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Star Trek: Discovery Just Challenged the Federation’s Fiscal Hypocrisy
Den of Geeks ^ | January 6, 2021 | Ryan Britt

Posted on 01/08/2021 5:50:42 AM PST by C19fan

`Remember that time when Admiral James T. Kirk pretended to be a socialist so he didn’t have to pay the bill on a pizza date? In Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, Dr. Gillian Taylor (Catherine Hicks) rolls her eyes as Kirk is taken-aback about having to pay for the pizza and one round of Michelob (yes, Michelob) beers. Gillian says, “Don’t tell me that they don’t have money in the 23rd Century.” Kirk replies faux-innocently, “Well, we don’t!”

Even by that point, Trekkies knew that Kirk was playing dumb. This is the same Kirk who successfully staged a hostile takeover of a gangster planet in “A Piece of the Action,” and was more than a little bit familiar with the belly-dancer cafe scene on the planet Argelius II in “Wolf in the Fold.” In “The Doomsday Machine,” Kirk told Scotty that his favorite miracle worker had “just earned your week’s pay,” for fixing some phaser-banks at the last second.

(Excerpt) Read more at denofgeek.com ...


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: economic; scifi; trek
One of the most infuriating things about "The Next Generation" was the sanctimony about not having money and claiming people have moved beyond acquisition. Although perhaps in response to this we did get Deep Space 9. I guess I am not the only one who wanted to give the self-righteous Federation a kick in the arse. Think about the TNG episode where Jean-Luc visits the family vineyard in France. Obviously wine being produced the old fashioned way cannot be replicated so how does Robert Picard exchange his wine for the non-replicated fresh food and like he wants in his house. By barter??? Good gawd no.
1 posted on 01/08/2021 5:50:42 AM PST by C19fan
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To: C19fan

If people really paid attention to Star Trek, by TNG and Deep Space, Earth is ruled by if not “noble” houses but political or influential families. Kirk’s family, Riker’s family, Janeway’s family, were all connected to the space aristocracy.


2 posted on 01/08/2021 5:57:49 AM PST by j.argese (/s tags: If you have a mind unnecessary. If you're a cretin it really doesn't matter, does it?)
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To: j.argese

My idiot brother is a “Star Trek communist. During an argument a year ago I pointedly asked him multiple times if he was a Marxist and he kept evading the question and when I finally pressed him really hard he replied “I believe in a Star Trek future.” Marxist lie. They will never admit to being a marxist.


3 posted on 01/08/2021 6:07:33 AM PST by wildcard_redneck (COVID lockdowns is are the Establishment's attack on the middle class and our Republic)
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To: j.argese

I used to love watching Star Trek. I then took a break. Now when I channel surf to a rerun I see that it’s just a brainwashing show that shows the wonders what really looks like a communist Utopia. No need for money, those like like money are evil, everything is governed by bureaucrats, they have rules for everyone but violate them anytime they desire.


4 posted on 01/08/2021 6:12:09 AM PST by Dutch Boy
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To: wildcard_redneck

Ask him what his prime directive is.

And if the federation is not to try to influence “other cultures” then leave America the hell alone!


5 posted on 01/08/2021 6:19:54 AM PST by a fool in paradise (Who built the cages, Joe?)
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To: Dutch Boy

>>No need for money, those like like money are evil, everything is governed by bureaucrats, they have rules for everyone but violate them anytime they desire.

The ones I’ve seen pushing this agenda in real life are trustifarian anarchists and billion dollar globalists.


6 posted on 01/08/2021 6:21:21 AM PST by a fool in paradise (Who built the cages, Joe?)
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To: C19fan

“Try this. It’s a drink humans call root beer”.


7 posted on 01/08/2021 6:23:22 AM PST by CletusVanDamme (Well I'm all broken up about that man's rights...)
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To: C19fan
One of the most infuriating things about "The Next Generation" was the sanctimony about not having money and claiming people have moved beyond acquisition.

YET, the Federation had "its" territory it would defend.

And there was rank in there were Admirals, captains, etc.

8 posted on 01/08/2021 6:25:51 AM PST by ealgeone
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To: ealgeone

One of the most infuriating things about “The Next Generation” was the sanctimony about not having money and claiming people have moved beyond acquisition.

__________________________________________________

It was an incredibly stupid part of the show. I remember it well. It’s amazing how the political Left latches on to things like that and ignores their own obvious desires for material and political advancement/improvement.


9 posted on 01/08/2021 6:46:09 AM PST by Bishop_Malachi (Liberal Socialism - A philosophy which advocates spreading a low standard of living equally.)
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To: ealgeone

Yes. And they valued some lives over others, throw away lives: be a Red Shirt on an away team and you die.


10 posted on 01/08/2021 6:47:20 AM PST by Hulka ( )
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To: C19fan
The most annoying thing about Star Trek and other
leftist influenced space operas is the addressing
of the female officers as "Sir."

"Sir" is used only when addressing a male officer
or another male who is in a position of authority or
as a sign of respect to an older more experienced male
person such as one's father.

Applying "Sir" or "Mister" to a female would to
me come across as insulting a lady. Try calling
Queen Elizabeth II "Sir" or "Mister".

11 posted on 01/08/2021 7:17:13 AM PST by StormEye
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To: C19fan

Kirk had money, he just sold the reading glasses he got as a birthday gift, at an antique clock shop. He then ensured the crew got a share of it. He’s just cheap.

That’s why she brushes him off at the end saying she rather hang out with the whales.


12 posted on 01/08/2021 7:21:29 AM PST by CW_Conservative
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To: j.argese

“If people really paid attention to Star Trek, by TNG and Deep Space, Earth is ruled by if not “noble” houses but political or influential families. Kirk’s family, Riker’s family, Janeway’s family, were all connected to the space aristocracy.”

Funny you mention this.

At one time I considered trying to write an ST novel, though CBS buying the IP probably means that project will never be done now. One of the things I wanted to do was show how the average person lived a little more, so I tried to do a logical think-through of how the Federation’s economics would work with no currency. I started with my base assumptions we can get directly from the source material, which are:

1. The Federation does not use currency for exchange of goods

2. Replicators do not create a post scarcity society like is claimed, because replicated food and goods are considered lower quality. Those items are ‘good enough’ but traditional manufactured and prepared items are higher quality.

3. Certain things of value can’t be replicated, not even cheaper, lower quality versions of these things. Prime location real estate comes to mind. Starship fuel (anti-matter) is probably also in this category.

4. The Federation has not abolished the idea of private property.

5. Picard goes at length to talk about how people work to better themselves and not for pay. We know the truth of human nature, however, and while some may truly work because they want to, it would not be a necessity. You’d have huge numbers of people who simply subsist on freely available replicated goods, living in their tiny replicated box for an apartment, and watching TV all day.

6. The source material also makes it clear that reputation is hugely important in Federation society. This strongly suggests something like an official or unofficial social credit score system.

Conclusions that can obviously be drawn from this:

1. At the point in history that currency was abolished, those who found themselves in possession of valuable goods that couldn’t be replicated, or the means of producing goods that perhaps could be replicated, but the replicated versions were poor quality, would be in strong positions of power.

2. The result of #1 is an unofficial but very real aristocracy. Federation society would have the trappings of a representative government but in reality would be an oligarchy ruled by a small number of families that control influential industries.

3. Those in power would constantly be doing favors for each other using the means at their disposal. They would also use these means to reward those from the lower class that they liked and punish those that they didn’t.

4. There would be almost no middle class. There would be a small aristocracy at the top, a gigantic underclass at the bottom, and the middle class between these would be the smallest group. Middle class people, being generally defined as those willing or wanting to work and having the skill to do so, would really only have three options to make anything of themselves. A) The extremely intelligent may invent something new that becomes an essential, non-replicable item that elevates that person to the unofficial aristocracy (this would be difficult though. More likely this person’s idea would simply be stolen by the powers that be). B) Colonization of frontier worlds. C) Starfleet. Most will probably choose C.

5. Because of #4, Starfleet’s enlisted personnel, junior, and field grade officers will tend to have a different cultural attitude and mindset than the rest of Federation society or Starfleet’s admiralty. Basically, I would expect one would need to start toeing the political line to reach the rank of Captain or higher (the idea of my original novel took place after the Dominion War, where that normal unofficial rule was relaxed out of necessity). Similarly, those who choose to move to remote worlds as colonists will have a different view as well. Only the group that works its way into the aristocracy will fit in with current Federation society, though that fit probably won’t be perfect either.

6. The incredible amount of laziness and sloth in Federation society will be a breeding ground for ignorance and ripe for exploitation by a bad actor or actors. The society described is not stable and could be broken pretty readily by a small group of motivated individuals. The only reason it hasn’t already is because the cultures the Federation interacts with commonly either 1) are similar to themselves (these are mostly Federation members) or 2) so different that the foreign culture can’t really infect or subvert their own (Klingons, Dominion, Borg). The Romulans might prove a cultural threat, except they are so isolationist it’s never been an issue. In recent Trek canon, their biggest cultural threat was actually the Cardassians, even though they weren’t a military threat. The Cardassians were not isolationists and their culture was similar enough to infiltrate and be disruptive to the Federation’s fragile society. Their initial military hostility to the Federation and later joining the Dominion prevented this.

7. Federation leadership would have little understanding of anything like moral values. Their morals would be maintaining power at all costs. The underclass would be ‘medicated’ with free stuff and wouldn’t know anything about values either. Only Starfleet and pioneers who choose to colonize remote planets would have any moral basis to their lives, because their lives would require it.

An adversary with the right cultural context wouldn’t have too hard of a time breaking the UFP. It is truly ripe for massive exploitation, chiefly because it’s philosophical view is that people are better because they evolved, which is not how people are. If people are better, it’s because they chose to be. If you think that people are better because they evolved to be, then anything you do becomes good, because it’s in your nature, and therefore moral. Such a society could easily be lead around by the nose using propaganda and fear.


13 posted on 01/08/2021 7:33:07 AM PST by JamesP81 (The Democrat Party is a criminal organization.)
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To: C19fan

Money is not only a medium of exchange it is also a store of value. Even the most primitive societies had barter, exchanging goods for goods. The development of money very quickly followed. It is inconceivable that in some far off future that a highly advanced society could run without an economy based on some medium of exchange or store of value.


14 posted on 01/08/2021 9:18:59 AM PST by The Great RJ ("Socialists are happy until they run out of other people's money." Margaret Thatche)
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To: JamesP81
Great analysis! Only one thing: it appears that the Cardassians have in fact already infiltrated our civilization.

They just changed the first letter of their last name to 'K'.

15 posted on 01/08/2021 9:19:24 AM PST by who_would_fardels_bear (This is not my current tagline.)
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To: JamesP81

That was a profound and illuminating analysis you put great thought to. And you pointed out where humankinds’ inherent failings prevent us from truly progressing - like where they merely replaced currency with standing in the pecking order and exchanging favors. That’s where the Soviet Union was and China surely does today.

I met and spoke with Rodenberry pre-resurgence when he was floating a small presentation between colleges showing the pilot doing Q & A and he sincerely believed this was the way to go. I’m a Cold War guy who knows that system would work if people could live up to it, but they can’t so we’re far better off with meritocracy (or close illusion of it) that really does push people to bettering themselves and their society.


16 posted on 01/08/2021 1:34:17 PM PST by MikelTackNailer (Fortunately despite aging I've been spared the ravages of maturity.)
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To: CW_Conservative

They had credits in the original, and only series.


17 posted on 01/08/2021 2:00:46 PM PST by cowboyusa (America Cowboy up!)
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To: C19fan

In the First Contact movie Picard was in the middle of a Borg takeover of his ship where defeating them was the number 1 concern as they were going to change time and convert the people of Earth into drones. He stops and explains to a women from the time period that they have moved beyond money....

In the tv show they came across people frozen from hundreds of years earlier and Picard was facing the destruction of outposts along the Romulan border (Borg) and they have a Romulan warship decloaking off their bow. Picard explains to a former rich investor that again they have moved on from money and we work to better ourselves....

Star Trek: The Next Generation can really be boring. I have read descriptions of episodes of it being like a meeting in a teachers lounge.

BTW Star Trek: STD is just that, a STD.

The actors and writers and studios involved in tv shows and movies always ask for more and more money. They never want to pay more in tax then they have to. Try taking the stuff these people have that they bought with their money.


18 posted on 01/08/2021 4:31:40 PM PST by minnesota_bound (I need more money. )
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To: MikelTackNailer

When you get down to it, my criticism of Trek is that Roddenberry’s concept describes a reality that cannot exist. Humans don’t evolve to be better. If they are better, it’s by an act of moral agency.

One of the purposes of my likely defunct novel was to pit these two worldviews against each other to expose the inherent folly in Roddenberry’s concept.


19 posted on 01/09/2021 1:20:50 AM PST by JamesP81 (The Democrat Party is a criminal organization.)
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To: JamesP81

Thank you for posting that. All we need to know is look at our Welfare State. Are many of the people subsiding on government handouts “improving themselves” with all their leisure time. Of course, not. “Star Trek Man” is just as likely to happen as “New Soviet Man”.


20 posted on 01/09/2021 4:02:07 AM PST by C19fan
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