I don't think anyone has answered this question yet. Picard told us in this episode that the tunnels beneath the Chateau were used by the French Resistance in the early years of WWII and then sealed up later in the war, with all kinds of munitions still down there - he cited it as one of the reasons he wasn't supposed to go down there as a child, because it was known to be very unsafe. That's why the gun was there, it was left behind by the resistance during WWII.-Why was a gun down in the Picard family basement, and why did Jean-Luc know that? Was it still there hundreds of years later?
-It also would've been nice to see Picard's older brother or him being mentioned.
As others have said, the older brother was mentioned in an earlier episode. He was away at school on the day of this particular memory - which, although it has been stretched over an entire season and therefore seems like a long period of time, this particular memory is of a single day in Jean Luc's life.
Her nanoprobes were severely depleted after being held captive by the Confederation. She's been working to make more, but they are imperfect and still extremely limited, resulting in imperfect assimilation.I wonder, why aren't the Borg Queen's new drones actually turning into the Borg drones we all know and love? I thought the nanoprobes actually did most of the work of creating the Borg attire on someone after they get assimilated pretty quickly.
Someone in 1800 might say the same of our society today - they have so many treatments available, why do people still die? I guess the answer is that every single case is a unique individual, people are imperfect and make imperfect choices, even the most wondrous of treatments generally has limits, and in any society people can fall through the cracks. There was an episode of TNG in which Worf was paralysed and wanted to be allowed to commit suicide rather than either live with a disability or consent to a risky treatment, and although he later changed his mind, the episode emphasised his right as an individual to make that choice. By that metric, 24th century society would also allow Yvette the right to choose, so long as she wasn't harming anyone else with her choice.My real bugbear is Picards' mom suffering a long time from a mental illness. She's a federation citizen on earth, and the stigma if any, is much less than the jack pack on ds9. Nobody in the 2300's should be committing suicide due to a treatable mental illness.
To be fair, all we know is that the crew believe there is only supposed to be one timeline, and they've been operating off that assumption all season. Just because they believe it, doesn't mean it is true - which is probably the point of Borgati's parting statement.I thought the point was there was only supposed to be one time line. If it is as you suggest, perhaps the solution is to do something that allows both timelines to exist. Not that any of this makes any sense because time travel is a paradox in itself unless it creates a new timeline.