clearspira wrote: ↑Mon Aug 27, 2018 7:32 pm
chaos42 wrote: ↑Sat Aug 25, 2018 12:16 am
yes except that they haven't eliminated money in star trek, thats just another rodenberryisam that writers didn't correct. on many times in the original series they mention credits as a unit of currency, its only tng that started the no money in the future which was only because it was done in the first season and no one fixed it later, he had a lot of control at the time.
Have to correct you there: The first instance of there being no money in the future was in Star Trek The Voyage Home which was made in 1986, one year before TNG. If you don't remember the scene, it was where Kirk had to ask Gillian to by their beers.
Dr. Gillian Taylor: Don't tell me you don't use money in the 23rd Century.
Kirk: Well, we don't.
That isn't the only example either. Earlier in the film, Kirk's exact quote before deciding to pawn off his reading glasses was a dejected ''they are still using money.''
The Federation credits you mention (to my memory, I am happy to be corrected) only came up when dealing with non-Federation citizens such as when Uhura was trying to buy a tribble from Cyrano Jones. In that instance it makes perfect sense for there to be some form of currency as they couldn't possibly do business with other civilizations that DO have money. This would also be essential on Deep Space Nine as how else would anyone get hold of the latinum required to pay Quark? And like the real world, rank probably does influence how many credits you receive, which is why Uhura could afford to buy a tribble but Jake could not buy a baseball card (and would make his claim of not having any money accurate - technically its the Federation's money, not his).
My head canon is that the word ''credit'' implies just that: a credit line to some Federation bank that dishes out small amounts of money based on some stockpile of resources that they don't need thanks to the replicator but other civilizations find invaluable. Precious gems, food, water, blankets, clothes, technical expertise etc. Being friends with the Federation is like being friends with a genie. It is essentially a barter system.
sorry, forgot about that, the movies always throw me off because i didn't see the first 4 in theaters, didn't see star trek till tng came out because of mom, she is a fan of sci fi, and i don't have the sense of when they were made relative to everything else.
However that was what i was talking about, except its not just outside the federation its in the federation as well you probably have a base level of income, think of it as everyone is effectively on welfare, similar to the Republic of haven in the honor series by david weber. However if you want anything better than standard basic living you have to actually do something.
Either way i still think my theory is the one that works best given how things actually work NOW, things may change later, but till someone has an idea of how that could work, i think we have to use our 21st century way of thinking to explain this.
Personally i think they need to get a think tank together of experts on star trek and real world concepts like this and come up with a workable way these systems can work and then STICK TO IT.
For example explain that replicators don't just use energy but say energy that is stored in them from disassembled raw matter to construct the things they make. things like that.
Still the point i was making is that it seems some ships are made with cost cutting in sci fi and you would think that this would be a trope by now with how much its actually happening