I can absolutely accept "I don't have an answer for you."Let me be more specific: How can any of these races relate to each other? What do they have in common OTHER THAN "we hate Feds?"
There's no way to give you an answer that can satisfy you as long as you insist on reducing entire civilizations to simplified sound bites.
Ugh. I'd really like to comment further on this, but I'll just say I had several aspects of that in a Trek story I tried to develop 12yrs ago, and am now placing/rearranging it to fit with my own stories....the Pact is not about hating the Federation, not for all its members. The Gorn certainly have no reason to hate the Federation, since Picard and Data saved the current Gorn government from being overthrown. The Kinshaya have no history of interaction with the Federation at all, and focus their hatred on the Klingons. The Pact is about mutual defense against any potential threat; after seeing their quadrant come to the brink of annihilation at the hands of the Borg, they recognize that they can no longer go it alone.
Yes, I'm aware being a writer is an uphill battle as far as selling the idea to a publisher, never mind getting a book published at all or ever. It's more for myself to do.
And anyone who's watched more than a few hours of Star Trek knows the running joke about alien foreheads and the fact that the VAST majority of races encountered are humanoid in appearance to some degree. There's a familiarity with that on a psychological level.Since when does the way different species look have anything to do with whether they can get along? Anyone who's watched more than a few hours of Star Trek should understand that's a belief that holds no water in this franchise.But being so drastically alien, they are governed by different psychologies. The founding Fed members are all vaguely similar in both appearance and general social psychology. This isn't the case with the Typhon aliens, and they are in fact MORE prone to seeking violence as a solution than most races depicted.
Tholians
Species 8472
The "parasite" race from TNG season 1
Trill symbiotes
The Sheliak
The Calamarain
Excalbians
Horta
There are a few more, I'm sure, but as far as intelligent non-humanoid aliens go...that's it. Oh I know, the Gorn, the Gamilon, Jem'Hadar and even the Founders appear quite alien - and they are - but on the surface they all have (or take on) a relatively humanoid appearance which we relate to. It's almost always reflected in their psychology with regards to how they interact with human characters as well.
I think if the Breen, Romulans and Tholians weren't part of it, it would make more sense. Reason being there is a history to fall back on with the 1st two, and either written accounts or accepted behavioral assumptions of the last one.aside from the Romulans, and briefly the Breen, these races have rarely, if ever, been shown onscreen. The Kinshaya don't even exist in canonical Trek. The Tzenkethi were never seen, and in fact were only ever mentioned in one episode and a single scene of another. The Tholians have been featured in only four episodes and mentioned briefly in a few others, and the Gorn have only been seen onscreen in two episodes -- three if you count the brief glimpse of a Gorn councillor in Elysia in TAS: "The Time Trap" -- and mentioned in passing in two more.
The "idea" is my own perception of what I've seen, read, liked or disliked. It's no different from what I feel about Orion girls being retconned in Enterprise as fake slaves rather than being used as commodities as was implied in the show and written in stories before.The whole reason that author Keith DeCandido and editor Marco Palmieri chose these races in the first place was because of their obscurity and the lack of detailed knowledge we had of them -- because they were barely known and Keith and Marco thought it would be cool to develop them more fully. So I don't understand where you're getting this notion that onscreen Star Trek has provided clear, unambiguous portraits of who these species are and what their psychology is like.
The point you're missing is that what they are and how they live effects how they perceive their lives, the lives of non-Gorn, and their place in existence. If you don't understand that, then I'll put it to you another way with dogs again - they are governed by a different psychology than us based on what they came from, what they are now, and who they do or do not interact with. Troi explains it on only a language level EDIT: in the episode The Ensigns of Command.In appearance, but come on, they're aliens in a fictional universe. Obviously they've been capable of cooperating with each other enough to found an advanced technological civilization, so clearly a slavishly literal comparison with animals they just happen to look like on the surface is not legitimate.
I'm talking about environment and biology effecting perception and behavior now. Breen are known aggressors, and despite the fact I think DS9 is the pinnacle of Star Trek on TV, I still try and make sense of what the Founders offered them in exchange for a NEGOTIATION, never mind an alliance.Plenty of human regimes have been cold and callous, but that isn't a racial trait.
No matter the reason someone has written post TV series, the fact remains that animals/life forms of any kind are governed by the environment they come from, and what they instinctually feel is necessary to ensure their survival. Breen are aggressive. They are depicted as such. Somehow, it's an extension of the place they came from. Fine if someone fleshes that out, but it's still a factor....seriously, if you'd read Zero Sum Game, you'd discover how completely, transcendently, comically wrong you are to make any blanket generalizations about the Breen as a species.
We're all a type of animal. I know human arrogance wants to believe otherwise, but we're a type of animal existing in this biosphere.How the hell is that a trait of what kind of "animal" they are??? They're exactly the same species as Vulcans! Obviously their militarism is a cultural trait.Romulans are militaristic and don't trust situations or individuals they can't control.
As far as the militarism and control goes, c'mon, where do you think the concept comes from? They're humanoids who live in groups like us. For humans, it's a primate trait. When primates live in groups, that = top monkey/ape/human tells others what to do and keeps order so there's cohesion in the group, and some primates are known for "warring" with other troops.
Are Romulans a type of alien primate? That's up for debate, but they are the one group in the "Pact" who act and look most like us, so I'm going by that.
No, Romulans and Vulcans are not the same anymore. Sub-species at best. I provided a link in the other thread which addresses that point. Scroll down to the part here...
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Romulan
...the part that says "Physiology" to see the major differences, none of which, by your own admission, should not be able to occur within such a short evolutionary span. If they're the same species on every biological level, Chekov should never have been able to pinpoint Spock on that Stormbird.
Fair enough.Obviously, yes, but the point is that there are only some who are like that, and therefore there are others who are not. The Typhon Pact novels go out of their way to demonstrate that there are many different conflicting factions within the Pact, some of whom are just what you imagine, but others of whom are completely unlike that.
No, it's not. Perhaps you missed the part you quoted me where I said "If it had been reversed, I think it would have been great."*sigh* The fact that you look at two people showing respect for each other's diversity and see it as something to mock is part and parcel of why you're unable to understand what we're trying to tell you ...
What I find many Trek fans are unable to understand is that IDIC does not mean "the only acceptable opinion and perception is what I and the majority think is correct." I found the way it was written to be funny. You didn't. There's actually nothing wrong with that.

I'm actually well aware of that, as well as the fact the "Vulcan salute" is also of Jewish religious origins. I'm also aware that Shatner is Jewish. Did you know he's also Canadian?(And perhaps you weren't aware that Leonard Nimoy is Jewish?)
Yet, people still generalize certain political and religious groups in place of that, and it's accepted, the biggest one being that one group doesn't like certain ethnicities, when in fact the accusing group has a well documented history of either voting against reform or abstaining all together. Oh yeah, there's plenty of rampant prejudice and stereotyping today; it's just done in a different manner to different groups. We're still basically the same, all of us, and that's as far as I'll go with real world politics...for now.Most people in the United States used to follow the path that kept African-Americans and women from voting or participating equally in society. Now, most people in the United States fully accept their inclusion and reject those who still push for the old attitudes. Most people in the United States used to follow the path that rejected any acknowledgment of homosexuality, let alone any granting of rights; yet now an increasing percentage of people in the United States support marriage, military service, and other forms of inclusion for LGBT people. Societies can change; in fact, they routinely do. If anything, it's a fairly normal pattern for a new generation to rebel against the attitudes and excesses of the previous one.
Exactly! Who the hell do you think everyone has to deal with?...it's foolish and wrong because it assumes the entire species is a monolithic group. Weyoun was speaking about the behavior of the government and dominant culture of the Romulan Star Empire. It is foolish to equate that with the uniform behavior of the entire population.
I understand that, mostly because both sides of my family are recent immigrants, one side being white, while the other is not.Every society has multiple different factions and blocs within it. In a given generation or era, one such faction will dominate and impose its values on the character of the nation, while opposing factions are marginalized or repressed. But eventually, the dominant faction will weaken and an opposing faction will gain in strength, and the national character will change.
I understand that very well. I'd like you to quote me were I said "everyone in every group acts and thinks exactly alike."With members of the Romulan military -- members of the ruling faction and subculture. When dealing with the Romulan Star Empire as a political entity and those who were employed in the support of its current policies. A state is not its people. Especially not an oppressive, dictatorial state.
Sure, if you want to make Star Trek stories about politics, lobbyists and handshakes, and crews teaming up to scan for fungis and rocks - yeah, that would be great.A lot of the posters on this board are German. Would you therefore expect them to be Nazis? I doubt it.<SNIP> So surely it should be just as easy to accept that the character of the Romulan government and military at a certain point in history can't be assumed to be a universal, perpetual attribute of Romulans as a species, and that it's just as possible for the oppressive, treacherous Romulan regime to be replaced by a more peaceful, enlightened one as it was for the Nazis to be replaced by the modern, democratic German government.
For me, I'd rather read a Trek book about an adventure, with clearly defined good and bad main characters, a decent supporting cast, and an arc both the lead protagonist and antagonist have to go through. Romulans as adversaries are better for this (much like NAZIs being primary adversaries for Indiana Jones.) If I want pointed eared people who are peaceful, I'll read a story about Vulcans.
Hmmm...suddenly I'm getting that "fan-fic" vibe again.Which was entirely true until the Borg Invasion. Once you've read Destiny, maybe you'll understand what a complete game-changer that was.Actually THIS time I'm also going by the Vanguard depiction of them as being hive-minded. And pretty much anything which is hive-minded is adverse to that which is not part of their group. They are xenophobic - that much is well known. They are a hive-mind. Both those = no alliance ever with anyone, IMO.

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