@mrxak, on Jan 17 2007, 07:37 AM, said in Government Systems and Politics:
It's that time again, folks...
Okay, we've discussed a number of things in the past, like space warfare, space travel, population growth, and other things. But now it's time to talk about politics.
**This is really a fascinating topic and I wish I'd spotted it sooner so I wouldn't be so far behind.
Never the less, just a bit here and there on my thoughts, which I'm sure I will have more of as I slowly catch up with everyone else's responses.
To me, science fiction has never really gotten it right. We see visions of the future where humanity is spread throughout the stars, yet these realities are barely three or four hundred years into the future. The sheer amount of time it would take, bar some species-threatening imminent disaster, to move even a sliver of the population of the Earth to another world would be enormous. In fact, would probably take well over six hundred years for just one world to even begin to approach the population of Earth, even at a steady rate of say, perhaps, 5 million a year. Since we always assume there are multiple colonizable planets within travel distance of Earth, that number becomes further and further diluted.
So what does this have to do with politics? It is quite simple. As Peter Cartwright explained in his fascinating topic on the EVO board, in his galaxy, the United Earth government begins and ends on Earth simply because the vast, overwhelming majority of humans still live there. I believe that this is the only way a human society that has multiple colonies outside of the solar system can exist; and thus there must always be a central power that resides at Earth. Republics, in which a government based on the system of representation for all members would simply not work, unless the body itself were made up of tens of thousands of members. More simply; how would each planet elect one, or perhaps two individuals to represents all the many ethnicities (and species) residing there, in a body made up of similar individuals all representing different planets?
If we assume that to be considered a major colony, each planet must support at least a population that exceeds, perhaps twenty million. The figure is arbitrary but it serves the purpose in the point I'm trying to make. In order to be a colony that can sustain that kind of population, any world would be completely and totally dependant upon the mother world for resources, aid, what have you. This puts the government(s) of Earth in a position of great power. Why then, would they relinquish power to planets that are dependent upon them, knowing full well any planet without the support of Earth would fail?
The simple answer is they wouldn't. Not at least until the colonies could establish themselves enough to be self-sufficient. Then, bar any major conflicts from outside the human realm (or within) it would be free to set up its own government that serves the purpose of this new society, rather than that of the planet and Earth. It's like a giant tree growing seeds. At some point the seeds will fall off and land in the dirt, where they will battle to survive, growing and maturing on their own. Eventually, it becomes its own tree that produces more seeds. The only way I see an Earth government relinquishing power is because it has to; one can only imagine the strain of dozens of colonies on the economy and resource stock piles of the planet Earth.
In the scenario I've begun work on this much is true, to a certain extent. Every human planet is free to ally with whomever they choose. The price is providing resources back to the home world, which has become so barren and stripped of natural resources that now it is dependent on its colonies. In exchange, it is given absolute protection from the navy, which it provides ships, weapons and crews for. The details are unimportant, but the basic idea is that Earth is no longer the focal point of the galaxy; rather, the first world discovered outside the solar system has replaced it, leaving it a distant shadow of its former self. The new government rules essentially as I have outlined; it consists of a central monarchy, the ruler of which only directly controls his capital world. However, his military is the strength of the Empire, and beyond that, individual members of this group are left free to govern themselves as they see fit. No two planets govern themselves in the same way; they all simply support the overall military alliance. I suppose this whole idea came around when I started thinking about back story for the whole scenario; I sort of starting getting those cliched ideas of a big galactic republic like in Star Wars, but then it struck me. There are hundreds of countries in this world, very few of which are actually organized into alliances, let alone joint governments. It is impossible, therefore to assume, in my view, that anything would be different in colonies settled by individuals from Earth, who would presumably bring with them the same cultural and social differences.
_bomb
**