I for one was surprised, appalled even that only ten thousand Vulcans lived off world, after thousands of years of space faring!
Well there's a bunch of Vulcans on Romulus...


I for one was surprised, appalled even that only ten thousand Vulcans lived off world, after thousands of years of space faring!
Well there's a bunch of Vulcans on Romulus...![]()
That's because the Vulcans, Andorians, and Tellarites didn't have Sesame Street.Seemingly, humans invented the concept of co-operation![]()
Do you mean because Romulans are descendants of Vulcans?
Obviously.
Nero technically destroyed his own species home planet.
They are the same race with different philosophies, that is all....
They look different though. So it must be a little more than that.
Differences are negligible. The difference is mental, not physical. Agree to disagree.
All of the series have acknowledged their being a genetic divergence between the two species, and again between the Romulans and Remans, they've become three unique species.
Destroying Remus would not be seen as the destruction of the Romulan race anymore than blowing up Vulcan.
I read somewhere once that the best way to get English and Australians to recognize their common ground is to talk to an American. Maybe that's Earth.In Trek's world, the fall of Earth means the fall of the Federation. Whether it makes sense or not. Humans somehow got Vulcans, Androians, Tellarites and others to put aside their differences and team up, despite them all being out in space for decades or centuries longer than us. Seemingly, humans invented the concept of co-operation![]()
They do not. I just watched Balance of Terror, The Enterprise Incident, and Star Trek V and VI.They look different though. So it must be a little more than that.
But the Romulans have developed an entire cranial-neurological difference that makes them separate in a good enough orbital scan system, TNG and ENT have made that clear enough. They may have the fucking dumbest hair cut in all reality and the most insufferable personality known to all sapient kind in common, but they're not remotely the same species any more.
They do not. I just watched Balance of Terror, The Enterprise Incident, and Star Trek V and VI.
Yes, and apparently they don't have this need of logic. To the point of being lost without it. A Vulcan without logic is said to become a murderous beast. A Romulan manages well without it.
Rampent paranoia replaced it, plus whatever environmental effects the new planet had on them, or the ridges are the result of surgical/genetic manipulation. They keep so many secrets, it's hard to know.
Or maybe those are wigs, covering the tattoos, which are renewed every so often, and release chemicals to keep them calm, and Nero lost his wig and is suffering withdrawel throughout ST'09.
I want to start by saying that I understand your sentiment.As opposed to beaming up a identical number of children instead ?
The member world could always send more (different) representatives to where ever the councils meets now that Earth is gone. Really, the council gets in the lifeboats first?
Excuse my language, but what fucking scum.
Diane Duane described the Rihannsu as developing their own culture, re-evolving their language from older roots, etc, on their long journey from Vulcan to ch'Havran and ch'Rihan. I've sometimes thought that perhaps that effort to differentiate themselves from their Vulcan cousins never entirely ended, and resulted in some genetic manipulation at some point between Star Trek VI and TNG.They look different though. So it must be a little more than that.
I want to start by saying that I understand your sentiment.
But I'm going to follow up by pointing out that continuity of government when your government is worth a crap (and one likes to think the Federation has worked that out better than we have, by the 23rd century) may actually ultimately save more other lives when there's an ongoing state of emergency and danger. The indecision that comes from no one clearly being in charge in a situation like that can kill.
So saving them first may fall under that old "needs of the many" header.
Diane Duane described the Rihannsu as developing their own culture, re-evolving their language from older roots, etc, on their long journey from Vulcan to ch'Havran and ch'Rihan. I've sometimes thought that perhaps that effort to differentiate themselves from their Vulcan cousins never entirely ended, and resulted in some genetic manipulation at some point between Star Trek VI and TNG.
Oscar the Grouch has no place in a culture that shuns emotions and embraces pure logic.That's because the Vulcans, Andorians, and Tellarites didn't have Sesame Street.
Looking at it from a logical standpoint, what would be of greater importance:As opposed to beaming up a identical number of children instead ?
The member world could always send more (different) representatives to where ever the councils meets now that Earth is gone. Really, the council gets in the lifeboats first?
Excuse my language, but what fucking scum.
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