We've seen plenty of examples of the darker side of the Federation. How many times has someone been racist against Spock / Data / alien of the week? How many evil admirals have there been, motivated by their own xenophobic biases? John Gill and Merik literally created or joined fascist, dictatorial societies so that they could lead it. In STiD, Marcus was going to kill every single person on board the Enterprise without a second thought, just so he could satiate his prejudice and enact genocide.Yeah, but that's after 20 years of fighting ruthless attack by the Klingons. And a wartime military looking and acting like a wartime military is hardly evidence that the nation it defends is under fascist rule. The military and civilian worlds are very different things, something a lot of Trek viewers forget, since we've hardly ever seen civilian life in the Federation (until Picard, at any rate).
All it takes is for someone like that to coerce a following and grab power. Without "going there", let's just say that recent events on 21st century Earth have shown us that "it can't happen here" can very quickly be shown to be false. The 23rd and 24th centuries are no different. People haven't changed in thousands of years. They won't change in a few hundred more.
Truer words were never elsewhere said about the realities of human nature on Star Trek.Let me tell you something about Hew-mons, Nephew. They're a wonderful, friendly people, as long as their bellies are full and their holosuites are working. But take away their creature comforts, deprive them of food, sleep, sonic showers, put their lives in jeopardy over an extended period of time and those same friendly, intelligent, wonderful people... will become as nasty and as violent as the most bloodthirsty Klingon. You don't believe me? Look at those faces. Look in their eyes.
The Synth would imply this is a flashback scene. But what the hell kind of outfit is Picard wearing?
All this is why I always loved Quark's comments to Nog in Siege of AR-558:
Truer words were never elsewhere said about the realities of human nature on Star Trek.
Federation upbringing encourages the best in people and teaches them to manage and overcome their darker sides.
If Disney Concert Hall is decorated with banners that look like that, things clearly went south XD
It could be like Butterfly Effect, small changes have big repercussions, and the lesson is that some tragedy needs to happen
Yep, the same Federation that tried to deactivate Data in Measure of a Man. Certainly not the Paragon of Galactic Virtue it would like its neighbors and citizenry to believe.
Of course...that's really saying something.And it looks like an evolution of the eeeeeeevil Space Force may be the military branch of this Brave New World Disorder, judging by the other flag design present on the steps.
Yes, but Quark's words support what I'm saying -- that it's a question of context and upbringing. A human raised in hardship could turn out badly, sure. We've seen humans on fringe colonies go bad, like Kodos or the more ruthless Maquis. I'm talking about the probability that someone raised on nigh-paradisical 24th-century Earth, someone coming from a near-identical background to Picard himself, could turn out so monumentally worse than Picard did.
I just truly hope it’s something a little more deeply thought out than yet another contrived Orange Man Bad shallow allegory.Of course...that's really saying something.![]()
I'm calling...the Romulan evacuation happened successfully, and the Romulans took over the Federation, or merged with them in a way that involved meeting in the middle, fundamentally altering the Federation.
Now ya lost me!with Sela at the helm.
with Sela at the helm.
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