Whilst there is some intentional or unintentional allegory there, it is more ‘young are malleable, so maybe keep an eye what you stick in their heads’ and could just as easy allegorise radicalisation by religion, or nationalism, rather than the leap to ‘boomers vs young’ you express here.
Secondly, they aren’t ‘brainwashed’ until the transmission is achieved, so it is a little more complex (and faster working over a group) than traditional story based brainwashing,
Changelings teaming up with the Borg is down to more than just an alliance of old enemies. (Action figure smooshing)
It’s actually quite logical — as has been played on and talked about repeatedly this season, and as has been demonstrated since about 1997, they are both hive-mind species. They have a natural inclination to pooling their identity, and see it as a form of perfection.
Given that both the Borg and The Dominion exist as allegorised versions of Communism at some point in their inception,
True. And one could say that it would ruin the emotional impact of the Seven/Shaw scene, but since they keep resurrecting Data, they obviously don't think it's all that bad.
For themselves? Sure. But why would they want to directly empower a race that will with certainty pose a threat to the rest of the Great Link?
Final note: This whole thing were the text of the story is literally, "All the young people get brainwashed by evil foreigners and only the Boomers can save us" is... not the kind of idea I would want to see people adopt in real life.
The Link as a whole isn’t even involved here. This is a rogue element.
They don’t have the budget for that. That means making new sets.I still don't know why Picard hasn't approached the Qowat Milat for help. They have a hopeless cause.
Or the Klingons... surely the empire won't go for any of this silly networked ship nonsense?
Money has a powerful way of bringing people back from the dead. If Paramount realizes how big of a deal a Star Trek Legacy show (with Shaw) would be the man they'd retcon that death in a heartbeat.
Huh? No she didn’t. Peace was the only way to get the cure to her people.I did always think it was lame at the end of DS9 how the Founder just accepted that the Federation were benevolent (or at least non aggressive). It was very sudden.
I'm sorry, but the literalizing of the generational divide is just there in the text. It is literally about the old folks stopping brainwashed young people.
Again, this is fixating over in-universe details. That's not relevant. What's relevant is the storytelling trope that is being used, and that trope is "brainwashing/mind control."
No, it's not, because the rogue Changelings should be able to recognize that the newly-empowered Borg will just turn around and try to assimilate or exterminate the Great Link the first chance they get. They are literally acting against their species' best interests.
What? The Dominion were never allegories about communism. The initial creative inspiration for them according to the DS9 Companion interviews was the Mafia.
Huh? No she didn’t.
Matalas helped in season 2 but it was mainly Goldsman.
If they only needed portions of his parietal lobe, they didn't need to even bother with all the portal device subplot at all. You're telling me a Changeling-infested Starfleet can't pocket a parietal lobe without being able to cover it up?
Or how they found out Picard had died.Well, we still don’t know and will probably never know, why the Borg and rogue changelings worked together.
I’ve posted about this in other threads recently. The portal attack doesn’t make a lot of sense
I did always think it was lame at the end of DS9 how the Founder just accepted that the Federation were benevolent (or at least non aggressive). It was very sudden. So it's good that they made that a bit more realistic.
It doesn't. I didn't even know what I was seeing at first.I’ve posted about this in other threads recently. The portal attack doesn’t make a lot of sense
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