Clearly NT just has a "dick tax" -- if you have a dick, get taxed; they assume you've knocked up somebody at some point that deserves some kickback.
The terrible secret of
Clearly NT just has a "dick tax" -- if you have a dick, get taxed; they assume you've knocked up somebody at some point that deserves some kickback.
If we're going to go further down the route of considering porn logic, the economy of places like NT must be borderline pointless anyway. We have to assume they're able to sell their near limitless supply of milk and sperm well - presumably on the basis of authenticity, given they would be easy to synthesise or produce locally - and with access to tame AIs of the complexity of Gianna pretty much all jobs could easily be automated.
TiTS economy is capitalist and requires people for manual labor, except where it doesn't, because that's relatable to our experience and what we expect from sci-fi settings, which usually have this exact same deal going on. It doesn't particularly make sense from a logical perspective, but it's in-genre.
Capitalism is still in the 31st century. I don't want to be a space pirate anymore.
I mean, that's Star Trek, which is one of the only popular sci-fi settings that does to at least some degree address the idea that technology can change the nature of work from something necessary to survival into something done for the sake of enjoying doing it. It sometimes does so in a hamfisted way, of course, but I wouldn't exactly describe the Federation as depressing.the idea of Spess Communism is pretty depressing.
Good End wherein Comrade Steele donates all Steele Tech assets to the anatae coalition upon finding the final probe and joins the space proletariat when?Within TiTS, the anatae are essentially space communists. They have some faults, to be sure, but it's hard to look at their society and look at the UGC and claim the latter is superior. I think at best you could argue each has benefits and drawbacks over the other.