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Why does the Federation make such bad treaties?

Which is more important individual rights or the need to protect soceity as a whole? One of a governements primary role is to protect it's citizens thats why we have military forces and sign treaties. A treaty tries to balance the needs of both parties unfortuantly some people might be negatively impacted by it. Does that mean if 99.9% of people befit from the treaty whilst .1% are negatively impacted by it the treaty shouldn't be signed?
 
Which is more important individual rights or the need to protect soceity as a whole? One of a governements primary role is to protect it's citizens thats why we have military forces and sign treaties. A treaty tries to balance the needs of both parties unfortuantly some people might be negatively impacted by it. Does that mean if 99.9% of people befit from the treaty whilst .1% are negatively impacted by it the treaty shouldn't be signed?


exactly. Trying to protect a tiny minority at the expense of a much larger society on the whole on an issue like this is impractical and stupid.


the Maquis' "cause" was b.s. They were a small number of colonists and Starfleet was going to resettle them for free elsewhere within the vast territory of the Federation.


The Maquis decided to be spoiled children about it and decided their property rights on a few planets trumped the UFP's interest in peace.
 
Oh, and I supposed the Nazis has good reasons to remove the Jews from Europe and anyone standing up to the Nazis for killing the Jews risking their and their family's livelihood are stupid?
 
Were the Jews part of an official government who offered to resettle them for free?

It wasn't like the DMZ worlds were some ancient hallowed ground, most of the people there were the same ones who settled them in the first place. And they knew all along there were contested worlds.
 
NO, but I do draw the similarity when their property were illegally seize and having their citizenship being taken away. And those Indians were there for a long time...even before the Federation was created. Let's say if the planet was inhabited by 7 billion inhabitant...both humans and other aliens. Would that be wrong? It's wrong to let the government get away with stuff like this and nobody seems to be bothered by it. No wonder the Romulans never liked the Federation.
 
In the Federation's case, they weren't trying to conquer the colonists, they were just trying to negotiate a treaty involving territorial swaps.

One more thing should be noted. We know those worlds were contested even before they were colonized (and the colonists were warned about that). Now, seeing how the Cardies are the bad guys, it's natural to think their claim to those worlds wasn't legitimate. But what if it actually was? What if the Federation really encroached on their territory by settling those worlds? And was just recognizing their claim and returning what was rightfully Cardassian? (Similar to the Israel/Palestine example you gave.)

And yet they had to devote resources to capturing the Maquis and the Cardies still had territorial ambitions against the Federation so clearly that didn't work for them. Despite this treaty, they still had to devote resources to stopping various Cardassian plots against them and bring the Maquis to heel. If the point of the treaty was deal with the Cardassian situation and efficiently, it still failed.

It's still better than all-out war.

It seems like that just emboldened them to cause more trouble. The fact that this treaty failed completely in less then a decade and the Cardies fought against the Federation in the Dominion war, with the Dominion in Cardassia being a much bigger threat to the Federation then Romulans or the Klingons, it failed on a spectacular level.
It could be said that the actions of the Maquis (who at one point stopped just defending themselves and started attacking as well) are part of what drove the Cardassians to seek the alliance with the Dominion.

Now, I do think the Federation has it's share of the blame. But it's because they allowed the colonists to settle in a contested space in the first place. And because they didn't do (or at least we haven't seen them do it) more to ensure that the Cardassians were following the treaty.
 
NO, but I do draw the similarity when their property were illegally seize and having their citizenship being taken away. And those Indians were there for a long time...even before the Federation was created. Let's say if the planet was inhabited by 7 billion inhabitant...both humans and other aliens. Would that be wrong? It's wrong to let the government get away with stuff like this and nobody seems to be bothered by it. No wonder the Romulans never liked the Federation.



you're arguing against strawmen here, and you don't seem to understand the issues involved or how to use historical analogies.


the UFP wasn't trying to strip the colonists of their citizenship, or send them to prison camps, or steal their land, or any other of the nonsense you've been pulling out of your butt.


the UFP was merely asking the colonists to relocate to other parts of the Federation so they could conclude a peace treaty with the Cardassians.
 
Well in the case of the indians as seen in Jorneys end(which took place 2270), didn't they settle on that planet some twenty years prior to the DMZ being created. i.e circa 2250. We know that the Setlik III massacre was around 2347. So it appears they settled on a planet that at that point in time was under Federation control.

And has been mentioned previously in todays world, Governments have the means to relocate you should they need the land you reside on. So it is possible that the Federation has similar laws.
 
If that's the case then the Federation would have no responsibility to reign in the Maquis, because if there were not Federation citizens, then would have no control over their actions and the Cardassian government couldn't complain to Federation about the maquis, saying they are endangering the peace treaty, clearly that is not the case.

This is what I mean, we hear about the Feds in the DMZ but we never found out what happened to the colonies that the Feds actually formally gave to the Cardassians.

We also never found out what happened to the Cardassian colonies the Feds got complete control over.

I think its safe to the assume the Federation wasn't tormenting the cardassian colonists like the Cardassian government was towards the Federation colonists, whch makes this treaty even more unfair and one sided.

The whole treaty boils down to the Federation has to follow it all the time and the Cardassians can ignore or invoke it whenever they feel like it. None of your justifications have changed that.

The Cardies violated it in "The Maquis", but then the Feds knew what they were up to and stopped them but the Maquis themselves didn't stop. We never found out what happened to the armed Cardassian colonists, so for all we know the Maquis became the only aggressors in the DMZ attacking unarmed Cardies.[/QUOTE]

And why didn't the federation ever threaten to pull out the treaty during those episodes, considering what a major violation that was? The Cardassians violated the treaty and the federation didn't even threaten diplomatic consequences from this.

Then why did Picard say they were citizens in Preemptive Strike, why was the Federation so determined to bring them to heel if they were not Federation citizens. Heck why was the Cardassian government complaining to the Federation about the Maquis if they were not Federation citizens.

The writers couldn't make up their minds over whether they were Fed citizens or not.

Overwhelming evidence suggests they are, you mentioned one line of dialogue from one episode, I mentioned another line of dialogue from another episode, major plot points from DS9 and TNG that revolve around the Maquis being Federation citizens. Heck the Maquis were planning on declaring independence from the Federation, that clearly cannot happen if they were not part of the Federation.

They were both actions of bad faith by behalf of the Cardassian government. They kidnapped and tortured a federation citizen after intentionally luring the federation there with stories of WMDs, these are actions of extreme bad faith. A treaty is worthless if one side constantly shows bad faith to it.

But the Feds were still the ones who sent that team, the Feds were the overt aggressors there looking for weapons that didn't exist. It was a trap, but the Feds fell into it and came off looking bad because of it. WE know the truth, but the Feds came off looking the bad guy in that situation.[/QUOTE]

Entrapment is not a good faith measure and the Federation has circumstantial evidence that was entrapment on the part of the central Command.

If a police officer uses entrapment to convince someone to commit a crime, the charges are thrown out. Same deal here, its a bad faith action and the Federation council knows this and yet they took no real action.


NO, but I do draw the similarity when their property were illegally seize and having their citizenship being taken away. And those Indians were there for a long time...even before the Federation was created. Let's say if the planet was inhabited by 7 billion inhabitant...both humans and other aliens. Would that be wrong? It's wrong to let the government get away with stuff like this and nobody seems to be bothered by it. No wonder the Romulans never liked the Federation.



you're arguing against strawmen here, and you don't seem to understand the issues involved or how to use historical analogies.


the UFP wasn't trying to strip the colonists of their citizenship, or send them to prison camps, or steal their land, or any other of the nonsense you've been pulling out of your butt.


the UFP was merely asking the colonists to relocate to other parts of the Federation so they could conclude a peace treaty with the Cardassians.


Except the Cardassians were still planning military strikes against the federation, so it didn't achieve that aim either. The Cardassians violated this treaty all the time, so having them torment federation colonists was just the tip of the ice berg.

And sacrificing individual liberty for the good of the state is dangerous. Remember after 9-11 when some said it was "unpatriotic" to criticizes the President and the government used the Patriot Act to increase surveillance power , etc. That;s what this attitude can lead, justifying abuses of power.


And yet they had to devote resources to capturing the Maquis and the Cardies still had territorial ambitions against the Federation so clearly that didn't work for them. Despite this treaty, they still had to devote resources to stopping various Cardassian plots against them and bring the Maquis to heel. If the point of the treaty was deal with the Cardassian situation and efficiently, it still failed.

It's still better than all-out war.

Is it? The war happened anyway and was far worse. The treaties with the Cardassians were like treaties with Nazi Germany, the other side is going to be the aggressor and the treaty is just an excuse to get breathing room for the next offensive, not a serious attempt at peace.

It seems like that just emboldened them to cause more trouble. The fact that this treaty failed completely in less then a decade and the Cardies fought against the Federation in the Dominion war, with the Dominion in Cardassia being a much bigger threat to the Federation then Romulans or the Klingons, it failed on a spectacular level.
It could be said that the actions of the Maquis (who at one point stopped just defending themselves and started attacking as well) are part of what drove the Cardassians to seek the alliance with the Dominion.

Now, I do think the Federation has it's share of the blame. But it's because they allowed the colonists to settle in a contested space in the first place. And because they didn't do (or at least we haven't seen them do it) more to ensure that the Cardassians were following the treaty.

Except the Federation's weak treaty and wiliness to defend it, made the Federation seem like pushovers, which was why the Romulans, Cardassians and any other beliegrent power in the area felt like they act like an aggressor towards the federaation, because there were no consequences to acting like that. Despite the fact the UFP helped th Cardies during the Klingon Cardassian war, the Cardassians had no problem with declaring war on them, because the federation made itself appear as weak and confused sheep, who roll over the time, that doesn't instill gratiude in an enemy, it instills entitlement, arrogance and makes the other side think that you are easy pickings.
 
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Resettlement happens all the time, and even in the most private property loving areas, if the state wants to obtain property, they will, just that in some areas they have to pay for the property in question.

The Federation is a BIG place, and the federation wasn't willing to go to all out war over a couple of newly developed settlements when you had other boarder conflicts, Romulus making noise for the first time in decades, and other threats. The federation was hoping for some sort of romulan treaty, where both sides generally respected the border, but alas, the cardassians where rooting about for more. And they paid heavily for that mistake.
 
The DMZ was different to say the Romulan Neutral Zone. It appeared that the RNZ was an unibaited region of space, whilst the DMZ was exactly what it says it is a De-militarised Zone, where there were still settlements on both sides.
 
Sometimes it seems like the Federation is run by Neville Chamberlain,
Got it in one. ;)

The Dominion War treaty is the worst one yet. Why the holy frak the Feddies think the Dominion won't break it (eventually, could take centuries, the Founders think long term) is beyond me. The speech they made at the signing treaty was incredibly delusional, like the whole thing was a misunderstanding? :rommie:

That's okay, the Dominion loves naive neighbors. :evil:
 
They're back in the Gamma Quadrant, which is enough for the Alpha Quad folks. After all, they have Ben and the Prophets on their side meaning the wormhole is effectively closed to any Dominion armadas coming through.

Which means the Female Changlings speech when she said "We'll make you fight to the death, so that our next invasion will kill you all" was a hollow threat as the Prophets wouldn't let it happen.
 
^ And the Dominion is the type of outfit that would be willing to wait 70 years to achieve its goals. That's no time in the life of a changeling.
 
And given how fast Fed tech advances, by the time the Dominion gets there the Feds will be able to fight them on better terms.

Either way, it was acceptable compared to a continued war.
 
Considering that at least some of the colonists were warned about the situation before they settled on these planets, why did they do it anyway?

I mean right on a disputed border with a regime known for massacring civilians?

That's too close for comfort.

The colonists may have to take some of the blame.

That's one for the history books-don't ever swap border territories with people living in them-there's gonna be trouble.


The Feds seem to be harsher on their own than their actual enemies.

They were aggressive in trying to stop the Maquis, but the Dominion war treaty?

The Breen can just return to their space and promise never to make war with the Federation, ok, you may go ..
 
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