Yeah. We found that out a few weeks back.
Uh... some of us know Lynx, and his gender, going back several years now.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
Yeah. We found that out a few weeks back.
The horror.Yeah. We found that out a few weeks back.
Uh... some of us know Lynx, and his gender, going back several years now.We had a similar version of this debate back when the VOY-R was first being announced and it became apparent that Kes wasn't going to be in the books.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
Yeah. We found that out a few weeks back.
Uh... some of us know Lynx, and his gender, going back several years now.We had a similar version of this debate back when the VOY-R was first being announced and it became apparent that Kes wasn't going to be in the books.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
The Borg and Russia (or any human nation) are not equivalent, because they have fundamentally different mindsets. The Borg do not experience revenge; they attack for three reasons: to acquire new technologies and knowledge, to expand their territory and acquire more drones, or to eliminate a threat that has proven resistent to their usual methodology (like Species 8472, although note the breach into Fluidic Space was initially performed out of the first desire, the acquisition of new information).
So when the Borg attack a group on onw of their ships because their breaking stuff or interfering with their plans its not because they consider them a threat.
I know this is in reply to me, but I haven't the faintest idea what you just said.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
Now wait: Kes' last appearence was "Fury" in season six and she would have been 10 by the time Voyager got home. Was there really much weeping and gnashing of teeth over Kes not being there?
aaron, great av, but it's missing the final stage: blown to kingdom come!
The majority of the crew are revealed to be terminator robots in the last two chapters the remaining Voyager crew members are rounded up and shot in the mess hall. Kim dies while shouting "spatial anomaly off the starbARGGGGGGGGG", while Seven manages to escape by flashing her rack at one of the terminators overloading his processor in the process.
Chakotay is also spared because he registers as "wooden" on the terminator's senses and they mistake him for a rather elaborate table. Janeway appears via a timeportal wearing a leather jacket and sunglasses and says "come with me if you want to live" then the vorlans turn up and the book finishes on a cliffhanger.
BTW, regarding this thread's original topic: "No Way" is winning 55% to 45%.
Bearing in mind I actually voted with the "winning" side, I doubt whether the poll makes a bit of difference to Margaret one way or another. As Captain Kirk once said, "I'll keep that in mind...when this becomes a democracy."![]()
You mean like say a group that has some what successfully mostly through luck fought off two invasions by the borg and destroyed their ENTIRE transwarp network effectively craping on all their major plans for the forseeable future.
I'm saying when a starfleet away team beams aboard a borg ship and say damages systems to cripple said vessle do the borg not attack said away team becuae they in fact consider damaging their ship to be in some way threatening.
^ For what it's worth (I'm not of the Kes party - I liked her character fine, but that's as far as I'm willing to go), I expect some sort of work-around could have been arranged for her short lifespan, too. Ocampans didn't have access to Trek-level medicine, after all. And I expect it would have made her character better, since - do let's admit it - the silly-short lifespan was not the finest alien trait Trek has ever come up with.
Since he refuses to read anything that is being currently published - what do you suggest?
Wait a minute... Lynx is a he?!? Great googly-moogly.
^ For what it's worth (I'm not of the Kes party - I liked her character fine, but that's as far as I'm willing to go), I expect some sort of work-around could have been arranged for her short lifespan, too. Ocampans didn't have access to Trek-level medicine, after all. And I expect it would have made her character better, since - do let's admit it - the silly-short lifespan was not the finest alien trait Trek has ever come up with.
^ For what it's worth (I'm not of the Kes party - I liked her character fine, but that's as far as I'm willing to go), I expect some sort of work-around could have been arranged for her short lifespan, too. Ocampans didn't have access to Trek-level medicine, after all. And I expect it would have made her character better, since - do let's admit it - the silly-short lifespan was not the finest alien trait Trek has ever come up with.
The series itself had shown that the Ocampan lifespan could conceivably be extended to--what was it, fourteen years?--in "Cold Fire"
Wait a minute... Lynx is a he?!? Great googly-moogly.
I strongly disagree. We already have too much of that in certain series, not to mention in daily life as well. Star Trek is about adventures and exploring space, not a soap opera of dying and grief.If they'd *used* the short lifespan to explore stories about how we deal with aging and eventual death, it would have been terrific.
I strongly disagree. We already have too much of that in certain series, not to mention in daily life as well. Star Trek is about adventures and exploring space, not a soap opera of dying and grief.If they'd *used* the short lifespan to explore stories about how we deal with aging and eventual death, it would have been terrific.
I strongly disagree. We already have too much of that in certain series, not to mention in daily life as well. Star Trek is about adventures and exploring space, not a soap opera of dying and grief.If they'd *used* the short lifespan to explore stories about how we deal with aging and eventual death, it would have been terrific.
What sci-fi is really good at is exploring contemporary issues. This is a contemporary issue.
But, Lynx, I know I'm not as experienced in the pain of losing someone as you are. You're the expert on this--you've said it so many times to me, it's been permanently imprinted on my brain. You know what it's like to lose someone. I have no clue.
So take my opinion as the uninformed thing that it is, and move on.
PS: To those who don't know us, Lynx has been telling me that I'm an idiot about this for 8 years now. For the record, I'm a widow.
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