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They need to actually give a full look into the economics of the federation. Yeah, it's space communism. But I want more specifics.
There's a recent episode in Lower Decks where they liberate a planet from capitalism..... by essentially taking all the "worthless" gold and jewels and giving it to Space Pirate Royalty to broker a peace deal between them and the Federation.
I don't doubt that the majority of the occupants of said planet are now happier not having to grind for capital...., but apparently having capital is still an immensely useful resource that the Federation is happy to, uh, quietly commandeer in lieu of payment for its, uh, services to the planet(?)
I still need to catch up on the latest season(s?) of lower decks. And given the fact that lower decks is a comedy, and borderline non-canon, I'd take that with a giant grain of salt.
Energy-to-(organic)matter conversion + futuristic power generators makes feeding your population a triviality. That simplifies just about any economic system, which takes a lot of the complicated stuff out of government and class hierarchies.
But Star Trek is a fictional utopia, much like Communism.
In reality, corruption would still mess up government in a “real world” Star Trek. I’m a casual Trekkie, but I don’t recall much detail about the Federation’s or Earth’s government structure. Do people still vote? Is it a benevolent military dictatorship? Who knows? And who cares? It’s not really relevant to the themes of the shows.
Star Trek is founded on liberal ideas popular in the mid-20th century that humanity could achieve unity and peace if it just cast aside superficial differences like race and gender, allowing us to focus on exploring the universe once we’d gotten over fighting each other. That’s the very core of the entire franchise and I’m fine leaving it that way, unscrutinized, since it clearly doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. It’s like how the force is best left a mystical property of the universe in Star Wars, rather than science-ized with medichlorians.
Right, but they very clearly don't get all of their food out of a replicator, nor do they use the holodeck for things like hair cuts. There is still people who serve as cooks, waitresses, barbers, etc despite the technology being there to not need those jobs.
And that's what I want explored in more depth.
I've been dipping my toe in the books. At least in the first book for PIC, The Last Best Hope, they very clearly still have political struggles for power, corruption, tribalism, and voting. It ain't a dictatorship, but the goals and views of the government leaders aren't wholey benevolent.
A particularly good example was the Federation council member Olivia Quest. She's a rep from a border planet, whos been facing some issues with the romulan star going supernova, and all the immigrants that are mayhaps being sent their way. So she raises a big stink over any and all help towards the romulans. It's self serving, selfish, and tribalism, but she was voted in and she wasn't alone.
All of this is very familiar to real life. But it's the exact kind of details I want, but on one of the shows. They made it interesting in the books, they could just as easily make it interesting in the show.
Maybe the tech of replicators/transporters/holodecks should be left unscrutinized, because ultimately it relies on technobable for it to be compatible with a suspension of disbelief. But I don't think the same goes for the societal structures of the federation. It worked in the Last Best Hope, I think it could work on the screen.