Meh. I think the Babylon 5 conspiracy is more concerning.
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I think you might be on to something. I think there may have been aliens in B5.
Meh. I think the Babylon 5 conspiracy is more concerning.
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But knowing Cardassian tactics and ethics, would you have much reason to doubt that they were the initial aggressors? It's possible they weren't, but I for one can't condemn the Maquis' actions in totality.
The first time, Cardassians broke the treaty in The Wounded. The second, was when they were arming their colonists. Sisko discovered this.That's the Maquis account of the situation. I'm nosay sure they're a reliable narrator.
There's no breakage with the treaty in The Wounded. The Cardassians are entitled to deploy their fleet as they like. Now it may certainly be said they were planning to break the treaty but it wasn't they that broke it in that episode.The first time, Cardassians broke the treaty in The Wounded. The second, was when they were arming their colonists. Sisko discovered this.
They also armed Bajoran revolutionaries, who overthrew the government, and tried to kick the Federation out. Then the last time they just went into the DMZ full force and apparently killed everyone. The Federation didn't say a word
Best 3 out 4 then.There's no breakage with the treaty in The Wounded. The Cardassians are entitled to deploy their fleet as they like. Now it may certainly be said they were planning to break the treaty but it wasn't they that broke it in that episode.
The Maquis are wrongheaded in the final analysis but I do think they have "a case". I move on the writers premise that their new homes are sacrosanct and that they've been abruptly and clumsily treated by a distant Federation bureaucracy.Best 3 out 4 then.
....If I didn't know better...I'd say you're starting to sound ...like a sympathizer!
Point being, I wonder how the Federation treated the Maquis between when the CU joined the Dominion and when the Maquis were wiped out? And how they were treated afterwards when the Maquis became a shell of its former self?
But knowing Cardassian tactics and ethics, would you have much reason to doubt that they were the initial aggressors? It's possible they weren't, but I for one can't condemn the Maquis' actions in totality.
Because as anyone who's seen "Journey's End" knows, that's not how it happened. The Federation was willing to help the Maquis relocate elsewhere, but they refused. We SAW this play out.
Sisko says to the new Cardassian leader Dukat that the Federation doesn't recognise his government. If that's so and the Federation regards the Cardassian government as being overthrown and in a state of lawlessness, then the treaty is in abeyance.I suspect the Maquis were eliminated by the Cardassians with Dominion help, after Cardassia joined the Dominion and before the war with the Federation broke out. The treaty still banned entry by Federation ships into the DMZ, and the Federation wasn't very interested in breaking the treaty in order to protect the Maquis colonies that were rebelling against Federation authority.
As I've stated more than once the Maquis had a psychological and emotional investment in the homes and lived they've built.
Even Chakotay remarked that his father had a saying, "Home is where you are."And as I've stated more than once, the fact that with 24th-century technology, one's home can be re-created in precise detail on any one of hundreds of other worlds, makes that pretty much irrelevant.
What court of law? They started out by defending themselves. The Cardies were never interested in adhering to the treatyAgain, not a justification.
"They did it first" does not hold up in a court of law.
However, "We won in the end" commonly gets you out of being in the court at all.
What court of law? They started out by defending themselves. The Cardies were never interested in adhering to the treaty
Yep, technobabble solutions are always perfect solutions.And as I've stated more than once, the fact that with 24th-century technology, one's home can be re-created in precise detail on any one of hundreds of other worlds, makes that pretty much irrelevant.
TNG forward certainly thought so.Yep, technobabble solutions are always perfect solutions.
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