It is certainly the Miranda of its day structurally- nacelle and engineering structures tightened up against the saucer with an auxiliary hull ('roll bar' or 'mission pod') bolted on top. That may not be a coincidence.FaxModem1 wrote:Well, going by Memory Alpha, the Galaxy class was being designed and built in the 2350s, with the Nebulas starting to be built in the 2360s. It's possible that the Nebula was like the Miranda class of its day, a smaller, more economic ship, but one that can pack just as much punch...
Yeah. I cannot see the Federation deliberately gene-tinkering its citizens to be more compliant. Honestly I can't imagine them drugging or otherwise altering them either. And if they were doing that, you'd think it would come up at some point. Q would berate the Federation for doing it, or the Klingons would point and laugh, or something.FaxModem1 wrote:Frankly, that's rather implausible, considering how much genetic engineering scares the crap out of the Federation, and that the UFP isn't really communist, we've had long discussions on that matter in the PST forum.
The US Navy controls dockyards, the US Postal Service is one of the dominant modes of communication in our society (and was more dominant in the recent past), and a wide variety of mass transit systems are government operated in the US because transportation is a public service, it is something that is often provided more cheaply and efficiently by a nonprofit agency.biostem wrote:You are conflating the Soviet Union/Chinese style of how communism was practiced, versus the actual definition of communism. Basically, if the government controls the means of production, transportation, forms of communication/media, and so forth, then said society is communist. How many private shipyards have we seen in Star Trek? How many privately owned communication networks/companies have we seen? Are there many transporter stations or shuttle services owned and operated by non-startfleet personnel?
Does all this mean that the US is a communist state? I mean seriously, if you wrote a series of TV shows about the US Navy, the United States might appear a lot more state-controlled than they really are, just because people in the Navy live in a state-controlled bureaucracy.
She isn't a commander, not at the beginning of the series.. She's a lieutenant commander, which means she is two levels of rank junior to the captain. Troi isn't promoted to commander until passing a battery of examinations in the seventh season, by which time she's been in Starfleet for a little over a decade.Adamskywalker007 wrote:Why is Commander Troi a commander? That sounds an awful lot like a political officer.
She's also, arguably, the second-most senior person in the ship's medical branch (and medical branch is important on a Starfleet exploratory vessel). Moreover, she acts as an aide to Picard on important diplomatic missions courtesy of her empathic abilities.
So I think that the ship's senior psychiatrist is justified in holding the rank of lieutenant commander (as opposed to lieutenant or ensign).
Looking at her biography, her rise in rank seems to have been unusually rapid, but no more so than a number of other characters who were promoted rapidly immediately before or after their tenure on the Enterprise-D.
Evidence is still lacking.The fact that the UFP is not revolutionary does not mean they are not communist. And they are not brutal in the same sense as the Soviets, but that does not mean they do not deal with political dissent.
I suspect that rifling through the episodes in question would reveal numerous examples of these individuals accepting payment in credits. They may be accepting payment in latinum, but there might be a number of reasons for a Federation that allows capitalism to be using Ferengi currency in the DS9/VOY era.If those companies were part of a captialist economy why were they paid in commodities rather than currency?
Well then we have a contradiction. Senior Federation officials both are, and are not, being confused by the idea of wealth, trade, and personal ownership of property. Perhaps it would be sensible to resolve the contradiction in favor of the majority of the episodes seen (i.e. those not part of the first season or two that were most strongly influenced by Roddenbury's personal quirks?)They could have just been playing for fun. How else could you reconcile the fact that both Councilor Trou and Captain Picard have both expressed shock at the very concept of wealth? In most of the modern world, you would be hard pressed to find a society in which educated individuals would have this position.FaxModem1 wrote:Also, there is the question of what exactly the crew of the Enterprise were betting over during their regular poker games if they had no money.
What do you mean? Are you surprised that there are few or no individual personal starships in Star Trek? I'm not- a starship is a fairly complicated piece of machinery, and almost all such ships that we see have large crews, numerous pieces of complicated machinery, and so on.But those civilian ships are all the equivalent of space greyhound rather than individual ships.
They may well be items normally owned by large groups or corporate firms, simply because of the expense. Sort of like how there aren't very many skyscrapers or ocean liners or jumbo jets owned by private individuals in real life.
Perhaps because DS9, specifically, had no pre-existing radio or TV stations or their equivalent, and Quark couldn't be bothered to create one? So he hacked into the phone system to play viral ads.So why did Quark have to illegally use Federation communication systems to broadcast advertisements?Communications is an unknown, as we don't see many non-Starfleet calls. All this tells us is that Starfleet and the Federation government has their own communication infrastructure for dealing with call between Starfleet personnel. For all we know, there are civilian calls all the time with private companies.
Legitimate businessmen who supply arms to groups that are legally classified as terrorists do tend to wind up in jail, yes.She did pay her crew in commodities rather than currency, indicating that she was involved in the black market. She also eventually went to prison for supplying the Marquis.Batman wrote:If you're referring to Cassidy Yates, she (mostly) was a legitimate businesswoman. Which doesn't mean she was operating within the Federation.
Also, in what commodities was Yates paying her crew, again?
To be fair, the Federation very well might arrest non-Federation citizens caught running contraband to an organization the Federation regards as terrorists. There are capitalist societies that do this- ask the Afghan government if they've had any luck extraditing their citizens back from wrongful detention at Guantanamo Bay...FaxModem1 wrote:Also, Kasidy seems to be businesslike, as she owns her own company. So, again, the Federation either arrests non-Federation citizens, or there are companies in Federation space that chart cargo, freight and passengers for profit. They just aren't a crazy obsessed money society like the Ferengi are.