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Should the Vulcan Extremists Return in Picard?

The Overlord

Fleet Captain
Fleet Captain
In both the 23rd and 24th centuries we saw extremist movements in Vulcan that wanted to remove all non-Vulcans from their society. After Romulus was destroyed, there would be millions of Romulan refugees and many would want to settle on Vulcan. Many Vulcans may be unhappy with Romulans settling on Vulcan. Should the Vulcan Extremists return in Picard?
 
The extremists would offer some free plot points for a while, especially if "Picard" continues for some time, or how its cast changes or remains the same or what not. They're still out there and with Romulus's destruction, that would easily add kindling to the fire.
 
If they were around in the 2250s and are still around in the 2370s, I think there's a good chance they're still around in Picard. They've probably been around since the Federation was founded. The isolationists were against an alliance. So anything that's been around for 200+ years, in that case, isn't going anywhere. They'll just become more extreme.
 
If this kind of faction shows up again, I hope they don't call them "logic extremists."

It might be interesting to see some Vulcans who still hold onto the ideas of ENT Seasons 1-3 Vulcans, i.e. more militaristic, they think mind melds are inappropriate, they don't believe katras are real, etc.

Kor
 
What really floored me about the Logic Extremists was that there was one serving in Starfleet! An Admiral, no less! I never understood that.

It'd be like a member of the IRA serving in the British Army. Why would anyone want to join an organization serving an entity they seek to destroy?
 
What really floored me about the Logic Extremists was that there was one serving in Starfleet! An Admiral, no less! I never understood that.
...
I assumed he infiltrated Starfleet to somehow undermine it from within, basically a double agent.

Kor
 
I assumed he infiltrated Starfleet to somehow undermine it from within, basically a double agent.

Kor

She, actually. ;)

Admiral Cornwell even pointed out that, as far as logic extremists go, Patar was a particularly fanatical one. Which makes the problem even worse...

If Patar was a double agent, though, I think somebody would have noticed.
 
She, actually. ;)

Admiral Cornwell even pointed out that, as far as logic extremists go, Patar was a particularly fanatical one. Which makes the problem even worse...

If Patar was a double agent, though, I think somebody would have noticed.
Oh, I was thinking of some other Vulcan for some reason. It already feels like ages since I watched the last season.
I wonder if it was well-known that Patar was a logic extremist, or if it was a secret that Cornwell somehow uncovered, and was going to expose at the right time.

Kor
 
Might be "logic extremism" is a valid political view to hold, akin to, say, fascism, and both Vulcan and Earth have political parties built on that. It's just that callous terrorists are a known subset of logic extremists, while they are not quite as common a subset of the love instructors party or the united federalist party.

I could well see Starfleet cringing with embarrassment about having an outspoken fascist in the high echelons, but not being capable of doing anything much about it. Who knows, perhaps the extremist party was quite popular and influential in the 2250s until folks like Patar gave it a bad / even worse name?

Timo Saloniemi
 
Might be "logic extremism" is a valid political view to hold, akin to, say, fascism, and both Vulcan and Earth have political parties built on that
Wasn't one of the Section 31 admirals logic extremist, according to Cornwell?
 
Yup, that's the Patar gal Mr. Laser Beam brought up above. The top boss of the darkest corner of the intelligence community might well be expected to have eccentric attributes, by the rules of drama if not by real-world precedent. But being a logic extremist need not be a crime as such - and Sarek realizing that his aide is one need not mean the guy would be an assassin as such, but it logically follows that if said aide has so far hidden his political alignment, then obviously he is an assassin as well.

Timo Saloniemi
 
What really floored me about the Logic Extremists was that there was one serving in Starfleet! An Admiral, no less! I never understood that.

It'd be like a member of the IRA serving in the British Army. Why would anyone want to join an organization serving an entity they seek to destroy?
Yeah, I got to admit, that was a total WTF to me too.
 
Might be "logic extremism" is a valid political view to hold, akin to, say, fascism, and both Vulcan and Earth have political parties built on that. It's just that callous terrorists are a known subset of logic extremists, while they are not quite as common a subset of the love instructors party or the united federalist party.

I could well see Starfleet cringing with embarrassment about having an outspoken fascist in the high echelons, but not being capable of doing anything much about it. Who knows, perhaps the extremist party was quite popular and influential in the 2250s until folks like Patar gave it a bad / even worse name?

Timo Saloniemi
Given how human-centric Starfleet is, it seems odd that an outspoken adherent of extremist Vulcan anti-human xenophobia would become popular and influential among their ranks. More and more, I'm thinking Patar was a long-term sleeper agent for the Logic Extremists (or perhaps turned and became radicalized at a later time after being well-established in the admiralty), and Cornwell somehow uncovered her true ideological leanings fairly recently.

Kor
 
IIRC,the real Patar had been dead for some time by the time we first meet the fake one. Depending on how long Control had been using that holo-fake, maybe that's why Cornwell thought she was a logic extremist. It could have been an example of Control not really getting it right (i.e. not doing a good job at faking Vulcan behavior).
 
A UFP official body embracing ideas, including hostile ones, appears intuitively attractive to me. Surely there could be Flat Earthers in the Deep Space Colonization Board, Vulcanxit activists in the Joint Committee for Sticking Together Forever, and Rabid Defeatists in the Defense Command, for the fresh viewpoint.

OTOH, Vulcans are often seen as top bosses in Starfleet, in TNG, DS9 and DSC at least. A diverse catering of Vulcan viewpoints might be a defining Starfleet parameter, and indeed the reason why the frankly quite inhuman Prime Directive always appears so important but does fluctuate between "hugely important" and "insanely important" as a function of time.

Timo Saloniemi
 
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