting.

And meanwhile, that would surely be a violation of the Guarantees of the Federation Constitution and would get such a culture kicked out of the Federation.

To claim that I "disagree with Star Trek" on that issue is a complete non sequitur,

It's as simple as this: CHARACTERS in Star Trek insist that Earth does not use money. YOU have claimed that it does.

No, OTHER CHARACTERS have claimed that it does.

That YOU can't bring yourself to accept that Star Trek has contradicted itself on this issue does not mean it has not.

Of course it is. It may not be called by the same word, and we all agree that additional functions may develop or be abolished, and we all agree that the way in which it approaches its basic function can evolve over time, but the basic concept of an institution legally empowered to use violence in the defense of the state and to use force on its members has existed as long as civilization has, and will exist until civilization disbands.

Sure, "an organization legally empowered to use violence" will always exist. At issue here is whether or not "an organization legally empowered to use violence" always will--or even always has--referred exclusively to "the military."

Whether the specific word is used, the concept is the same. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's a duck, even if the word being used for ducks is el pato.

In this case, the Federation has legally empowered its exploration agencies to use violence. They probably have a pretty good reason for this, not least of which may be something implicit in Starfleet that all Federation members find sufficiently trustworthy. That "the organization legally empowered to use violence" is defined as "the military" is an idiosyncrasy of the English language and a convention of international law that, again, I would not expect to be universal, or eternal.

The label itself was not the point, and that's why I established what the word military means before describing why the Federation Starfleet is a military. If you want to pretend that the word being used to describe the organization legally empowered to use violence in defense of the state is now grimptup, then, fine, Starfleet is the Federation's grimptup just like the U.S. Armed Forces are the United States's grimptups. The word is not the point, the concept behind the word is the point.

Having said that, there have been numerous references to Starfleet as the military that were not analogies, so the evidence seems to indicate that the world military is still used to refer to an organization legally empowered to use violence to defend the state.

Or let's put this another way: the Vulcan High Command was legally empowered to use violence. Was the Vulcan High Command their military?

Um, yeah. In fact, Vulcan was a de facto military dictatorship until Archer, T'Pol, and T'Pau overthrow Administrator V'Las.

Then why is it called a military by David Marcus in Star Trek II?

It's not. David is COMPARING Starfleet to the military, and his mother disagrees.

No, he's not, and no, she does not. Read my signature: David explicitly calls Starfleet the military and complains that scientists are always its pawns. His mother does not contest that Starfleet is a military, she contests that Starfleet has kept the peace. There's nothing analogous about it. The dialogue is explicit: Starfleet is a military.

By Benjamin Sisko in "Homefront"/"Paradise Lost?"

Does he? You'll need to quote that line for me.

From the script for "Homefront:"

JARESH-INYO
Hmm. I understand the need for
increased security, but...
(referring to the PADD)
Blood screenings and phaser
sweeps?

SISKO
They've proven very effective on
Deep Space Nine.

DEEP SPACE NINE: "Homefront" - 11/04/95 - ACT TWO 26.

26 CONTINUED:

JARESH-INYO
I'm sure they have. But I hope
you'll keep in mind that this is
Earth, not a military
installation.

SISKO
(to the President)
Sir, the thought of filling the
streets with armed troops is as
disturbing to me as it is to you.
But not as disturbing as the
thought of a Jem'Hadar army
landing on Earth without
opposition. The Jem'Hadar are the
most brutal and efficient soldiers
I've ever encountered. They don't
care about conventions of war, or
protecting civilians. They won't
limit themselves to military
targets. They'll be waging the
kind of war that Earth hasn't seen
since the founding of the Federation.

From the script for "Paradise Lost:"

11 CONTINUED: (2)

Sisko and Odo exchange a look. Sisko has to take a
moment to gather his thoughts. This is tremendously
difficult for him but he pushes on.

SISKO
Sir, I believe that certain
Starfleet officers, led by Admiral
Leyton, are conspiring to
overthrow the legitimate
government of the Federation.
and replace it with military rule.

And as the President reacts, as much to Odo and Sisko's
grim demeanor as to Sisko's words, we...

FADE OUT.

END OF ACT ONE

Leyton is reaching out to Sisko, but Sisko refuses to
cross the gulf between them.

SISKO
My duty is to protect the
Federation.

LEYTON
Which is what we're trying to do.

SISKO
What you're trying to do is seize
control of Earth and place it
under military rule.

LEYTON
If that's what it takes to stop
the Dominion.

SISKO
Do you think the other Federation
worlds are going to sit back and
let their President be replaced by
a military dictatorship?

LEYTON
Hardly a dictatorship, Ben.

No less than five times is Starfleet referred to as a military: Starfleet Starbase Deep Space 9 is called a military installation by President Jaresh-Inyo; Starfleet targets of the Jem'Hadar are called military targets by Sisko; the idea of Starfleet directly ruling the Federation is referred to as military rule three times. Heck, when Sisko calls it a military dictatorship, the coup's leader contests the idea of it being a dictatorship, not the idea of it being military.

For that you would have to find an example of where "military" is actually defined in the 24th century.

Are we going to start assuming that every English word in Star Trek has changed meanings when there's no evidence that it has, and when said word is used to mean in an identical manner to its present-day usage?

The layout of United Earth Starfleet Headquarters, seen in "Demons"/"Terra Prime," is completely different from the earliest Federation Starfleet Headquarters

And the VAB at Cape Canaveral looks totally different from any of the buildings used during the Mercury-Gemini program. The only thing they have in common is being at Cape Canaveral.

No, they also have the fact that they're both run by the United States government's NASA program in common; the buildings used by the Mercury-Gemini program were not being run by the State of Texas's "Texas Aeronautics and Space Administration."

Yeah, and the U.S. Navy and U.K. Royal Navy share a lot of terms, technology, and practices. Doesn't make them the same institution.

Indeed. On the other hand the U.S. Air Force is the same thing as the old Army Air Corps,

No, it's not, it's the successor organization of the Army Air Corps.

and the U.S. National Guard is (basically) the same thing as the militia.

No, they're not, they're the successor organizations of the state militia. And several states have maintained their original militias, too, organized as State Defense Forces that, unlike the National Guard, cannot be called into federal service.

No, they're both the overall mission of Starfleet.

Absolutely. And they are both the overall mission of the WHOLE Starfleet. Exploration, however, has always been depicted as its primary mission, which makes sense since Starfleet spends alot more time doing that then anything else.

No, the ships we've followed have spent more time doing that than anything else. But numerous episodes have established that there are plenty of Starfleet ships and bases permanently dedicated to defense missions -- which makes sense, since the Federation is surrounded by hostile imperialists who would invade at a moment's notice if the majority of Starfleet was out beyond UFP borders exploring.

Defense and exploration are both Starfleet's primary missions, and I promise you that neither one is seen as being more important than the other.

No one's arguing, after all, that this is a military that functions exactly like modern militaries or that doesn't have another additional primary function. Just that it shares the defining trait of a what we today call a military and that it is therefore a military, even if they use a different word for the concept.

What we disagree on here is whether "military" is just another word for "the organization legally empowered to use violence against your enemies." It's a question of whether we're arguing legalisms or word usage; that definition is a matter of legal parlance, where actual word usage is less concise and--especially in English--the concept of "military" has connotations far beyond mere legality.

No, it doesn't. "Military" only means "the armed forces." That's it. Those other connotations are things that people with specific political agendas have added to it -- whether those connotations are "honor" or "service" or those connotations are "militarism" or "violence" or "jingoism." But they're not a part of the real definition of the term. They're not a part of the basic concept.

I am arguing legalism, not word usage. I'll happily concede that Starfleet is much less militaristic than modern militaries; it operates very differently and has additional missions. But in terms of the specific legal meaning of the organization legally empowered to defend the state, Starfleet is the Federation's military, even if they use a different word to refer to that legal concept.

There is no evidence that the Federation actually absorbed United Earth or its starfleet, and in fact Ronald D. Moore noted that when writing "Homefront"/"Paradise Lost," they had intended to include a reference to the Federation President overriding the UE government before cutting it for simplicity's sake.

That's sort of what I meant. Earth gave up control of its own Starfleet and handed it over to Federation control. If they did NOT do so, then you have to wonder--if they are two different organizations--where Earth Starfleet is today.

I always presumed that the ships and personnel of the United Earth Starfleet, Andorian Imperial Guard, Vulcan High Command, and Tellarite starfleet were all handed over to the newly-created Federation Starfleet, and that those organizations were then either abolished or abolished and replaced with successor organizations, in the same way that the Massachusetts State Navy effectively ceased to exist after the founding of the Continental Navy and, then, the U.S. Navy.
 
No, because his whole reason for joining Starfleet in the first place -- as revealed in this year's film in a scene that would not have been affected by Nero's temporal incursion -- was to get away from a Vulcan society that he had recognized would never accept him as an equal.
If that was the case, he wouldn't have applied to the Vulcan Science Academy as well.

I don't consider that remarkable at all.
Neither do I... assuming the Andorians have their own fleet parallel to Starfleet.

No, Starfleet was explicitly referred to as a military. You especially cannot rationally claim that they'd call it a court-martial if it wasn't actually martial.
You're leaning too much on the concept of "court martial" as if it explicitly and exclusively refers to a military organization. I suspect you know that quite a few such organizations do not convene court martials in wartime.

That's like saying that it's not actually a starship, it's a boat.
Heh.

Are you seriously going to argue that Hungry Horta's Pizza and Rock Delivery Service has the legal right to imprison a pizza delivery employee who breaks their internal code?
I don't know. Ask the Horta.

Are you seriously going to argue that any non-Starfleet organization other than the Federation government itself has the right to use force on its members?
I wouldn't be surprised.

And meanwhile, that would surely be a violation of the Guarantees of the Federation Constitution and would get such a culture kicked out of the Federation.
I was not aware that the Horta or the Hiroddan were Federation members. Though even if they are, they may not violate those Gaurantees. Vulcan Society definitely tolerates murder as long as they're fighting over a pretty girl.

No, OTHER CHARACTERS have claimed that it does.

That YOU can't bring yourself to accept that Star Trek has contradicted itself on this issue does not mean it has not.
Contradictions must be resolved. In point of fact those contradictions are only possible if we assume current understanding of "currency" is applicable to them. Without that assumption, there is no contradiction.

Whether the specific word is used, the concept is the same. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's a duck, even if the word being used for ducks is el pato.
Sure. But then when the thing you're looking at turns out to have mamary glands and doesn't actually fly, it might be a platypus and not a duck. The devil is in the details.

The label itself was not the point, and that's why I established what the word military means before describing why the Federation Starfleet is a military. If you want to pretend that the word being used to describe the organization legally empowered to use violence in defense of the state is now grimptup, then, fine, Starfleet is the Federation's grimptup just like the U.S. Armed Forces are the United States's grimptups. The word is not the point, the concept behind the word is the point.
Indeed. But Starfleet has critical differences with the U.S. Armed Forces that cannot be glossed over and make for a crucial difference between it and a military. The most important being that militaries do not devote an equal or greater amount of their resources on exploration and (non-weapons related) scientific research.

Um, yeah. In fact, Vulcan was a de facto military dictatorship until Archer, T'Pol, and T'Pau overthrow Administrator V'Las.
The Vulcans would probably disagree... OTOH, I have no problem with taking Starfleet as the de facto military of the Federation, or Ben Sisko as the de facto Viceroy of Bajor.

No, he's not, and no, she does not. Read my signature: David explicitly...
Explicitly? He's saying "Scientists have always been pawns to the military," not "scientists have always been pawns to Starfleet, which is the military." He is implicitly calling Starfleet to the military, to which Carol replies "Starfleet has kept the peace for over a hundred years, I cannot and will not subscribe to your interpretation of these events!" Both statements make implications: David says "They're the military, we're they're pawns!" where Carol replies "Starfleet wouldn't do that, we're not their pawns." It depends on which part she's disagreeing with, though if she's honest with herself she would at least agree that David is correct via military-science relationship.

It could go the other way, of course, that Carol is simply saying "Starfleet is the GOOD military," but there's explicit here you can hang your hat on other than what we already know: That Starfleet is different enough to be something completely knew.

Analogy there. It's like someone saying "This is a rehabilitation facility, not a gulag."

Analogy again, based on what Leyton intends to replace the Federation government--and probably Starfleet--with.

And notice that none of these references here "explicitly" refer to Starfleet. In point of fact, the ones from "Paradise Lost" explicitly refer to ADMIRAL LEYTON's CONSPIRACY.

Starfleet Starbase Deep Space 9 is called a military installation by President Jaresh-Inyo
Inyo never referred to Deep Space Nine.

Starfleet targets of the Jem'Hadar are called military targets by Sisko
Sisko never referred to Starfleet. Indeed, non-military targets would almost certainly include a number of unarmed science stations and outposts operated by Starfleet.

Are we going to start assuming that every English word in Star Trek has changed meanings
Not every one. Just the ones that refer to things that do not exist today. We all know, for example, what Picard is talking about when he says "hologram," and we know he isn't talking about this stuff.

No, they also have the fact that they're both run by the United States government's NASA program in common
Yeah. Like Earth Starfleet and the Federation Starfleet. Earth IS a Federation member, is it not?

Of course, if you assume they're two completely different organizations then the changes between the two (turning from an exploration service into a military organization, in your theory) happened alongside other similarities (same command structure, same weapons, basic technology, terminology, practices, symbolism, space ship design, and apparent nostalgia by Commander Riker) that went unchanged. Earth Starfleet does everything the Federation Starfleet does, and in almost exactly the same way, and yet it is able to do this without being an actual military.

That makes sense to me. And I severely hope for the sake of the Federation that the MACOs are still active in the 24th century.

But numerous episodes have established that there are plenty of Starfleet ships and bases permanently dedicated to defense missions
The only ones that could possibly fit this description are the Neutral Zone Outposts, and nothing much is known about these except the purpose for which they were established. Various starships--yes, even the Enterprise--get called into defensive duty every dozen episodes or so. The thing is, since the Federation doesn't seem to regularly be at war, it's a foregone conclusion that they spend more time at peace than at war, and therefore most of Starfleet DOES spend more time performing peaceful/scientific missions than anything else. It's enough to know that in seven seasons of TNG, Enterprise never once came to the aid or had contact with another starship that was described as being on a permanent defensive mission. It did, however, encounter more than a half dozen "science vessels"...

Defense and exploration are both Starfleet's primary missions
Your primary mission is the mission you do most, the mission for which your ship is optimized. I think we could both agree that a starship whose crew includes a number of civilians and their families does not have "defense" as a primary mission, and we have seen enough starships configured this way to know it is not rare or unusual.

No, it doesn't. "Military" only means "the armed forces."
It does NOW. It used to only mean "the LAND forces," and interestingly enough that definition currently does not include space exploration agencies.

Those other connotations are things that people with specific political agendas have added to it -- whether those connotations are "honor" or "service" or those connotations are "militarism" or "violence" or "jingoism." But they're not a part of the real definition of the term. They're not a part of the basic concept.
I agree. It's just that the basic concept of "Starfleet" is different enough that "the armed forces" does not even describe half of what it does or what it is for.

But in terms of the specific legal meaning...
"Specific legal meaning" is transient and culture-specific. Starfleet is not an American or U.N. invention.

I always presumed that the ships and personnel of the United Earth Starfleet, Andorian Imperial Guard, Vulcan High Command, and Tellarite starfleet were all handed over to the newly-created Federation Starfleet, and that those organizations were then either abolished or abolished and replaced with successor organizations, in the same way that the Massachusetts State Navy effectively ceased to exist after the founding of the Continental Navy and, then, the U.S. Navy.
That works well for the U.S., but it leaves out the fact that Vulcan, Andorian and Tellarite technology were significantly more advanced than Earth technology even at the time of the Federation's founding. If they were all handed over to the Federation Starfleet, I would have expected it to go the other way, with humans serving on Vulcan-designed ships named after Vulcan scientists and explorers, with Starfleet headquarters established on Vulcan, and Starfleet Academy being either Andor or the Rigel Colony (some place with alot of experience training space explorers, which Earth most certainly did not have).

That's why I expect these organizations probably remained separate even to the 24th century. It has an interesting implication for some Federation politics, not least of which is the Cardassian Treaty; imagine, for example, if it was mainly EARTH colonies in dispute and the Federation forced UESPA/Starfleet to abide by the treaty simply because other Federation members had less to loose. Humans are too sensible at this time to resort to irrational race hatred, but that conflict makes alot more sense if other organizations--the Andorian Miliary, for example--had been a bit more successful against the Cardassians and then pressured the Federation into a solution that Earth wasn't satisfied with; it's possible the treaty was formed the way it was simply because the Andorians weren't willing to risk any more of their resources fighting for Earth colonies, so the Council said "Draw the line here and take what we can get." Admiral Leyton's conspiracy may be interpreted as a reaction to that situation. So could the formation of the Maquis: they know that Starfleet would stand up for them, but other Federation members--and their space fleets--would not, and therefore they adopt a "screw you all!" attitude.
 
Explicitly? He's saying "Scientists have always been pawns to the military," not "scientists have always been pawns to Starfleet, which is the military." He is implicitly calling Starfleet to the military, to which Carol replies "Starfleet has kept the peace for over a hundred years, I cannot and will not subscribe to your interpretation of these events!" Both statements make implications: David says "They're the military, we're they're pawns!" where Carol replies "Starfleet wouldn't do that, we're not their pawns." It depends on which part she's disagreeing with, though if she's honest with herself she would at least agree that David is correct via military-science relationship.

It could go the other way, of course, that Carol is simply saying "Starfleet is the GOOD military," but there's explicit here you can hang your hat on other than what we already know: That Starfleet is different enough to be something completely knew.

No David is saying Starfleet is planing to take the Genesis Device at that time becuase Regula 1 had most of it's staff on leave so resistance would be minimal and that they only helped them build it so they (Starfleet) could possibly use it as a WMD against any possible eniemes that could threaten the Federation and Carol was saying Starfleet doesn't operate like that.
 
If that was the case, he wouldn't have applied to the Vulcan Science Academy as well.

Um, he kept both as options, but once he realized the truth about his position among Vulcans he chose Starfleet.

You're leaning too much on the concept of "court martial" as if it explicitly and exclusively refers to a military organization. I suspect you know that quite a few such organizations do not convene court martials in wartime.
Ok, enlighten us, which organization aside from a military can convene a court martial? I'm not sure what's the point of the other sentence. We've seen Starfleet convene a court martial, even in peacetime.


Indeed. But Starfleet has critical differences with the U.S. Armed Forces that cannot be glossed over and make for a crucial difference between it and a military. The most important being that militaries do not devote an equal or greater amount of their resources on exploration and (non-weapons related) scientific research.
I feel we are going in circles, but like it has been said, the US Coast Guard devotes equal or even more time to its other duties (including non-weapons science research) than to defence operations and yet it is still a military. So even today you have a precedent for such an organization.


The Vulcans would probably disagree... OTOH, I have no problem with taking Starfleet as the de facto military of the Federation, or Ben Sisko as the de facto Viceroy of Bajor.
So you do accept it is a military? Just that it officialy, de jure isn't one?



Analogy again, based on what Leyton intends to replace the Federation government--and probably Starfleet--with.
And where will this new military rule come from? Which military? Leyton will found a new one?

And notice that none of these references here "explicitly" refer to Starfleet. In point of fact, the ones from "Paradise Lost" explicitly refer to ADMIRAL LEYTON's CONSPIRACY.
Which is commprised of STARFLEET OFFICERS. Every military coup is conducted by MILITARY OFFICERS. That's why it's military.


Inyo never referred to Deep Space Nine.
Reread the quotes:

SISKO
They've proven very effective on
Deep Space Nine.

JARESH-INYO
I'm sure they have. But I hope
you'll keep in mind that this is
Earth, not a military
installation.




Sisko never referred to Starfleet. Indeed, non-military targets would almost certainly include a number of unarmed science stations and outposts operated by Starfleet.
And what will be the military targets? :vulcan:

Various starships--yes, even the Enterprise--get called into defensive duty every dozen episodes or so. The thing is, since the Federation doesn't seem to regularly be at war, it's a foregone conclusion that they spend more time at peace than at war, and therefore most of Starfleet DOES spend more time performing peaceful/scientific missions than anything else.
You don't have to be at war to conduct missions related to defence. Most of today's states aren't regularly at war but all have fully functioning militaries. Training, wargames, patrol. Weren't there wargames in some episode of TOS?

It's enough to know that in seven seasons of TNG, Enterprise never once came to the aid or had contact with another starship that was described as being on a permanent defensive mission. It did, however, encounter more than a half dozen "science vessels"...
Were those science vessels Starfleet or non-Starfleet? You should also remember that Enterprise was often in deep space, far from Federation's main worlds where presumably most of the defence related operations are conducted.


Your primary mission is the mission you do most, the mission for which your ship is optimized. I think we could both agree that a starship whose crew includes a number of civilians and their families does not have "defense" as a primary mission, and we have seen enough starships configured this way to know it is not rare or unusual.
Can't they unload civilians at a starbase or something? Actually that was the main reason why Ent D's saucer could separate, so civilians could get out of harms way, while the other section goes to combat.

That works well for the U.S., but it leaves out the fact that Vulcan, Andorian and Tellarite technology were significantly more advanced than Earth technology even at the time of the Federation's founding. If they were all handed over to the Federation Starfleet, I would have expected it to go the other way, with humans serving on Vulcan-designed ships named after Vulcan scientists and explorers, with Starfleet headquarters established on Vulcan, and Starfleet Academy being either Andor or the Rigel Colony (some place with alot of experience training space explorers, which Earth most certainly did not have).
The mentioned species had a long history of hostility beetwen each other. Earth and earthrelated stuff were most likely chosen because it was politicaly convenient since Earth was neutral. Or the other races suffered more in the war with Romulans, leaving Earth as the one that is actually strongest (like USA before and after the world wars).

That's why I expect these organizations probably remained separate even to the 24th century. It has an interesting implication for some Federation politics...
I'm sorry, but now you are just making stuff up. You claimed above that because we haven't seen defence starships they don't exist. And now you're willing to accept things like Andorians fighting independently from Starfleet even though there's absolutely no proof for that? Where were all the other militaries in the Dominion War? Why do we always see just Starfleet? Why is only Starfleet mentioned?
 
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