Actually, I completely agree with you there. I never said that DS9 ripped off B5. I never believed that DS9 ripped off B5. My assertion is more to the effect that the producers of DS9 had the extraordinarily bad luck that far too much of what they did in an effort to distance DS9 from B5 managed to backfire, playing right into the hands of those who didn't look beyond the surface similarities, and were saying that DS9 ripped off B5.This is what I find so irritating about the people who argue that DS9 "ripped off" B5 -- the sheer laziness and dishonesty of their arguments, their obvious failure to consider both sides of the question. You can always pretend that two things are the same if you cherrypick the superficial similarities and ignore the differences, or if you ignore that they're generic ideas that show up all over the place. In this case, one would have to ignore a huge amount of difference between the Shadows and the Dominion. They have little in common besides being arc-driving baddies.
And that the Dominion War was part of that. War, especially when prolonged, bores me. The one television series set in a war (and dragging that war out far longer than it was in real life) was M*A*S*H. (And I always felt that it improved as it evolved away from the book/movie/stage play on which it was based.)
I did like VOY (and the first, second, and fourth seasons of ENT) better than most of DS9, even if VOY's premise seemed a bit too close to Lost in Space (which I've intentionally avoided seeing) or Space:1999 (which I have seen, and of which I've always preferred the second season). If the crew of the USS Voyager were quite literally lost in space, at least they were still Starfleet officers, and Citizens of the Federation, and chose to behave as such.