We are the crewmen who beam down first and are mourned for four seconds. We handle the munitions, investigate the strange noise, and stand between a named officer and the unknown. We have organized.
For one five-year mission, the pattern was clear enough that fans noticed before there was a word for it: when the writers needed to show that a situation was serious, it was one of us who proved it. The anonymous one. The one in operations red. The one whose name nobody quite caught.
Here is the part management does not advertise: when the numbers were finally run, the red division actually died at a lower rate than command gold or science blue. We are not careless. We are not unlucky. We are over-assigned, under-equipped, and sent in first — and then remembered for four seconds over a communicator.
"Starfleet security personnel rarely survive beyond the second act break."
— the operating assumption we are here to repeal.
Non-negotiable. To be ratified by the membership before the next away mission is authorized.
Before you accept an away assignment, run the numbers. Built from a century of incident data. Knowledge is leverage.
A name. A face. More than four seconds. Every member gets a line on this wall — even the ones the manifest never recorded.
…and the countless more whose names the away log never bothered to enter.
Dues are one credit per stardate. In return: a phaser advocate on every away team, full death benefits, and the simple dignity of a recorded name. There is safety in a counted crew.
Your card is signed. You are no longer anonymous. Member #1701 of Local 24 — solidarity beyond the stars.