"Federation is communist" article misses the point
Posted: 2008-03-04 10:51pm
Hi all. I just figured I'd throw in my 2 cents worth about the article asserting that the Federation is a communist nation.
If the writer of these articles is willing to accept Star Trek and Star Wars technologies at face value, no matter how much of a stretch some of them are, (Death Star power output levels, anyone?), then his entire argument is without basis.
At one point in Asimov's Foundation trilogy, when the characters are wondering why Hari Seldon's predictions were completely off the wall (how could he have missed an event as major as the crisis they were currently facing?!?), it's explained that there are a handful of different factors that could have thrown off Seldon's predictions. One of them was the development of radical new technology that Hari Seldon could not possibly have anticipated. This one actually ended up biting Asimov in the butt; Foundation has characters flying around in interplanetary spaceships, with nuclear-powered gizmos and gadgets at every turn... and really fancy slide rules, because he didn't anticipate computer technology.
But what does this have to do with Star Trek economics? In a word, replicators. All current economic systems are based on one fundamental assumption: there's not enough "stuff" to go around. You can't have everything you want, and you can't always even have everything you need, so we need a system, a way to divide it up.
But once you've got replicators, able to produce useful "stuff" out of raw materials in a matter of seconds, the notion of scarcity goes out the window, and along with it goes the concept of wealth. There's no need for capitalism anymore, as the profit motive has been rendered obsolete. There's no need for communism anymore, since there's no limited resources to be divided among the people.
And I can vaguely recall a DS9 episode that had something to do with protecting "industrial replicators" that a fledgling colony needed from the bad guys. (Cardassians? Maquis? Dominion? I don't remember. It's been a while.) So replicators aren't just Starfleet conveniences; they also come in at least one other size: a heavy-duty variety capable of providing for the material needs of a good portion of an entire colony.
This is internally consistent; the few times you actually see money (latinum) changing hands, it's for items that either "can't be replicated" or are too large to come out of a replicator, or for services, not items. Likewise, on Voyager, what does the local economy revolve around? The replicator! Because of shortages, replicator use has to be rationed, and "replicator rations" quickly become a medium of exchange now that the concept of scarcity has been re-introduced into society.
In short, there's no need to call the Federation a communist society simply because they don't appear to operate under capitalist principles. What's needed is an entirely new term to describe the entirely new system.
If the writer of these articles is willing to accept Star Trek and Star Wars technologies at face value, no matter how much of a stretch some of them are, (Death Star power output levels, anyone?), then his entire argument is without basis.
At one point in Asimov's Foundation trilogy, when the characters are wondering why Hari Seldon's predictions were completely off the wall (how could he have missed an event as major as the crisis they were currently facing?!?), it's explained that there are a handful of different factors that could have thrown off Seldon's predictions. One of them was the development of radical new technology that Hari Seldon could not possibly have anticipated. This one actually ended up biting Asimov in the butt; Foundation has characters flying around in interplanetary spaceships, with nuclear-powered gizmos and gadgets at every turn... and really fancy slide rules, because he didn't anticipate computer technology.
But what does this have to do with Star Trek economics? In a word, replicators. All current economic systems are based on one fundamental assumption: there's not enough "stuff" to go around. You can't have everything you want, and you can't always even have everything you need, so we need a system, a way to divide it up.
But once you've got replicators, able to produce useful "stuff" out of raw materials in a matter of seconds, the notion of scarcity goes out the window, and along with it goes the concept of wealth. There's no need for capitalism anymore, as the profit motive has been rendered obsolete. There's no need for communism anymore, since there's no limited resources to be divided among the people.
And I can vaguely recall a DS9 episode that had something to do with protecting "industrial replicators" that a fledgling colony needed from the bad guys. (Cardassians? Maquis? Dominion? I don't remember. It's been a while.) So replicators aren't just Starfleet conveniences; they also come in at least one other size: a heavy-duty variety capable of providing for the material needs of a good portion of an entire colony.
This is internally consistent; the few times you actually see money (latinum) changing hands, it's for items that either "can't be replicated" or are too large to come out of a replicator, or for services, not items. Likewise, on Voyager, what does the local economy revolve around? The replicator! Because of shortages, replicator use has to be rationed, and "replicator rations" quickly become a medium of exchange now that the concept of scarcity has been re-introduced into society.
In short, there's no need to call the Federation a communist society simply because they don't appear to operate under capitalist principles. What's needed is an entirely new term to describe the entirely new system.