Why would they need to?Which I always thought was strange, why wouldn't they announce themselves as the Borg, it's who they are.
Not always, if you notice every time we meet them their openning "speech" changes. If you notice, they nolonger include: "You will adapt to service us." in their opener.Isn't that what they normally do, announce themselves to whoever there about to assimilate? I thought it was typical of them to do this as I don't think the Borg are that secretive of there identity.
The omission of "We are the Borg" in "Regeneration" was the result of writer fiat in order to not wreck continuity by having Archer actually have a name to associate with this race of cyborgs. It was cheap I thought. At first I thought that perhaps Hoshi had opened communications in mid-sentence cutting off "We are the Borg" but after watching the scene again that wasn't the case.Which I always thought was strange, why wouldn't they announce themselves as the Borg, it's who they are.
At first I thought that perhaps Hoshi had opened communications in mid-sentence cutting off "We are the Borg" but after watching the scene again that wasn't the case.Which I always thought was strange, why wouldn't they announce themselves as the Borg, it's who they are.
Thanks! The El Auriens help a lot.
Those refugees in Generations didn't make a whole lot of sense. The El Aurians spent 70 years crossing the Galaxy to escape the Borg and then never bother to inform starfleet as to why they were refugees?
So you're saying these refugees watched their world and culture be destroyed by the Borg as well as others but yet not one of them would give up information freely too warn others?Those refugees in Generations didn't make a whole lot of sense. The El Aurians spent 70 years crossing the Galaxy to escape the Borg and then never bother to inform starfleet as to why they were refugees?
They weren't Starfleet's concern for all of those 30 (not 70) years, mind you. The particular bunch in ST:GEN is the only one known to have ended up in Federation territory, and there's little indication that anybody but Guinan, Soran and the guy calling himself Martus Mazur actually remained there. Waves of refugees must be passing through each of these star empires rather regularly, and if they don't want to speak, Starfleet's not the bunch to torture them for the information. (Klingons, Romulans or Cardassians might have gotten something more out of their respective bunches of refugees... But they wouldn't have volunteered the information forward.)
Timo Saloniemi
Come on, Timo.I'm not convinced you can watch the Borg assimilate a world and survive to tell the story. Not after "Dark Frontier" at any rate. When the Borg finally decide to do a world, they do it good, a sort of final harvest where every last member of the species is hunted down (insofar as practicable).
Guinan probably never saw the Borg assimilate her home. That she survived would be due to her being absent. What could her testimony really be worth to the assorted aliens she encounters on her flight? Why frighten these primitives with stories about a foe they cannot resist anyway?
It's not as if the El-Aurians would ever have viewed the Feds as their saviors or anything, really. From the looks of it ("Time's Arrow"), the El-Aurian culture would have been technologically more advanced than the Federation one, and cosmopolitically more savvy as well. If that didn't help, what would?
Timo Saloniemi
The Borg are not all powerful.In "Dark Frontier", the Borg did make the effort to get everybody who tried to escape from the target planet. And there's no real reason why they couldn't have done that: they had plenty of ships of their own, capable of superior speed and aggression. If a thousand refugee ships launched, the Borg would simply pick the biggest and fastest fifty during the first five minutes, the next biggest and fastest hundred during the next ten minutes, and the small and slow remaining craft during the following hours.
They wouldn't get those members of the species who were elsewhere to begin with, but my point was that Guinan must have been one of those.
...Of course, a smart species abandons its planet at the first sign of the Borg, not when they come for the final harvest, thus explaining some of the refugee waves.
Timo Saloniemi
There is absolutely no way to capture every last single person fleeing from a planet. Nobody in the Trek universe has rescources like that.
Guinan: "I wasn't there personally, but from what I'm told, they swarmed through our system. And when they left, there was little or nothing left of my people."
Guinan: "They don't do that [openly attack] individually. It's not their way. When they decide to come, they're going to come in force. They don't do anything piecemeal."
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