I think logistics were an excuse. I think it was fear.
The have's made their escape which left the have not's to take a Supernova in the face.
Pardon my French but too damn bad. Look at my signature.From a KAJILLION Fed citizens POV its not even a betrayal.
Imagine the following argument: I'm fudging some details cause i don't have exact details, but at the same time...neither would every Fed.
"We just lost 80,000 (?) fucking people!! 8 Wolf 359s!....the Romulans hid this for two years and spent that time taking care of their elite class. So WE put together the means to save their asses. Fuck them. They have a fucking empire and they STILL have about two more years to evacuate one fucking system. Shit, I could replicate a one man craft in two weeks. Fuck them, let them deal with it."
Now, i don't have details as to what happened after the Mars attack. They REALLY should have been able to take care of their own in two years. I'm going to assume they got the vast majority off, and the real problem is that rather then an orderly flow of people finding new homes, we got a nightmare refugee problem
Simon Tares, whose only transgression was to keep quiet that he was 1/4 Romulan (what's also telling is that he felt the need to conceal that).
Wasn't one of those worlds that threatened to leave Andor?
Wasn’t the issue is that he felt the need to lie?Tarses' problem was not necessarily that he was 1/4 Romulan. There's no proof that, had he come clean about it, there would have been any issue.
The problem was that Tarses lied. It doesn't matter what he lied ABOUT. The mere fact that he lied about anything on his Academy application, is a major red flag.
Well, it isn’t just any heritage. It’s that of a two-hundred year old super-secretive active enemy who looks just like your neighbor and thinks of you as a waste of skin.I would be concerned at the environment in which an applicant feels the need to lie about any heritage.
Again, I question the environment when that heritage, from his grandfather (not even his parents) makes him feel the need to lie. First duty and all that jazz looks really bad in light of this paranoid behavior.Well, it isn’t just any heritage. It’s that of a two-hundred year old super-secretive active enemy who looks just like your neighbor and thinks of you as a waste of skin.
It's a matter of degrees. People in most countries, including free ones like the United States and in Europe (including during their most liberal heydays) lie about their heritage and most countries are not run by Nazis or the like.Again, I question the environment when that heritage, from his grandfather (not even his parents) makes him feel the need to lie. First duty and all that jazz looks really bad in light of this paranoid behavior.
They do? O_oIt's a matter of degrees. People in most countries, including free ones like the United States and in Europe (including during their most liberal heydays) lie about their heritage and most countries are not run by Nazis or the like.
I've personally met people that have been cautious about who they divulge their heritage to in the United States, Greece, and France, including an Iraqi family that opened a diner here in (suburban) Pennsylvania, a Sudanese family that rented a room nearby, various Albanian workers and citizens in Greece, a taxi driver of still-unknown origin in Paris, a...They do? O_o
No, it's not okay at all. But it suggests that the Federation can be a very liberal free and open society and still have bullshit happen within. Especially given how vast it is and the different cultures within. Maybe Tarses was afraid of elements in Starfleet (who've lost blood to Romulus) would judge him, especially if well-meaning relatives raised him to hide himself.Interesting...still doesn't make how Simon was treated OK, nor does it illustrate a positive view of the Federation, at least in that instance.
OK. I personally have not encountered that here in Eastern Washington. Have worked with a variety of people in both retail and counseling fields. Personal history was rarely a matter of concern. Interesting to read about.I've personally people again and again that have been cautious about who they divulge their heritage to in the United States, Greece, and France, including an Iraqi family that opened a diner here in (suburban) Pennsylvania.
Yes, that is exactly right.No, it's not okay at all. But it suggests that the Federation can be a very liberal free and open society and still have bullshit happen within. Especially given how vast it is and the different cultures within. Maybe Tarses was afraid of elements in Starfleet (who've lost blood to Romulus) would judge him, especially if well-meaning relatives raised him to hide himself.
How can one say they believe in those values while stopping a mission to keep Romulans from cooking in a supernova? This wasn’t “well, we need to re-examine how and how much we can help in the wake of the Mars attack?”, this was “give it up entirely or we quit.”
Allowing the fear of a small minority to drive policy is the anathema of a democratic government. It would be like us throwing up our hands in the late-1850’s and giving up on getting rid of slavery because the South was making noise about succession.
Wasn't one of those worlds that threatened to leave Andor?
And I would think the Benzite world wouldn't have too much love for the Romulans,
nor Bajor.
Andor is a major military, and maybe industrial power in the heart of the Federation (though they've really been whittled down in numbers as of late, I recall?).
Anyway, in reference to amassing a second fleet, if there is such a thing as Federation exceptionalism, that was an opportunity to really show it.
You may have a point here, except there's a very different reason why that happens...if one that maybe we don't think is morally sound in retrospect. Still, I don't know that either of those is anywhere near the scale of loss that would have happened here. Also, there's something especially icky about being pleased with an enemy's not defeat but extinction.In fairness, we have seen the Federation engage in the policy of allowing extinction-level events to occur in the past without intervention. In both "Pen Pals" and "Homeward," the Federation was prepared to allow entire societies to go extinct before individuals broke Federation law.
They can't be everywhere at once. Should the Federation take on the Klingon, Romulan, and other empires for the sake of interventionism?The Federation also allowed Bajor (and probably other worlds) to be brutally occupied for decades, all in the name of non-interventionism.
Or maybe they really like the Romulans for liberating them, then coaxing them to maybe stay-with?Benzar could plausibly have been one of the worlds threatening secession given DS9 establishing that they're near the Romulan border and were taken from Dominion occupation forces by the Romulans.
There's the concept of it, and that's what I was addressing. Though, the fact that they even tried to aid such an enemy is something maybe beyond say the Klingons or Sheliak, among others...maybe us. They're still pretty freaking great.I agree. But there is no such thing as Federation exceptionalism. There is no such thing as any exceptionalism. No people is inherently superior to another, and all cultures are susceptible to regressive, nationalistic politics.
Don't forget Picard giving Riker a pat on the back for not saving a little girl by not using his Q powers.TNG interp is dumb and despite PEn Pals, I'd like to think the Feds would have saved that planet on Homeward if they could....and GAWD the argumentsin Pen Pals are just asinine...drifting into destiny and such.
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