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GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
The Fascist Ideology of Star Trek
Wednesday, September 27, 2006 2:12 PM
FINN MAC CUMHAL
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: If Starfleet is a military it is completely unlike any military today. The main job of militaries today is defence of their parent nation. Starfleets main job is Scientific and Exploration, Defence of the Federation is a secondary role. I'm finding it hard to see Starfleet as a military, at least as a military as we understand it, since militaries today don't spend most of their time exploring the Amazon or trying to find the cure for cancer.
Quote:Although the implied militarism is about a military star ship, kind of like saying JAG implies America is militarist.
Quote:The Regular Army is a force of full-time professional soldiers. The TA is a reserve force of civilians who fulfil soldier training and operational support on a part-time basis. The TA is not a separate Army. It is an integral part of the Army’s organisation and is designed to reinforce the Regular Army wherever necessary. [Emphasis mine]
Thursday, September 28, 2006 6:53 AM
CITIZEN
Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: And the British military is unlike the military of Anglo-Saxon England, so what? Militaries evolve to meet the threat. They always have. And modern militaries today are far more technical and scientific then they have ever been in the past. It is, in fact, quite in keeping with the theme and attitude of Star Trek that Starfleet should be a highly technical military with a strong emphasis in scientific research. How do you know that Defence is secondary role of Starfleet? Just because Sweden isn't at war doesn't mean their Army thinks Sweden's defence is secondary, but I bet there is an Amy building somewhere in Sweden where scientific research, not war fighting, is the principle endeavour. As for the degree to which the Starfleet appears to represent a science and exploration, how do you know that this isn’t simply because the Enterprise was charged with exploration? It actually makes perfect sense that, given the conditions assumed in Star Trek, that the military would want to explore and patrol their region of space.
Quote:Quote:Although the implied militarism is about a military star ship, kind of like saying JAG implies America is militarist.Citizen, ibid.
Quote:Quote:The Regular Army is a force of full-time professional soldiers. The TA is a reserve force of civilians who fulfil soldier training and operational support on a part-time basis. The TA is not a separate Army. It is an integral part of the Army’s organisation and is designed to reinforce the Regular Army wherever necessary. [Emphasis mine]
Thursday, September 28, 2006 9:19 AM
CYBERSNARK
Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: Quote:Originally posted by Veteran: I'm not sure what Sulu's nationality was . . . I think there has actually been some debate over that. Originally, I think he was supposed to be Japanese, but at some time later, it was discovered that the name Sulu actually can’t be pronounced in Japanese. Or so I understand. I really don’t know for sure. What I do know is that Sulu is generally thought to be American now.
Quote:Originally posted by Veteran: I'm not sure what Sulu's nationality was . . .
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:We are told that a character is a reporter, but no one ever seems to read the paper or watch the news.Not true, we don't see news channels, which would be the only way of expressly getting over the idea of an independent news service, because apparently people don't like watching TV and it's disappeared. I imagine it has something to do with holodecks .
Quote:We are told that a character is a reporter, but no one ever seems to read the paper or watch the news.
Thursday, September 28, 2006 11:23 AM
CAVALIER
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Except it was always maintained that Starfleet was formed for scientific research, and research is what they spend most of their time doing. Quote:As I understand your arguments, if the army took over the police and counterintelligence roles, as well as complete control over the economy, the army would cease to be a military organisation. After all, the defense of the country would no longer be its primary role. And you would deny, on that basis, that the resulting society was militarised.I'm not arguing that at all. I'm saying the Federation doesn't have a full time army. You're argument seems to be that if we were to disband the military and in times of war used Civilian planes to move police to the combat zone then all of a sudden that means the Police are all in the military even when they're acting as the Police in peace time and that all civilian planes are really military planes no matter where they're going or who they're taking there.
Quote:As I understand your arguments, if the army took over the police and counterintelligence roles, as well as complete control over the economy, the army would cease to be a military organisation. After all, the defense of the country would no longer be its primary role. And you would deny, on that basis, that the resulting society was militarised.
Thursday, September 28, 2006 12:22 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: The Federation has no money, no capitalism and, by implication, a command economy.
Quote:Officially the wonderful thing that allowed the creation of what the Federation claims to be paradise on Earth, was contact between Earth and the outside universe. However the Prime Directive requires that all primitive non-warp capable civilisations be left alone and uncontacted and uninfluenced by the outside universe. Why, if first contact was so good for Earth?
Quote:Officially, Starfleet exists to explore, and is armed only for self-defence. It has enough firepower to fight the navies of the other major powers on at least equal, and usually superior terms. Why are Starfleets explorers so unwelcome that they need to be so heavily armed?
Quote:Every sizeable ship that calls at DS9 from the Federation is a Starfleet vessel.
Quote:Private citizens are apparently unable to trade with the outside universe.
Quote:Officially the Federation has a free media. But we never see anyone pay any attention to a news report, even when there is a full scale war going on around them. Apparently, the official media is not worth listening to.
Quote:Quarks bar does not even have so much as a TV showing the football scores, never mind CNN.
Quote:Note that Sisko should pay some attention to such stations, partly because they often react faster than the militaries own intelligence, and partly because, as station commander, he would have to know what the stations inhabitants have just heard.
Quote:Human nature “changed” when the Federation was set up. Why, did they start adding G-32 Paxilon Hydrochlorate to the air processors?
Quote:And according to “Paradise Lost”, this utopia came within a hairs breadth of being overthrown by a single Admiral. Shouldn’t paradise inspire greater loyalty?
Quote:Now, there could be an innocent explanation for perhaps any one of these, but all of them?
Quote:I am attempting to argue (perhaps not entirely clearly) that it does not matter why Starfleet was formed, or what it does when it is not defending the Federation. It clearly controls the vast majority of the mobile firepower of the Federation, and therefore serves the Federation as the functional equivalent of a military, whatever its mission statement.
Quote:To reverse your example, suppose the police were abolished, and the Army used to maintain law and order. The Army would now be acting as the police in peace time. Would the Army therefore cease to be a military or “full time army”?
Thursday, September 28, 2006 2:22 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Cybersnark: Actually, the best source I know of (a novel that hasn't been contradicted by anything [yet]) suggests that Sulu's father is Vietnamese. His mother is Japanese (she's the one who taught him how to fight --Sulus aren't fighters. . . but his mother is a Tanaka ).
Friday, September 29, 2006 4:49 AM
Friday, September 29, 2006 6:56 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: The Federation has no money, no capitalism and, by implication, a command economy.I see so before the invention of money and capitalism there was only command economies. Nice propaganda and rhetoric, shame it doesn't have any relation to reality. It seems the writers aren't the only people who can't imagine people living their lives in freedom without the motivator of greed, the acquisition of personal wealth.
Saturday, September 30, 2006 10:14 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: Officially the wonderful thing that allowed the creation of what the Federation claims to be paradise on Earth, was contact between Earth and the outside universe. However the Prime Directive requires that all primitive non-warp capable civilisations be left alone and uncontacted and uninfluenced by the outside universe. Why, if first contact was so good for Earth?Yeah, except the real problem with your example is that Earth wasn't pre-warp at first contact. First contact was attained because of the first Human Warp flight. So first contact for Earth doesn't support you at all there. So Earth wasn't contacted until after it attained warp drive. By comparison civilisations that were contacted prior to attaining warp drive ended up as vicious gangster regimes and so on. In fact relations between Vulcans and Humans were strained because the Humans thought the Vulcans were holding them back by NOT giving them the advances to warp five drives.
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: Officially the wonderful thing that allowed the creation of what the Federation claims to be paradise on Earth, was contact between Earth and the outside universe. However the Prime Directive requires that all primitive non-warp capable civilisations be left alone and uncontacted and uninfluenced by the outside universe. Why, if first contact was so good for Earth?
Quote:From memory alpha: Starfleet officers are required to understand that allowing cultures to develop on their own is an important right and therefore must make any sacrifice to protect cultures from contamination, even at the cost of their own lives. In all, there are 47 sub-orders in the Prime Directive. (VOY: "Infinite Regress") Originally the Directive was a shield for primitive worlds. If such a world was in danger, Starfleet had been known to order ships to save that world, provided it could be done without violating the Directive (TOS: "The Paradise Syndrome"). The Directive was later amended, prohibiting Starfleet officers from intervening even if it would result in the extinction of an entire species or the end of all life on a planet or star system. By the 24th century the Federation had begun applying the Prime Directive to warp-capable species, refusing to interfere in internal matters such as the Klingon Civil War. (TNG: "Pen Pals", "Homeward", "Redemption, Part I", "Redemption, Part II")
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: Officially, Starfleet exists to explore, and is armed only for self-defence. It has enough firepower to fight the navies of the other major powers on at least equal, and usually superior terms. Why are Starfleets explorers so unwelcome that they need to be so heavily armed?Exploring has always been dangerous, rarely because the explorers are unwelcome invaders from a militaristic nation, so again I fail to see how this supports anything.
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: Officially, Starfleet exists to explore, and is armed only for self-defence. It has enough firepower to fight the navies of the other major powers on at least equal, and usually superior terms. Why are Starfleets explorers so unwelcome that they need to be so heavily armed?
Quote: Quote:Every sizeable ship that calls at DS9 from the Federation is a Starfleet vessel.All you have to do to disprove this is watch any episode without the blinkers. DS9 is constantly being visited by sizeable vessels, rarely Starfleet ones. I'm afraid the reality is the polar opposite of what you say.
Quote: Quote:Private citizens are apparently unable to trade with the outside universe.I've already disproved this, Federation citizens are clearly shown trading with the outside world. Ignoring anything I say that doesn't fit what you think doesn't make you right.
Quote: From Memory Alpha: When Nog suggests that Jake should bid for a baseball card in an auction, Jake says "I'm Human, I don't have any money." Nog replies "It's not my fault that your species decided to abandon currency-based economics in favor of some philosophy of self-enhancement." Jake says "Hey, watch it. There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity." Nog then replies "What does that mean?" Jake responds "It means we don't need money!" (DS9: "In the Cards")
Quote:Originally posted by Cybersnark: Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:We are told that a character is a reporter, but no one ever seems to read the paper or watch the news.Not true, we don't see news channels, which would be the only way of expressly getting over the idea of an independent news service, because apparently people don't like watching TV and it's disappeared. I imagine it has something to do with holodecks .It's also implied that Jake's stories were aimed at a print market. He was likely freelance, selling stories to either the Federation News Service or the Bajoran networks. And we did see different ideas of media freedom when DS9 was occupied by the Dominion: Weyoun promised Jake that his work would not be censored, while the Cardassians demanded that it would be (Of course, we know from Garak that a free press is not a Cardassian concept).
Quote: Quote:Human nature “changed” when the Federation was set up. Why, did they start adding G-32 Paxilon Hydrochlorate to the air processors?Yes because a global nuclear war that nearly wipes out the entire Human race followed by contact with aliens are such minor events people would never re-evaluate their priorities in light of them. It's not like it's ever happened before, I mean even after the First and Second World Wars Europe is still constantly mired in regional conflict. I mean only today Britain invade France.
Quote: Quote:And according to “Paradise Lost”, this utopia came within a hairs breadth of being overthrown by a single Admiral. Shouldn’t paradise inspire greater loyalty?George Bush says there's Islamo-Fascists under your bed and people are prepared to turn a blind eye to wire tapping and torture. Fear is a powerful motivator.
Quote: There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity.
Saturday, September 30, 2006 12:58 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: Earth had possessed warp technology for less than one day at the time of First Contact.
Quote:I find it hard to see how this development could have made First Contact so much more beneficial to humanity, than it would have been five, or even a hundred, years before.
Quote:It would appear that the primary purpose of the Prime Directive is to maintain the cultural purity of the worlds in question, and that it is thought better to let a species die than render them impure. I really do not think that that is a very good sign at all.
Quote:Because Starfleets explorers apparently require enough firepower to fight a full scale war against another major power. It is as if every expedition in the amazon took an army battalion with them. If you take that much firepower, people will assume that you are invading, and then you probably will have a battle.
Quote:All the Starfleet ships have mostly human crews. Every non-starfleet vessel I have seen appeared to have a non-human crew, strongly suggesting that it did not come from the Federation. This was not true in Captain Archer’s day, but that was the time the Federation was created, about 200 years before DS9.
Quote:If Jake is unable even to buy a baseball card, that strongly suggests that individual Federation citizens do have problems trading with the outside universe. (My claim that it is impossible is admittedly an exaggeration.)
Quote:Note that all this is consistent with the Federations belief that to interfere with a culture is bad for it. Trade between two cultures would alter both cultures. IIRC we do see Sisko conducting trade negotiations, but that would imply that Starfleet or the Federation Government is trading, not private citizens (and as Sisko is the commander of a space station, trade negotiations cannot make up that much of his duties).
Quote:Fair enough. Does the media matter though? Is there, for example, any case where freedom of the press requires one thing, and the Federation desires another? And if so, how is the conflict resolved?
Quote:If Weyoun promised not to censor Jakes work, even when Jake was living in or near a major Dominion military base, in the middle of a war with the power Jake is presumably loyal to, Weyoun must not expect Jake to report anything of military importance. In Jakes position, I think I would feel a little insulted…
Quote:After the First and Second World Wars we had the Cold War. After Cortez arrived in the Americas, many cities took advantage to rebel against their overlords in Mexico City. The motives that drive Shakespeare characters are perfectly familiar to people today, 400 years later. People who survived the Killing Fields or death camps did not suddenly become more virtuous. The show can never show the mechanism by which this alleged transformation occurred. All it can do is have people assert that it happened.
Quote:Indeed it is. A country facing war will often accept changes intended to make prosecuting that war easier and more successful. Usually a coup will not do that. It divides peoples loyalties and risks civil war, and certain political turbulence, on top of all the other problems. People fear to change the government under such circumstance cf the 90% approval ratings for Bush immediately after 9/11.
Quote:I think the important point is really Jakes:Quote:There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity. Star Trek tends to see virtue as loyalty to a higher collective. People are supposed to make life better for their people: humanity, bajorans, romulans etc. The point is not to make people free, but to make them think the right way.
Quote:There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity.
Sunday, October 8, 2006 3:26 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: It would appear that the primary purpose of the Prime Directive is to maintain the cultural purity of the worlds in question, and that it is thought better to let a species die than render them impure. I really do not think that that is a very good sign at all.But the Federation council has decided to not implement the prime directive under certain circumstances. Frankly I find the idea of a law that prevents one captain from beaming down and handing over nuclear weapons to an alien tribal chieftain who could never hope to understand the consequences of using them as a pretty good idea.
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: It would appear that the primary purpose of the Prime Directive is to maintain the cultural purity of the worlds in question, and that it is thought better to let a species die than render them impure. I really do not think that that is a very good sign at all.
Quote: Quote:Because Starfleets explorers apparently require enough firepower to fight a full scale war against another major power. It is as if every expedition in the amazon took an army battalion with them. If you take that much firepower, people will assume that you are invading, and then you probably will have a battle.Actually many times in the series Starfleet ships have been shown to be less powerful than the individual warships of other nations. A Romulan warbird is superior, as is a Vor'Cha Klingon Cruiser, to the Enterprise D, apparently the most powerful ship in starfleet.
Quote: Quote:All the Starfleet ships have mostly human crews. Every non-starfleet vessel I have seen appeared to have a non-human crew, strongly suggesting that it did not come from the Federation. This was not true in Captain Archer’s day, but that was the time the Federation was created, about 200 years before DS9.Actually I think this is one of the circumstances where you can defer to the dictates of television budgets. They can't afford to stock the ships with cool looking aliens. I think that the fact that they mention Starfleet is open to all and show enough Aliens to indicate an alien presence is enough.
Quote: Quote:If Jake is unable even to buy a baseball card, that strongly suggests that individual Federation citizens do have problems trading with the outside universe. (My claim that it is impossible is admittedly an exaggeration.)Not really, my god daughter can't bid in auctions. I can't bid in an auction if they don't accept the currency I carry. I have to exchange it, which in the above episode is exactly what Jake does (I was actually going to bring that episode up myself, thanks). He trades what he does have to get Latinum so that he can bid in the auction. I don't see how that's fundamentally different to going to a Bureau de Change.
Quote: So trade at least internally to the Federation is limited to what can't be replicated, luxury items of various types. There's no problem trading in a barter system for these, in fact due to the subjective nature of their worth I would argue that for a lot of things it's MORE efficient.
Quote: Quote:After the First and Second World Wars we had the Cold War. After Cortez arrived in the Americas, many cities took advantage to rebel against their overlords in Mexico City. The motives that drive Shakespeare characters are perfectly familiar to people today, 400 years later. People who survived the Killing Fields or death camps did not suddenly become more virtuous. The show can never show the mechanism by which this alleged transformation occurred. All it can do is have people assert that it happened.The cold war wouldn't have remained a cold war in old Europe.
Quote: Quote:Indeed it is. A country facing war will often accept changes intended to make prosecuting that war easier and more successful. Usually a coup will not do that. It divides peoples loyalties and risks civil war, and certain political turbulence, on top of all the other problems. People fear to change the government under such circumstance cf the 90% approval ratings for Bush immediately after 9/11.If the American public had honestly thought that Bush was at fault for it? The rogue Admirals thought the Federation council wasn't doing enough to protect the Federation, Military coups have and do happen for these reasons. That doesn't mean that it is, merely that they thought it was, by a minority. This happens, I don't think it's necessarily indicative of anything, especially remembering that at the time the federation had been invaded by a number of hostile powers.
Quote: Quote:I think the important point is really Jakes:Quote:There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity. Star Trek tends to see virtue as loyalty to a higher collective. People are supposed to make life better for their people: humanity, bajorans, romulans etc. The point is not to make people free, but to make them think the right way.This is something most decent people feel intuitively isn't it? I mean bettering themselves? Making life better for future generations? Sounds more like the culture has shifted the emphasis from one basic instinct to another.
Sunday, October 8, 2006 4:33 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: It is a good idea and is a reason for having export restrictions on munitions. But the Prime Directive also bans any form of contact until the species is warp-capable. Including such ideas as the germ theory of disease, the printing press, and writing. And the milestone of warpdrive has nothing to do with culture, social sophistication etc – we know that from looking at the Klingons, Cardassians etc
Quote:Note the TNG episode “Who watches the Watchers”, where it is a disaster when members of a pre-warp race briefly see to people observing them.
Quote:At Trafalger Nelsons flagship was the 102 gun Victory. I believe she was the most powerful ship in the British fleet (Admirals led their fleets into battle literally, so she must have been one of the most powerful). The most powerful ship in the Allies fleet was the 136 gun Santissima Trinidad. I gather the French Navy also had ships in the 120 gun range. But no one would have said that Victory was built primarily to explore, just because she was slightly smaller than the most powerful ships in the other major navies..
Quote:Compare this with the Endeavour, Beagle, Challenger which certainly were exploratory ships,
Quote:The reason Jake gives for not having money is not “I am young”, but “I am human. We don’t have any money”.
Quote:Money is useful only for trade and accounting, so if Federation citizens have no money it seems safe to conclude that they rarely engage in trade, with each other or anyone else.
Quote: The UK had rather unhappy relations with the US and France throughout the 19th century, but the cold wars stayed cold.
Quote:It could happen, if people hold the existing government in sufficient contempt. But what does that suggest about popular opinion of the Federation government?
Sunday, October 8, 2006 4:59 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: And the milestone of warpdrive has nothing to do with culture, social sophistication etc – we know that from looking at the Klingons, Cardassians etc
Sunday, October 8, 2006 5:07 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cybersnark: (In Enterprise, a lot of alien writing systems seemed to resemble ancient Bajoran [though Hoshi obviously wouldn't recognize this, I'm going by my own graphic design training --it looks like the Enterprise graphic designers borrowed stuff from DS9 surplus], perhaps implying that cultures in this area of the quadrant were "seeded" by ancient Bajoran starfarers, who would've needed some form of warp drive. . .) *wanders off on tangent*
Sunday, October 8, 2006 5:35 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: I think the important point is really Jakes:Quote:There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity. Star Trek tends to see virtue as loyalty to a higher collective. People are supposed to make life better for their people: humanity, bajorans, romulans etc. The point is not to make people free, but to make them think the right way.
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: I think the important point is really Jakes:Quote:There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity. Star Trek tends to see virtue as loyalty to a higher collective. People are supposed to make life better for their people: humanity, bajorans, romulans etc. The point is not to make people free, but to make them think the right way.
Quote:From Memory Alpha: It appears that the Federation economy is built on a model that is neither capitalist or socialist, but something akin to communist model, however precise information is very scarce. The descriptions given by various Federation citizens are as follows: Kirk told Spock about 20th century Earth: "They're still using money. We need to get some." Later on, while Kirk was having dinner with Gillian Taylor and was unable to pay in the restaurant, Gillian asked sarcastically, "Don't tell me they don't use money in the 23rd century," and Kirk told her "Well, we don't." (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home) Picard tries to explain to Ralph Offenhouse from the 20th century that there would be no need for his law firm any longer: "A lot has changed in three hundred years. People are no longer obsessed with the accumulation of 'things'. We have eliminated hunger, want, the need for possessions." (TNG: "The Neutral Zone") When Lily Sloane asked how much the Enterprise-E cost to build, Picard tells her "The economics of the future is somewhat different. You see, money doesn't exist in the 24th century... The acquisition of wealth is no longer the driving force in our lives. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity." (Star Trek: First Contact) When Nog suggests that Jake should bid for a baseball card in an auction, Jake says "I'm Human, I don't have any money." Nog replies "It's not my fault that your species decided to abandon currency-based economics in favor of some philosophy of self-enhancement." Jake says "Hey, watch it. There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity." Nog then replies "What does that mean?" Jake responds "It means we don't need money!" (DS9: "In the Cards") Jake: "(big smile) I sold my first book today. Quark: "Really? How much did you get for it? Jake: "It's just a figure of speech. The Federation News Service is going to publish a book of my stories about life on the station under Dominion rule. But they're not paying me." (DS9: "You Are Cordially Invited...") Tom Paris says about the significance of Fort Knox: "When the New World Economy took shape in the late 22nd century and money went the way of the dinosaur, Fort Knox was turned into a museum." (VOY: "Dark Frontier")
Quote: But this ignores the basic thing, every culture programs it's citizens to a degree. You think it's normal to want the latest products? It's not a basic Human instinct to want the latest washing machine, and frankly I find the cultural programming that sets us up for commercialism far more insidious than programming us to improve ourselves. Our society doesn't just make us think the right way, it aims to make us buy the right way, and even behave in the right way (I reference companies that use colour schemes to ensure people eat quickly in fast food restaurants and the like). If we're being bombarded with 'programming' to buy the latest things from the latest brand names are we really free or do we just think we are?
Quote: My point is that EVERY culture makes us think the 'right' way. That's part of what a culture is, a framework on how we should think and behave, it's just when it's OUR culture we can't really see it, because that's just the way it is. We all see reality through the filter of our culture.
Sunday, October 8, 2006 6:13 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cybersnark: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: And the milestone of warpdrive has nothing to do with culture, social sophistication etc – we know that from looking at the Klingons, Cardassians etcActually, the Klingons didn't invent warp drive, they got it from the Hur'q, a warp-capable race who conquered the primitive Klingons and bit off more than they could chew (the Hur'q are extinct now, and the Klingons rule an interstellar Empire with their back-engineered technology). That's why Klingon culture is so odd; they should be just inventing gunpowder about now, but instead they have starships, disruptors, and cloaking devices --the Klingons are an example of what happens when you break the Prime Directive. There's also evidence that the Hebitians (before they called themselves Cardassians) got their warp drive from the ancient Bajorans.
Sunday, October 8, 2006 6:23 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: 1) Socialism requires everyone to be altruistic. 2) Therefore, under socialism, everyone will be altruistic 3) Therefore, under socialism, everything will be great No one seemed to wonder what would happen if the government bureaucrats did not become altruistic under Socialism. (Not the only problem with Socialism, but certainly a serious one.)
Quote:It is hard not to conclude that the Federation is much more dependent on people thinking the right way than is our own society.
Quote:After all, if everyone on Earth turned into a perfect altruist, it would cause no problems for General Electric, or the people who sell each other things on eBay. Instead of seeing ads which told you how much better off you would be if you bought the advertised product, you would see ads which told you how much better off everyone else would be if you bought the advertised product. Advertisers might well prefer such a world – it would be harder for customers to tell if the product really had made everyone better off (on average), than if it had made the customer better off.
Quote:(This is why it is generally a mistake to say that Big Giant Firms want us all to want Evil Thing X: they really do not care what anyone wants, as long as they can figure out some way of selling it to him. Even if they could control our minds, they would have no incentive to.)
Quote:If advertising was as effective as all that, New Coke and the Ford Edsel would have been a great success, children could be persuaded to eat their vegetables by an ad campaign, no one in the English speaking world would still be smoking, and the War on Drugs would be a complete success.
Quote:The idea that advertising is very powerful seems to be the only thing that advertising executives can sell with any reliability…
Quote:That said, the Federations altruism has the problem that it is not enough to want Nice Things for everyone. You have to decide what the Nice Things are. If I want a school to be built, and someone else wants the same resources to be used by a hospital, we could both be perfect altruists, and still disagree violently. After all, peoples lives are at stake! The Federation could only stay in its state of perfect utopian non-conflict if everyone agrees with each other about priorities, as well as being altruistic.
Quote:If you have that much control over peoples thoughts, you should be able to persuade them that the current leadership is the best possible.
Quote:And in the Federation, of course, the current leadership must believe that they are the best possible leadership, or their altruism would cause them to abdicate in favour of the leaders they believed superior…
Quote:But some cultures can take a lot more disagreement than others. For example, a culture where the current leader is supposed to be selected by God has a problem with religious toleration, because members of different religions will find it difficult to believe that God did intend for their country to be ruled by someone they must see as a heretic, or at least severely mistaken.
Quote:If the Federation does require altruism of its citizens, than it could not allow many people to have the same goals and loyalties that have driven almost every actual human being in the known world. Because most of the time, most people put themselves and their family first. If the Federation cannot survive that, it cannot survive human nature as we know it.
Sunday, October 8, 2006 6:56 AM
RABBIT2
Quote:I’m beginning to wonder if anyone but Earth invented warpdrive on their own. If the Vulcans did, what does that say about the Romulans?
Sunday, October 8, 2006 7:18 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Ahh but of course it would. In order to make a profit someone else has to make a loss, there's not infinite money, ergo.
Sunday, October 8, 2006 7:29 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: Why does someone have to make a loss, for me to make a profit?
Sunday, October 8, 2006 9:12 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: Why does someone have to make a loss, for me to make a profit?I'll ask the opposite question, if someone doesn't have to make a loss for you to make a profit where does the extra money come from? Remember we're talking about a finite system, in a finite system resources can move around but not grow, thus for one person to have more of something someone else must end up with less.
Sunday, October 8, 2006 9:42 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: Creating extra money is easy as many central banks have demonstrated. All you need is a printing press…
Quote:Creating wealth is harder, but not impossible!
Quote:Originally posted by Finn Mac Cuhmal: I think it says something about the Leftist ideals of Marxism and other egalitarian economics that the only way such economics could be seen as feasible is with the assumption of infinite resources.
Quote:The Earth is not a closed system (solar radiation strikes it, and it rejects waste heat into space). The human economy contains only a small fraction of its energy and land resources, and a negligible fraction of its mineral reserves.
Quote:Even if the economy was a closed system it might still be possible to rearrange it to increase the total “wellbeing” (wealth, if you like) of the people in it.
Quote:Notice that if this were not true, it would remain impossible to make the average man better off with any social system, capitalism, socialism or something as yet uninvented. The average man is better off now than he was a few hundred years ago (never mind a few thousand), despite the fact that there are so many more people to divide resources between.
Quote:And of course, this must be true in the trekverse as well, as the average Federation citizen is supposed to be so well off.
Monday, October 9, 2006 6:02 AM
Monday, October 9, 2006 7:46 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cybersnark: In fact the Federation's mines currently rely on holographic slave labour (using decommissioned EMHs like Voyager's Doctor). Before them, there were probably paid miners (I can't see the UFP condoning slavery --holograms don't count as "people," but organic and cybernetic life-forms do).
Quote:It must be noted that all the altruistic qualities that the Federation is based on (kindness, politeness, dignity, respect, responsibility for one's actions, etc) do exist --we Browncoats in particular get to see them in action anytime one of us has a problem. It's just a matter of creating an environment that cultivates them instead of greed, arrogance, and hatred. Nature versus Nurture, but in this case Nurture is serving as a positive force. That's how you cange behaviour, not by drugging the population or by enforcing rule of law, but by rewarding the good people who're already out there, making everyone else want to emulate them, and trying to limit the causes of the problem.
Tuesday, October 10, 2006 10:31 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: I'll ask the opposite question, if someone doesn't have to make a loss for you to make a profit where does the extra money come from? Remember we're talking about a finite system, in a finite system resources can move around but not grow, thus for one person to have more of something someone else must end up with less.
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: B]After all, if everyone on Earth turned into a perfect altruist, it would cause no problems for General Electric, or the people who sell each other things on eBay. Instead of seeing ads which told you how much better off you would be if you bought the advertised product, you would see ads which told you how much better off everyone else would be if you bought the advertised product. Advertisers might well prefer such a world – it would be harder for customers to tell if the product really had made everyone better off (on average), than if it had made the customer better off.
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: B]After all, if everyone on Earth turned into a perfect altruist, it would cause no problems for General Electric, or the people who sell each other things on eBay. Instead of seeing ads which told you how much better off you would be if you bought the advertised product, you would see ads which told you how much better off everyone else would be if you bought the advertised product. Advertisers might well prefer such a world – it would be harder for customers to tell if the product really had made everyone better off (on average), than if it had made the customer better off.
Tuesday, October 10, 2006 1:06 PM
Wednesday, October 11, 2006 5:15 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: Holographic slave labor? I thought I had seen it all, but evidently there is still more lunacy in the description of Star Trek Economics. That has to be something from Voyager.
Sunday, October 15, 2006 3:13 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: The US has a population of > 250 million. That is more than the entire population of the world few thousand years ago. If a group of people has a fixed total wealth the average wealth per person can only depend upon the number of people in the group. This allows us to deduce one of three things. Either – a) The average American now, is poorer than the average human being in the Late Stone Age. b) The US has taken more from the rest of the world, than the rest of the world had to begin with. c) The total wealth of the world is not fixed in any meaningful sense. I am going with proposition c). Notice notice that although total wealth can increase it has still always had some finite value at any moment in time – resources have never been infinite, and still would not be if the replicator was invented tomorrow.
Quote:Consider a thought experiment. Badger and Mingo are both trapped on an island. Badger has the only supply of water, Mingo has the only supply of food. Both have more than enough for two. If Badger trades some of his water for some of Mingos food, both of them will survive. Clearly, both of them have profited. No one has lost. Why would this be abhorrent to an altruist?
Quote:I presume you earn money somehow. If employing you is to your employers disadvantage, why does he continue to employ you? If being his employee is to your disadvantage, why do you continue to work for him? If you both benefit from this trade of your time for his money, it is difficult to say that all trades disadvantage one party or the other.
Quote:Returning to the Star Trek v Firefly point we started with, it occurs to me that the difference between the two is similar to one of the differences between the modern left and right. Star Trek sees the important issues as being entirely a matter of personal moral virtue. It seems to me that this view is much more common on the left these days (not in Mussolini’s time). We are given hardly any positive information about how life in the Federation actually works. We are given the negative fact that in the Federation money is vanishingly rare, and that Picard was unable to give an estimate of the cost of the Enterprise-E (in ST: First Contact), from which we may deduce the rarity of trade and the absence of accounting. Almost the only positive information we get is about the generosity, kindness enlightenment etc of all Federation citizens. Usually this information comes from the mouth of a Federation citizen. :tries to find deadpan icon: What information we do get about how things work suggests that most economic activity is either collectively undertaken (Federation News Service, Earth Cargo Service, Starfleet) or semi-legitimate at best (Quark, Morn etc). Some vineyards, restaurants etc on Earth are shown, but they cannot be privately organised trading entities, like their present day equivalents, because such organisations must trade extensively to survive (sell products, pay rent etc), and therefore use money extensively. I always get the impression that the typical Federation citizen – and the person who conceived Star Trek – had Citizens opinion of trade. The Federation, then, is a utopia designed by a man who believed in a collectivist ideology. Such persons in the modern English speaking world are typically found on the left, but they can occur on the right, and have been common there at various times and places in the past. Mussolini was an example, which is where the Federation-is-fascist idea comes from. In Firefly, on the other hand, having pure and virtuous goals is not enough. If you consider the people who exemplify the Core of the Alliance, and are drawn from its leading classes, they look very similar to their equivalents in the Federation. They are all portrayed as good as their job, desire the best for their fellow man etc. Admittedly the Operative was ruthless, and the Miranda experiment disastrous, but Section 31 has done some pretty unpleasant things too. Some Alliance officials are officious and some, in the bottom layers, corrupt, but that is not unheard off in the Federation either. It is not difficult to imagine Inara, Simon or (pre-Academy) River on the Enterprise. The Operative would fit well into Section 31. The Independents we see, on the other hand, are largely a bunch of criminals. Our BDHs, even Kaylee, are, if you look at it frankly, a gang of armed robbers. The fact that two of them are largely concerned with the getaway vehicle does not make them any less implicated. The fact that Kaylee, of all people, can join a gang of thieves, and not think it anything special, says a lot about the view of life held on the Rim. And yet, often enough, the BDHs are in the right, and the Alliance is in the wrong. In Star Trek, the good intentions are, on the whole, all that you need. In Firefly, the good intentions of the authorities are not enough. These days that is a viewpoint that seems more common on the Right, and it is also the sense in which Firefly is the anti-Trek.
Tuesday, October 17, 2006 9:50 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: I always get the impression that the typical Federation citizen – and the person who conceived Star Trek – had Citizens opinion of trade. And what is, exactly, my opinion of trade?
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Cavalier: The US has a population of > 250 million. That is more than the entire population of the world few thousand years ago. If a group of people has a fixed total wealth the average wealth per person can only depend upon the number of people in the group. This allows us to deduce one of three things. Either – a) The average American now, is poorer than the average human being in the Late Stone Age. b) The US has taken more from the rest of the world, than the rest of the world had to begin with. c) The total wealth of the world is not fixed in any meaningful sense. I am going with proposition c). Notice notice that although total wealth can increase it has still always had some finite value at any moment in time – resources have never been infinite, and still would not be if the replicator was invented tomorrow.No, technology to extract resources has improved. You are equating that with infinite resources, incorrectly. Resources are now running out, Capitalism requires those resources to expand indefinably, the supply of resources can only expand indefinably if they are infinite. Perpetual growth is the very core of capitalism, and perpetual growth requires perpetual resource. You're option C is fallacious because it implies that although we only have finite resources at any one time resources here on Earth are infinite.
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Consider a thought experiment. Badger and Mingo are both trapped on an island. Badger has the only supply of water, Mingo has the only supply of food. Both have more than enough for two. If Badger trades some of his water for some of Mingos food, both of them will survive. Clearly, both of them have profited. No one has lost. Why would this be abhorrent to an altruist?Maybe you can explain what that has to do with the Capitalist idea of profit? In fact by Capitalisms standards no one has profited. There's no possibility of growth for either operation because there's no profit, they are just breaking even. In a business sense what they've done is made back exactly their outgoings, sure they've 'profited' by virtue of their business not going bankrupt, but they haven't profited in the Capitalist sense, I.e. getting more money out than they put in.
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: So let's try another thought experiment. There is a fixed amount of credits in the world. We use money to represent these credits, but if you print twice the amount of money what happens is where $1 would have bought you eight credits yesterday will buy you four today. Now you have a business making stamps for FOX that say CANCELLED (a very profitable business obviously). Your total outlay amounts to 5000 credits, and your total income amounts to 6000 credits. Where did the extra 1000 credits come from? They came from FOX. But if FOX made their own stamps it would cost them 5000 credits instead of 6000, so FOX is losing out 1000 credits.
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:I presume you earn money somehow. If employing you is to your employers disadvantage, why does he continue to employ you? If being his employee is to your disadvantage, why do you continue to work for him? If you both benefit from this trade of your time for his money, it is difficult to say that all trades disadvantage one party or the other.I work for the British military, I don't think they make all that much money out of my work.
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: However, something can be advantageous to both parties in comparison to their alternatives while still disadvantaging one party. An area that has experienced a natural disaster, there's no food anywhere so I pack up my cupboards and generously sell a can a beans for the low low price of a $100 a throw. We've all profited from the deal, the people I sold to get a can of beans so they don't starve, and I get $100 for a 50c can of beans.
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Returning to the Star Trek v Firefly point we started with, it occurs to me that the difference between the two is similar to one of the differences between the modern left and right. Star Trek sees the important issues as being entirely a matter of personal moral virtue. It seems to me that this view is much more common on the left these days (not in Mussolini’s time). ………. In Star Trek, the good intentions are, on the whole, all that you need. In Firefly, the good intentions of the authorities are not enough. These days that is a viewpoint that seems more common on the Right, and it is also the sense in which Firefly is the anti-Trek. I'm assuming your American, because you're opinions of what constitutes the left and what constitutes the right shows the disparity I see between American ideas of left and right and Europe's. I think to put it simply the modern left over here is aiming to make life better for everyone, the right is trying to make life better for oneself, with the obvious side effect that this should result in a better life for all. The idea that the left is blinded by idealism, requiring people to be better seems to be more along the lines of a partisan attack, like if I were to say the right basis it's policies on scaring the electorate into voting for them .
Quote:Returning to the Star Trek v Firefly point we started with, it occurs to me that the difference between the two is similar to one of the differences between the modern left and right. Star Trek sees the important issues as being entirely a matter of personal moral virtue. It seems to me that this view is much more common on the left these days (not in Mussolini’s time). ………. In Star Trek, the good intentions are, on the whole, all that you need. In Firefly, the good intentions of the authorities are not enough. These days that is a viewpoint that seems more common on the Right, and it is also the sense in which Firefly is the anti-Trek.
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Just to meet something head on: What information we do get about how things work suggests that most economic activity is either collectively undertaken (Federation News Service, Earth Cargo Service, Starfleet) or semi-legitimate at best (Quark, Morn etc). Federation News Service? How's that any different to ABC News?
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: The charge of collectivism because most undertakings are done so collectively seems to ignore the fact that most trade today is conducted by corporations. I also hardly think Quark being a corrupt businessman is the Federations fault. Some vineyards, restaurants etc on Earth are shown, but they cannot be privately organised trading entities, like their present day equivalents, because such organisations must trade extensively to survive (sell products, pay rent etc), and therefore use money extensively So?
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