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That's why they call it the blues (Paths of Disharmony SPOILERS)

But I can't see that at all, I might be able to see that if the UFP ships actually went out and purposefully tracked down and attacked the Borg.

I agree that, for whatever reason, members of the Federation don't seem to blame Janeway and Picard. I don't either, not really. They can't see the future and had no way of knowing how events would unfold. That said, I have one response to the above quote: Endgame. Janeway quite intentionally attacked the Borg, using futuristic weapons to destroy the transwarp hub and kill the Borg Queen. She did this against the advice of future-Janeway, who advocated only using the technology to get home.

I believe that attack demonstrated the massive threat the Federation presented to the Borg and served, at least in part, as the reason for their full-scale invasion of the Federation.
 
Ok, I'll admit I forgot about that one. I was thinking Janeway did that because the Borg were headed for Earth. I haven't watched EG in ages.
 
JD
The borg losing 1-2 cubes in attacks on Earth would barely matter for it; it wouldn't even count as a skirmish by borg standards; it most definitely would not motivate 'Destiny'.

The actions that provoked the borg into the highly atypical - for the borg - attack on the alpha/beta quadrants (with the federation a priority target) were Janeway destroying the transwarp hub or liberating unimatrix 0.
 
It also reminds me of a line in "The Tears of Eridanus" from "Shattered Light", where an Andorian points out "a warrior culture has few sympathies" but that one of the strongest sympathies they do have is for family.
I'm late to the party, but I feel obligated to give proper credit-- that's a riff on a line from D. C. Fontana's venerable "Yesteryear." And about the only thing ever established about Andorian culture before TOS.
 
Finally got the book. Only a few 10's of pages into it. Not surprised by the T'Ryssa-Taurik relationship. Was it planned at the time the Destiny trilogy was being plotted?
 
Posting via iPhone so excuse my brevity... Here's one very good reason why the Federation won't fall. ;-) it will be shaken to its core, true. But it will remain in existence.

I am sure if I hunt enough I can find more canon references to post 24th century Federation...
 
They've had two referendums on secession in the last thirty years. The first referendum in 1980 came back with No at 59.56%/Yes 40.44%. The second referendum in 1995 came back as No 50.58%/49.42%. The largest political party in Quebec, the Bloc Québécois advocates for secession. And in 1999, the Canadian Parliament passed the Clarity Act, which outlines the conditions under which the Canadian Crown-in-Council would recognize a province's secession.

So it's very fair to say that secessionist sentiment in Quebec is a major political force, far more than what we'd ever be familiar with in modern America. And yet I still doubt Canada would collapse if Quebec seceded.

Speaking as a Canadian, if Quebec left the federation the major problem would be the dominance of Ontario, with a near-majority of the Canadian population and Ontario, while western Canada--Alberta especially, also British Columbia--would resist, well, resist. I don't think that the collapse of Canada would happen if only because there's a real Canadian community, but it would make things complicated.

*nods* That's what I thought, and that's also what I think will happen to the Federation. Andor's secession will be hard, but it won't be a fatal blow.

The thing to note when you're talking about Quebec separatism that it isn't a binary situation. The 1995 referendum question didn't even use the word "independence."

Do you agree that Québec should become sovereign after having made a formal offer to Canada for a new economic and political partnership within the scope of the bill respecting the future of Québec and of the agreement signed on June 12, 1995?

Said bill would give Quebec the "exclusive power to pass all its laws, levy all its taxes and conclude all its treaties," and let it become "sovereign"--not, again, "independent." It also authorized the Quebec government to negotiate a very close federation with Canada, including a shared economic space, common labour market, and even a shared currency.

Hmm. Sounds almost like a miniature version of the European Union.

How does this relate to Vulcan and talk of Romulan reunification? Vulcan may be split down the middle between pro- and anti-reunificationists, but we have no idea how they're defining reunification. Are we talking about opened borders? A new Vulcanoid bloc? Romulan membership in the Federation? Federation (or Vulcan) membership in the Typhon Pact? A strong commitment to intensified cultural and economic exchange programs? Joint projects? Any suggestion or combination of suggestions is imaginable, IMHO.

Exactly!

Sci

About ZSG:
More like the klingon ambassador stated the federation's political instability as clearly as possible - not that this statement about the federation provides him with cover regarding the Klingon Empire - and Bracco had nothing to contradict him with.
More like you would like to ignore such statements because you just don't like them.

No. I just (rather consistently) assign less value to such statements than do you, as I don't take hyperbole to be completely accurate.

About Canada - already answered by rfmcdpei.

Yes. rfmcdpei's statements backed up my own argument: That, just as Quebec's hypothetical secession would be a hard but not fatal blow for Canada, Andor's secession will be a hard but not fatal blow for the Federation.

About 'Taking wing':
"A political majority can be transitory," T'Sevek said coolly. "Particularly such a narrow one."
"Vulcan must be split right down the middle on this, Troi thought."

Exactly. No information about the opinions of the minority of Vulcan poll respondents is offered. Troi infers that Vulcan is split down the middle because of the differences of political opinion that exist between Admiral Akaar's advisers at the briefing, but solid data is not offered.

About RBoE:
Again, Sci, like it or not, Spock worked for decades, tirelessly, for a reunification knowing full well it can involve Vulcan breaking away from the federation.

So? I favor the current uprising in Egypt, even though I know there's a possibility that a hostile, fundamentalist government might assume power if Mubarak loses power. That doesn't mean I favor such an outcome, it means that I'm willing to take the chance that one bad outcome might occur as the cost of pursuing a better outcome (a moderate, stable, Egyptian liberal democracy).

That Spock is aware that Vulcan might choose to secede from the Federation in the process of unifying with Romulus does not mean that he (or, by extension, the majority of other Vulcans in favor of unification) favors or has no problem with Vulcan secession. It's more likely that he's simply willing to take the chance of one bad outcome (Vulcan's secession) occurring as the cost of pursuing a better outcome (Vulcan-Romulan reunification within the context of Federation Membership).

People who participate in or try to shape the political process know full well that politics is not a binary, "Either/Or" process. There's a wide range of potential outcomes, and favoring one direction that could later veer into yet another direction does not mean you favor that other direction. Politics is a continuum.

Knowing full well it's a lot more unlilely for such a reunification to create detente.

Says who? Hell, Spock's Unification movement is partially responsible for the rise of the moderate Gell Kamemor to the praetorship. That's a significant step towards detente in the first place. There's no reason to consider that option more unlikely than Vulcan secession.

And after 'Destiny' you can be sure the previous borg encounters were looked at with a microscope - by everyone.

And the inescapable resulting conclusion is that the borg would not have attacked so soon, in so large numbers and with intent to exterminate if Picard/Janeway would not have provoked it by killing queens and destroying a transwarp hub.

Sure. By the same token, the Third Reich would not have attacked Britain and France so soon if they hadn't declared war after the Reich's attack on Poland. That doesn't mean the Third Reich was not the aggressor, and it doesn't make the British and French governments responsible for Hitler's choices. Picard and Janeway are not responsible for the Borg Collective's choices.

So - an unstable federation, with a founding member already left (a decision taken by vote, with a substatial margin), another founding member with a very good cause for leaving,

Which there is no evidence it wants to secede.

many other victimised, looking for what went wrong, who made the mistakes that lead to such a catastrophic outcome - yes, the trend IS for the federation to disintegrate.

I'm sorry, what was that about me having convoluted hypotheses? You're the one who's proposing that the Federation's trend is to disintegrate because of one Member State seceding, making up "evidence" that others want to do the same with no actual evidence to back it up.

Is this a possibility, not a certainty, Sci? Yes, but a possibility far likelier than the ones you advocate.

What ones have I been advocating, exactly? The most I've been saying is that Andor's secession will be hard but not fatal for the Federation and that there's no evidence that most Vulcans want or have no problem with seceding. Please do not put words in my mouth.

rfmcdpei

"More like you would like to ignore such statements because you just don't like them."
What statements from canon/trek lit have I ignored, exactly, rfmcdpei?
You're taling about Sci and his convoluted hypotheticals

Eh? What convoluted hypotheticals have I proposed, exactly?
 
Finally got the book. Only a few 10's of pages into it. Not surprised by the T'Ryssa-Taurik relationship. Was it planned at the time the Destiny trilogy was being plotted?
*I* was surprised by the current state of the T'Ryssa-Taurik relationship, and I'm the only person to have ever written Trys and Taurik together prior to this. I've got to know what would even make you ask if it had been planned out back four books ago. :vulcan:
 
*I* was surprised by the current state of the T'Ryssa-Taurik relationship, and I'm the only person to have ever written Trys and Taurik together prior to this. I've got to know what would even make you ask if it had been planned out back four books ago. :vulcan:

I had a weird experience, having done the beta read on Dayton's book months ago, but only reading yours over Christmas. Thoroughly enjoyed it. The brownish tones of the cover influenced me to think the book would be depressing, but there was plenty of hope and light seeded throughout.

I was having strange forward flashes of insight into the T/T relationship and had wondered if you knew where those first encounters would lead.
 
I just had a thought. (Bear in mind that I have not read any of the Typhon Pact novels.) I previously asked what would happen to Andorians serving in Starfleet or the Federation government. If any such Andorians wanted to remain where they were, and the Federation pledged to abide by that decision, but the Andorian government tried to compel them to leave, would this be possible? Would it be possible for Andor to force its citizens to leave the Federation as Andor itself has done?

I mean, obviously the Federation cannot and WOULD not ever force Andor to stay in the Federation against its will; taken in the other direction, given that Andor *has* seceded, can *they* do anything about those individual Andorians who don't want to leave the Federation? Might the Typhon Pact get involved somehow, on Andor's behalf? It also seems obvious that any Andorians who do wish to return home, and therefore give up their Federation citizenship, would be allowed to do so (since otherwise they may never see home again). But if they don't want to, can Andor make them do it anyway?

(it's a damn good thing that none of this happened when Thelian was president of the Federation... :devil: )
 
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I don't know alot about this kind of stuff, but my thinking would be that if Andor tried to make them leave, then they would have the option of giving up their Andorian citizenship. Now, could a person from a non-member planet become a Federation citizen?
 
I don't know alot about this kind of stuff, but my thinking would be that if Andor tried to make them leave, then they would have the option of giving up their Andorian citizenship.

I'm sure the *Federation* would allow that, yes. But would Andor respect that decision? And if they did not, would there be anything they could realistically do about it? Short of kidnapping and/or war, of course.
 
Wouldn't they just be able to ask for political asylum if the Andorians refused to let them stay in the Federation?
 
I would think most Andorians serving in Starfleet/Federation will return to Andor.

To me it seems that all races, except humans from Earth, have a lot of patriotism for their home planets.
 
I just had a thought. (Bear in mind that I have not read any of the Typhon Pact novels.) I previously asked what would happen to Andorians serving in Starfleet or the Federation government. If any such Andorians wanted to remain where they were, and the Federation pledged to abide by that decision, but the Andorian government tried to compel them to leave, would this be possible? Would it be possible for Andor to force its citizens to leave the Federation as Andor itself has done?

Well, Andor could probably pass a law revoking the citizenship of any Andorian citizen living in Federation territory or working for the Federation government or Federation Starfleet. But, no, they could no more physically enter Federation territory and force their citizens to return to Andorian territory than could any other foreign state. I mean, I'm sure the Islamic Republic of Iran isn't happy that there are Iranian-Americans working for the U.S. government, but they can't legally force them to leave the U.S., y'know?

It also seems obvious that any Andorians who do wish to return home, and therefore give up their Federation citizenship, would be allowed to do so

Interestingly, if Federation citizenship works anything like modern-day citizenship, they might not need to relinquish their Federation citizenship. It's entirely possible that the Federation might continue to extend to those Andorians who wish it Federation citizenship even if the Andorian government does not recognize that extension.

That's how it works with dual citizenship these days. U.S. law requires any foreign citizen seeking to become a naturalized U.S. citizen to renounce their original citizenship. But, many foreign states do not recognize as legal under their law that renunciation; as a result, while the U.S. government does not recognize these naturalized U.S. citizens as having dual citizenship, many of their original governments continue to extend citizenship to those individuals, refusing to recognize as valid the renunciation.

Now, could a person from a non-member planet become a Federation citizen?

Sure. I mean, why wouldn't the Federation allow for immigration and naturalization like any country does today?

And we've seen it happen canonically. Worf was born a citizen of the Klingon Empire, but emigrated to the U.F.P. and became a Federation citizen.
 
Now, could a person from a non-member planet become a Federation citizen?

Sure. I mean, why wouldn't the Federation allow for immigration and naturalization like any country does today?

And we've seen it happen canonically. Worf was born a citizen of the Klingon Empire, but emigrated to the U.F.P. and became a Federation citizen.

That probably applies to Leonard James Akar too. :bolian:
 
Now, could a person from a non-member planet become a Federation citizen?

Sure. I mean, why wouldn't the Federation allow for immigration and naturalization like any country does today?

And we've seen it happen canonically. Worf was born a citizen of the Klingon Empire, but emigrated to the U.F.P. and became a Federation citizen.

That probably applies to Leonard James Akar too. :bolian:

I wasn't thinking about that, but, good point! (I'd find it hard to believe that they'd let him serve as the Starfleet CINC without being naturalized.)
 
I just had a thought. (Bear in mind that I have not read any of the Typhon Pact novels.) I previously asked what would happen to Andorians serving in Starfleet or the Federation government. If any such Andorians wanted to remain where they were, and the Federation pledged to abide by that decision, but the Andorian government tried to compel them to leave, would this be possible? Would it be possible for Andor to force its citizens to leave the Federation as Andor itself has done?

It wouldn't be legally possible, certainly if these people a) were Federation citizens and b) didn't want to be expatriated. In an absolute worst-case scenario, you'd have a situation akin to that of Iran, where expatriates who'd renounced their citizenship in favour of a foreign country's wouldn't have their new citizenship recognized.

We're not close to a situation akin to that of Iran with Andor, though. As the ambassador pointed out, nothing's going to happen to the Andorians who happened to vote against secession; Andor's going to remain a pluralistic society, if one marked by political violence, and a democratic one. It isn't cutting off all ties to the Federation or to the wider universe; it's just opting for a unilateral redesign.
 
Speaking as a Canadian, if Quebec left the federation the major problem would be the dominance of Ontario, with a near-majority of the Canadian population and Ontario, while western Canada--Alberta especially, also British Columbia--would resist, well, resist. I don't think that the collapse of Canada would happen if only because there's a real Canadian community, but it would make things complicated.

*nods* That's what I thought, and that's also what I think will happen to the Federation. Andor's secession will be hard, but it won't be a fatal blow.

I'm not convinced that the situation would be even that bad.

Consider. The long-term trend in Canada has been for power and population to shift away from the Atlantic coast, first towards central Canada then towards western Canada. My own province of Prince Edward Island ("pei") has four seats in the federal parliament, not the one that you'd expect from an equal distribution or the six it started out with, because it was grandfathered in. The long-term relative decline of Quebec in Canada--something that started before separatism, incidentally, as Ontario economic growth made Montreal lose its position of historical dominance--is significantly less pronounced, but if not for Quebec's tendency to vote as a bloc its influence could have been diminished. Even now, it's home to a bit over a fifth of the Canadian population and economy.

Can Andor claim anything so favourable? At the beginning of the Federation, Andor ranked alongside Earth, Tellar, and Vulcan as one of the civilizations that had to band together against the Romulans, one of four equals. If Andor had seceded in 2182, the effect would have been huge.

Two centuries have passed. The rapid expansion of the Federation afterwards, via the incorporation of unpopulated worlds and the integration of new civilizations, created the potential for vast relative decline among these four civilizations. The founding members, grandfathered into the civilization, did have an advantage over the newer members, and humans and Vulcans did seem to have kept up, founding new colony worlds and getting involved in Federation-wide affairs and remaining culturally influential and the like. (Not enough has been said about the Tellarites to make any statements, though I'll class them with the Humans and Vulcans.)

I don't think that the Andorians did that, or did that to the same sustained degree, because of their worsening reproductive crisis. The four-sex reproductive paradigm was introduced partly because it was so cool, but partly because an ongoing slide towards extinction explained why a founding member of the Federation was so inexplicably absent. Andor by itself is still an important world, but it's not nearly so important as it used to be.

Will Andorian secession have the same effect on the Federation as Quebec's from Canada? Sure, if in the century and then some after Canada was founded it went on to incorporate the United States, Mexico, and perhaps Japan. The blow will be more to morale, I think, and less to the mechanics of the Federation.

That Spock is aware that Vulcan might choose to secede from the Federation in the process of unifying with Romulus does not mean that he (or, by extension, the majority of other Vulcans in favor of unification) favors or has no problem with Vulcan secession. It's more likely that he's simply willing to take the chance of one bad outcome (Vulcan's secession) occurring as the cost of pursuing a better outcome (Vulcan-Romulan reunification within the context of Federation Membership).
And when Spock was chatting with the Gorn, he wasn't weighting the likelihood of any of the hypotheticals.
 
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As the ambassador pointed out, nothing's going to happen to the Andorians who happened to vote against secession

Really? Hmm. That is interesting. And good news, I guess. Was it an Andorian ambassador who said this?

Andor's going to remain a pluralistic society, if one marked by political violence

But not physical violence? Not fighting in the streets or anything like that? In the Khitomer Alliance thread, I asked about non-Andorian Federation citizens on Andor - those visiting, or who had business or other appointments there. I take it they aren't in danger?

It isn't cutting off all ties to the Federation or to the wider universe; it's just opting for a unilateral redesign.

I see. So the Federation still has diplomatic relations, of a kind, with Andor?

Has Andor actually joined the Typhon Pact? If not yet, are they contemplating it?
 
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