was it Keerkegaard or Dick Van Patten who said 'if you label me, you negate me'?
There is not one sentence in the exchange that claims Starfleet is or has been a military, only that Leyton means to USE Starfleet to impose military rule.
There is not one sentence in the exchange that claims Starfleet is or has been a military, only that Leyton means to USE Starfleet to impose military rule.
And... how does that distinction, like, matter? If Starfleet already has the organization and firepower and ships and officers and authority structure in place to function indistinguishably from a military, why is it even important to insist that it's somehow not a military? What, when it comes right down to it, is your point?
There is not one sentence in the exchange that claims Starfleet is or has been a military, only that Leyton means to USE Starfleet to impose military rule.
And... how does that distinction, like, matter? If Starfleet already has the organization and firepower and ships and officers and authority structure in place to function indistinguishably from a military, why is it even important to insist that it's somehow not a military? What, when it comes right down to it, is your point?
He has an ideological problem with the concept of a "military" (he thinks that a military is automatically belligerent or jingoistic) and therefore cannot emotionally accept that the heroes of Star Trek are military officers, that's all.
PICARD
Starfleet is not a military
organization. Our purpose is
exploration.
KOLRAMI
Then why am I here?
PICARD
Because with the Borg threat,
I have decided that my officers
and I need to hone our tactical
skills.
(MORE)
STAR TREK: "Peak Performance" - REV. 4/21/89 - TEASER 4.
4 CONTINUED: (3)
PICARD (Cont'd)
In a crisis situation, it is
prudent to have several options.
RIKER
I still prefer brains over brawn.
(to Kolrami)
I think it's a waste of
effort to test our combat skills
-- it's a minor province in the
make-up of a starship captain.
KOLRAMI
Your objection is noted. Let us
hope your distaste for the
exercise will not affect your
strategic abilities.
There is a moment as Riker absorbs the words and the
underlying contempt with which they were delivered.
RIKER
Mister Kolrami, when I agree to
do a thing. I do it.
(to Picard, lighter)
Care to surrender now, Captain?
Picard gives Riker a warm, small smile, then looks to
Kolrami as if to say, "see what a hell of a fellow he
is?" Off their various expressions --
But you can't deny Captain, that
you're still a dangerous, savage
child-race.
PICARD
Most certainly I deny it. I agree
that we still were when ...
(indicating)
... humans wore costumes like that
four hundred years ago...
"Q" (MARINE CAPTAIN)
At which time you slaughtered
millions in silly arguments about
how to divide the resources of
your little world. And four
hundred years before that you were
murdering each other in quarrels
over tribal god-images. And since
there have been no indications
that humans will ever change
.....
PICARD
But even as far back as... !
(indicates)
... that costume, we had begun to
make rapid progress.
"Q" (MARINE CAPTAIN)
Oh? Shall we review your "rapid
progress"?
Paramilitary:
1. noting or pertaining to an organization operating as, in place of, or as a supplement to a regular military force
And... how does that distinction, like, matter? If Starfleet already has the organization and firepower and ships and officers and authority structure in place to function indistinguishably from a military, why is it even important to insist that it's somehow not a military? What, when it comes right down to it, is your point?
He has an ideological problem with the concept of a "military" (he thinks that a military is automatically belligerent or jingoistic) and therefore cannot emotionally accept that the heroes of Star Trek are military officers, that's all.
No. What I have is an ability ot resolve inconsistencies in a way you don't like.
here is the full excahnge from PEAK PERFORMANCE. It is not as CLB described.
PICARD
Starfleet is not a military
organization. Our purpose is
exploration.
KOLRAMI
Then why am I here?
PICARD
Because with the Borg threat,
I have decided that my officers
and I need to hone our tactical
skills.
from ENCOUNTER AT FARPOINT
But you can't deny Captain, that
you're still a dangerous, savage
child-race.
PICARD
Most certainly I deny it. I agree
that we still were when ...
(indicating)
... humans wore costumes like that
four hundred years ago...
"Q" (MARINE CAPTAIN)
At which time you slaughtered
millions in silly arguments about
how to divide the resources of
your little world. And four
hundred years before that you were
murdering each other in quarrels
over tribal god-images. And since
there have been no indications
that humans will ever change
.....
PICARD
But even as far back as... !
(indicates)
... that costume, we had begun to
make rapid progress.
"Q" (MARINE CAPTAIN)
Oh? Shall we review your "rapid
progress"?
etc.
He has an ideological problem with the concept of a "military" (he thinks that a military is automatically belligerent or jingoistic) and therefore cannot emotionally accept that the heroes of Star Trek are military officers, that's all.
No. What I have is an ability ot resolve inconsistencies in a way you don't like.
You have consistently argued that Starfleet cannot be a military because of its peaceable ethos, as though a military has an inherently violent or jingoistic ethos. You have demonstrated a repeated inability to separate the legal concept of a military from the idea of belligerence.
Picard's full of shit there if we take him literally.
It would probably be most reasonable to take it that he misspoke -- that he meant to say, "Starfleet is not a militant organization."
Because his statement there contradicts, as I and others have noted, previous statements affirm Starfleet's military nature, including "Court Martial"
and The Wrath of Khan,
and future statements affirming Starfleet's military nature, including "Homefront."
And, yes, "Homefront" establishes that Starfleet is a military. At no point does Leyton's coup indicate that it's changing the structure or nature of Starfleet -- his coup would change the structure and nature of the Federation government. He isn't transforming Starfleet into a military, he's putting the military in charge of the government. By your logic, the military junta in charge of Burma isn't a real military.
"That costume" obviously refers to the old, pre-Earth unification states to which that uniform belonged, and in particular to the jingoistic ideals represented by the US military of the Cold War. That's not evidence of anything, and certainly not evidence that Starfleet is not a military.
Starfleet is an exploratory organization that sometimes assumes the duties of a military. It is not a military organization as they themselves say, repeatedly.
Starfleet is an exploratory organization that sometimes assumes the duties of a military. It is not a military organization as they themselves say, repeatedly.
You're clinging to the assumption that "military" means "combat-oriented." That assumption has been repeatedly demonstrated to be fallacious. Yes, I agree with you 100 percent that Picard is arguing that Starfleet is not a combat organization. I agree with you 100 percent that Starfleet is dedicated to exploration as its primary goal with defense as a secondary priority.
But the point that Sci, Dave, and others have ably demonstrated, and that you are consistently missing, is that a military does not have to be combat-oriented. The Swiss military and the Japanese military are both outright forbidden by their nations' laws to participate in combat. Many militaries throughout history have engaged actively in exploration, science, diplomacy, humanitarian aid, etc.
So the problem is that you're misunderstanding what this debate is about. I don't think anyone here (other than Dayton3) is disagreeing with you about Starfleet placing exploration above defense. All we're saying is that putting exploration first is not inconsistent with the strict technical definition of the word "military."
So we're in agreement on the issue that really matters. The only remaining dispute is over an academic matter of terminology. And it's sad that you're being so intractable and confrontational in defense of such a minuscule difference.
Starfleet is an exploratory organization that sometimes assumes the duties of a military. It is not a military organization as they themselves say, repeatedly.
You're clinging to the assumption that "military" means "combat-oriented." That assumption has been repeatedly demonstrated to be fallacious. Yes, I agree with you 100 percent that Picard is arguing that Starfleet is not a combat organization. I agree with you 100 percent that Starfleet is dedicated to exploration as its primary goal with defense as a secondary priority.
But the point that Sci, Dave, and others have ably demonstrated, and that you are consistently missing, is that a military does not have to be combat-oriented. The Swiss military and the Japanese military are both outright forbidden by their nations' laws to participate in combat. Many militaries throughout history have engaged actively in exploration, science, diplomacy, humanitarian aid, etc. as well as combat. Starfleet has a different emphasis than most modern militaries, but that's not incompatible with it being a military service. Because "military" doesn't mean "warlike," it simply means a regimented, armed group of personnel in service to the state and acting in its interests.
So the problem is that you're misunderstanding what this debate is about. I don't think anyone here (other than Dayton3) is disagreeing with you about Starfleet placing exploration above defense. All we're saying is that putting exploration first is not inconsistent with the strict technical definition of the word "military."
So we're in agreement on the issue that really matters. The only remaining dispute is over an academic matter of terminology. And it's sad that you're being so intractable and confrontational in defense of such a minuscule difference.
Sorry. He didn't say "combat." he said "military."
And it does matter to me. I've not been watching the adventures of military men and women all these years. I've been watching explorers.
How am i being "confrontational?"Starfleet is an exploratory organization that sometimes assumes the duties of a military. It is not a military organization as they themselves say, repeatedly.
You're clinging to the assumption that "military" means "combat-oriented." That assumption has been repeatedly demonstrated to be fallacious. Yes, I agree with you 100 percent that Picard is arguing that Starfleet is not a combat organization. I agree with you 100 percent that Starfleet is dedicated to exploration as its primary goal with defense as a secondary priority.
But the point that Sci, Dave, and others have ably demonstrated, and that you are consistently missing, is that a military does not have to be combat-oriented. The Swiss military and the Japanese military are both outright forbidden by their nations' laws to participate in combat. Many militaries throughout history have engaged actively in exploration, science, diplomacy, humanitarian aid, etc. as well as combat. Starfleet has a different emphasis than most modern militaries, but that's not incompatible with it being a military service. Because "military" doesn't mean "warlike," it simply means a regimented, armed group of personnel in service to the state and acting in its interests.
So the problem is that you're misunderstanding what this debate is about. I don't think anyone here (other than Dayton3) is disagreeing with you about Starfleet placing exploration above defense. All we're saying is that putting exploration first is not inconsistent with the strict technical definition of the word "military."
So we're in agreement on the issue that really matters. The only remaining dispute is over an academic matter of terminology. And it's sad that you're being so intractable and confrontational in defense of such a minuscule difference.
And sad that he's actively denying the objective definition of a military in order to avoid admitting that Starfleet is one.
Interesting Discussion.
No offense Redjack, but you've been refuted numerous times on this board and every piece of literature, every series, spin-off, etc, clearly shows that Starfleet has a duel purpose role which is based on a military nature.
To continue to argue this point in the face of such evidence and logic is illuminating that, in THIS discussion, you are beginning to suffer from Voltaire's definition of madness:
"To have erroneous perceptions and reason correctly from them."
Not trying to beat you up, but you're clearly grasping too hard.
CODA:
The definition of MARTIAL that I found is this:
1. Of, relating to, or suggestive of war.
2. Relating to or connected with the armed forces or the profession of arms.
3. Characteristic of or befitting a warrior.
So, absent a war footing, say Borg or Dominion incursion, the use of the term Court Martial in post-TOS Starfleet must be a function of habit rather than a description of the organization's intent or focus.
It is not an organization built to engage in warfare, which is part of the definition. It is an organization that is sometimes tasked with defense under certain conditions, making it, as I said, a paramilitary group at most.
How do we know? Because they say, repeatedly, that they are not a military organization. QED.
The Swiss military and the Japanese military are both outright forbidden by their nations' laws to participate in combat.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.