The conference chamber aboard the USS Brussels was unusually tense.
Not tense by Klingon standards, obviously. Nobody had drawn a bat'leth or challenged anyone to ritual combat. It was more the particular sort of human tension involving folders, opinion polls and a man in a navy blazer insisting everybody else had lost touch with ordinary people on Deck 14.
Captain Jean-Luc Juncker sat at the head of the table, fingers steepled.
"So," he said carefully, "you wish to withdraw from the United Federation of Planets. Despite having full access to Federation trade routes, scientific cooperation, defence guarantees, medical exchange, replicator standards and freedom of movement across three quadrants."
Nigel Farage leaned back smugly.
"We want our sovereignty back."
Commander Spock raised an eyebrow approximately two millimetres. On Vulcan this was considered open mockery.
"Captain," Spock said, "the petition specifically objects to Federation regulations concerning Romulan ale bottle labelling, curvature standards for shuttle docking ports and the alleged overreach of the Federation Committee on Agricultural Replication."
"Exactly," said Farage triumphantly. "It's bureaucratic madness."
Data tilted his head.
"Yet according to the figures, the humans leading this movement possess the largest number of shuttle exemptions in the sector, receive disproportionate agricultural subsidies and account for 23% of all Federation procurement contracts."
"Project Fear," said Farage instantly.
Worf frowned.
"I do not understand. Your world voluntarily joined the Federation."
"Yes, but nobody explained there'd be Andorians."
An Andorian ambassador shifted awkwardly.
"We have been here for two centuries."
Farage pointed dramatically.
"Exactly. That's the problem. Ordinary humans can no longer recognise their own starports."
Counsellor Troi sighed softly.
"I am sensing confusion, resentment and nostalgia for a past that may not have entirely existed."
Farage smiled.
"That's because you're an elite."
At the rear of the chamber, Chief O'Brien muttered into his tea.
"This is starting to sound very familiar."
A large holographic chart appeared above the table.
"If humanity leaves the Federation," said Data, "there will likely be immediate disruption to supply chains, reduced scientific collaboration, labour shortages on lunar infrastructure projects and probable decline in gross planetary product."
Farage folded his arms.
"We'll be fine. The Alpha Centaurians need us more than we need them."
"They appear not to agree," said Spock.
"Experts said warp drive was impossible."
"No they didn't," replied Scotty. "That was literally the one thing they thought was possible."
The room descended into argument.
One admiral warned of economic damage. Another insisted it would all be worth it for blue passports. Nobody could explain why blue passports mattered in space.
Outside the viewport, the Federation continued functioning much as before. Starships came and went. Trade flowed across sectors. Scientific discoveries continued. Nobody in the wider galaxy entirely understood why one reasonably prosperous species had decided to make interstellar customs declarations vastly more complicated for itself.
Years later, aboard a somewhat underfunded human cargo vessel delayed outside the Vega Trade Zone due to paperwork irregularities, an exhausted customs officer looked up from a stack of forms.
"You voted for this," he muttered.
The captain stared into the middle distance.
"We were told there'd be less bureaucracy."










