Jedi Master Spock wrote:Mr. Oragahn wrote:Ten thousand one century more? I'd say 5000 thousand tops.
It's generally an exponential growth curve. Finding new colony sites has been one of the driving forces behind exploration. There are easily at least ten times as many ships exploring, on average, in the TOS-TNG era as the TOS-ENT era, with average speeds ten times as fast.
But you still need people. Unless most humans can't stay put at least one generation, it's going to take time for kisd to grow and start moving out.
If it's the same people moving around, OK, you're settling new words, but you're not raising the population numbers. Your numbers get pretty thin in fact.
From what I saw, most colonies, especially the distant ones, closer to new territories, are not looking like worlds of depearture for further colonization, and if any has to happen from these worlds, we're again going to find very low population numbers, which to borrow your words, the E-D would have no difficulty evacuating in short order.
The idea of including colonies to member world, as affiliations, is not strange indeed. However, it doesn't lend any legitimacy to that 50 billion figure.
Attaching colonies to member worlds to total an average of 50 billion per member world isn't strange at all.
Aside from the idea that we don't get much evidence that there's anything around 50 billion people as an average. Even less when you consider that it would mean highly populated worlds have much more billion inhabitants, which there's even less evidence for.
The only bit I'd agree on is that Terrans have by far been the highest colonization faction of the UFP.
Why ten times? That's based on what precisely?
That's possibly because you also use socio-economical rules as they work on Earth and its ravaged or dominated countries, which would still be worse than a control under Dominion rule where synthetizers and easy energy production would still exist.
Not to say of course that Dominion rule might evolve over 125 years.
If it's worse under Dominion control, then 10% casualties causing five generations of submission is not the least bit unexpected.
I don't think Bashir's numbers mean anything. Simply put, whatever the outcome of the war, he estimates that the revolt will burgeon after five generations.
I'm sorry, but that's bogus. It's either one or the other. Not five generations plus one for the revolt for either outcome.
This is not the problem. The problem lies in who colonizes space. Andorians, Vulcans and some other members don't show to fancy large populations nor massive urbanized areas.
The Andorian-Vulcan conflict grew out of territorial claims. Conflict, in other words, over prime colonization worlds and the military bases to protect them. Both the Andorians and the Vulcans have been spreading out for a while, and both clearly claimed control over multiple planets prior to the founding of the Federation (
ref). Even Bajor, one of the poorer members of the Federation with close religious ties to the homeworld, has had eight colonies mentioned onscreen.[/quote]
But with no evidence to consider these colonies more populated than the lightly populated homeworlds.
The Vulcans, in fact, have had a rather major misplaced colony grow into something called the Romulan Star Empire. Vulcan reproductive habits are quite well documented; after reaching maturity, they normally mate like clockwork every seven years with a partner they were engaged to at an early age. Having more than one child seems typical, and Vulcans live a couple hundred years normally... and the Vulcans have been traveling the stars for something like three thousand years.
Well then they must eat their kids because there's no evidence that even Vulcan is highly populated. And frankly, despite that backstory of colonization, how much Vulcans have we seen throughout the UFP and its starships?
It's pretty thin, really.
If it wasn't for Trek's happy hippy spirit, one would even consider possible xenophobic bias, but I don't want to start a new thread on that... yet.
The reasons why we don't see many Vulcans in Starfleet has been discussed at great length, of course, but it's really worth assuming that most Federation members are in on the colonization game.
Well I never read those long discussions, I'm not a Trekkie. Still, that's a good topic to kickstart in a thread here, if it's not already been done.
Rather obvious, humans are one, if not THE most spread species as far as I've seen in the Federation. All other Federation alien species are almost sidekicks.
We mostly see the Earth-based
Starfleet onscreen. The Federation council, of course, is largely nonhuman. The cantina scenes - whether in TNG, DS9, or the movies - have significant alien populations.
Again, without wanting to go too deep into this other topic, I'll just say that it's normal that the council shows many faces, if it's supposed to represent all member worlds and that nearly all of them have unique alien species.
It doesn't say much about their actual numbers though.
And I would agree with you that as of the 24th century, humanity is probably the most spread out (and quite possibly most populous) member of the Federation. However, I still think they're a minority within the Federation, and I don't think humans made up the largest portion of the Federation when it was founded - indeed, I strongly suspect they made up the smallest portion of the population of any of the members.
I thereby claim we need a new thread, about species representation in the Federation and percentages!
Cocytus wrote:Just to interject here.
800,000,000 dead was the preliminary estimate for the planet of Cardassia, not the Empire as a whole.
The Founder:
I want the Cardassians exterminated. All of them, the entire population.
Admiral Ross:
Ben, we've driven the Dominion back to Cardassia Prime.
Sisko:
They're going to make us pay for every kilometer of the planet.
Odo:
Have you seen these reports? The Dominion has begun destroying Cardassian cities. Millions of people are dying.
Since Cardassia Prime was the only thing the Dominion retained effective control of at this point, the Founder can only mean the entire population of Cardassia Prime. 800,000,000 people died on a single planet in the short time between her giving the order, after the Cardassian Fleet switched sides, and Odo's convincing her to stand down, a matter of hours at best.
Nothing surprising, if the Dominion had a large contingent of forces and ships in the system. It would take no time to have a good number of their ships strike at the cities, and have other Jem'Hadar troops continue the mop up/genocide.
What I'd add is how the population seemed oddly concentrated before hand. Indeed, the destruction of cities is far from being terrible from what we see, yet the death toll is high. It's possible that some cities were spared more than others, or something else.
It's just a side issue anyway. Yes, it was clear that they talked about the planet.
Praeothmin wrote:How could the Federation recover from a 900 billion loss after only 5 generations if this number represented the majority of the Federation's population?
Even modern Earth would be hit hard if even, say, 10% of it's population (roughly 700 Million people), would suddenly die or be killed (close to what happened to the Cardassians, which is no wonder they felt such disarray)...
Putting aside the bizarre mono-projection of the doctor no matter what happens, considering how human population grew on Earth in one century (more than 3.73 times), let's assume the Vulcans decide to really show they can fuck every seven years, say the humans really decide to have big familes and copy the highest Chinese (6.2) and African growth rates, mixed to a relatively better average health system than we enjoy, and say the Federation had 1000 billion people (so 100 Bn left), that's going to be at least more than 400 billion people 100 years later, plus the new generation batch in its vigorous youth, to feed upon for the civil war/insurrection.
Logically, the harsher the response of the old Dominion, the more people would join the ranks of the Insurrectionists. You'd have Lebanon/Gaza all over the ex-UFP, with the difference that humans would probably have the possibility to hijack Dominion shipyards and run over garrisons to grab weapons.
That's certainly nothing to scoff at.