Agree 100% with everything here. In fact, when I first saw the blue speckles, I honestly first thought they had discovered the planet of origin for the spores. From there, my mind thought this entire world could be a spore-drive hub for the entire fleet. Instead, we do definitely seem to have an Organian-like species with some serious naiveté issues with how things work in the galaxy as they pertain to the forces at play here. For an enlightened species, they don't seem to be very bright. Pun kind-of intended.
And Saru...oh, Saru. Yeah, I had my rant about him earlier in the thread. I think Doug Jones is a great actor and the writers are doing him a great disservice by engaging in a bit of character assassination here. He's doing the best with what he's got but what he's given really seems to be kind of shitty, IMO. They've given him some pretty difficult genetically-induced psychological baggage to overcome.They talked about that briefly in the AfterTrek show. Definitely something people want to see.
What I want to know is, how does a prey species like the Kelpians, under apparently constant assault from some mysterious apex predator - assumed to also be sentient - have enough time, resources and security to develop a warp-capable society in order to be invited into the Federation? How could a world torn between two warring species like this even be a Federation member? I definitely want to see more about the Kelpians - not Saru, but definitely the Kelpians.
I’ve been thinking a lot about this, myself, and wondered just how this was all supposed to suss out. Earlier on, before the series aired, they kept on talking about how the Kelpians were subject to this kind of apex predation and I got the impression that this predator was non-sentient. I have nothing to back this up other than the way they spoke of them. After all, you don’t call humans and Klingons the apex predators of Earth and Qo’noS, respectively, even though that is true in some respects. Not giving a name to this apex predator feels as if they are implying that it is just another animal—or whatever passes for one on the Kelpian homeworld.
But then, when the series began, Saru said that his people were hunted, bred, and farmed, like the livestock of old (among humans). That implies something far different from my earlier assumption. Non-sentient creatures cannot farm or breed other species, save in the most generous and expansive definitions of the latter (which is clearly not the case here). So when Saru said that, my mind immediately scrambled the picture. The only thing that makes any kind of sense now is that, perhaps, the Kelpians were initially pre-sentients (like, say, an early hominid) and this apex species selectively bred them for specific characteristics. As a by-product of that—perhaps completely accidental—they achieved sentience. One thing led to another and, eventually, the Kelpians revolt.
The problem with this, though, is that it leaves us with a homeworld that is certainly not ideal for Federation membership. How would that work? Correct me if I’m wrong but does not membership require a unified planetary government? How does that work if you have two sentient species at war with one another or one having just gained political independence? Can you imagine a circumstance where they’d agree on a single, unified polity? It just beggars the imagination.
Which brings me back, full-circle, to the idea that the apex predator is non-sentient, in spite of Saru’s comments regarding farming, breeding, etc. But that stretches credulity to the breaking point. How on earth could a species like the Kelpians have evolved a warp-capable civilisation and
not become the apex predator, themselves? So you’ve a situation where the top dog on the Kelpians’ homeworld
isn’t the Kelpians…and yet the Kelpians, somehow, have a warp-capable civilisation? That’s…odd, to say the least, and doesn’t seem to comport with the definition of an apex predator/prey relationship or the common sense definitions of “farm” and “breed.”
And one more thing: Kelpians are congenital cowards. Literally. However useful that might be on their homeworld, it’s a distinct liability outside. A good case could be made that they are simply not a good fit for Starfleet which, I suppose, is what we’re finding out, seeing how Saru is “the first.” Were I Starfleet Command, I would be carefully watching Saru’s progress. Species, presumably, evolve characteristics suitable to their environments and adaptive to the circumstances they’d historically faced. They are unique to the ecological niches they occupy. That means—though we haven’t seen it yet in any “Star Trek” series—that there might very well be sentient species who simply cannot, for various reasons of biology or temperament, be integrated into Starfleet. The Kelpians, depending on how they’re fleshed out, might very well be one such species.
I think, realistically, that during preproduction the
idea of the Kelpians was too exciting not to go forward with but that, as things progressed, the producers did not realise all the potential problems the arrangement they were suggesting would have. If you think this through, consider what has been said, what is implied, and what we know of Federation membership requirements, Kelpians might be seen as somewhat problematic.