Wasn't that the supposition of my question: what if they joined the Dominion (not defeated by them)?
Wasn't that the supposition of my question: what if they joined the Dominion (not defeated by them)?
You think they would've let them keep their fleets ?
You think they would've let them keep their fleets ?
I think that was a point. The Dominion pretends to ally with locals then slowly removes their allies weapons and rights once they're finished.
It happens a lot with imperial societies.
The Cardassians think they're getting stuff out of the deal but they're not.
While the advanced species might be currently suppressing the primitives, there was no dialog as to the advanced attempting to kill off the primitive.If the primitives evolving with the other advanced race, what would stop them from doing so without them?
Or, let the black plague completely eradicate all life in Europe, so that those nice folk in the near/middle east can then replace them.If you substituted the closest RL parallel, it would be Native Americans dying out for Europeans to take their place (rather than the high tech vs. low tech depicted in the show)--which is so incredibly offensive I can't even begin to analyze that.
To be fair, there are indication that not all Trek species can inter-breed. There was initially doubt that Jadzia and Worf would be able to have children.How is it that Vulcans can mate with Humans and Humans with Klingons but these guys can't mate with people on their planet? You know, another acceptable alternative.
While the advanced species might be currently suppressing the primitives, there was no dialog as to the advance attempting to kill off the primitive one.
Comfortable slavery is not any less slavery.
of course it is
if your definition of slavery is simply " being under the power of another," then most of us already are anyway. What do you think happens if you don't obey a law that you think is silly or unjust, or don't want to pay a certain tax?
the only issue is whether that power is mostly tolerant, just, and benevolent or not
So, if somebody kidnapped you and locked you in a room for ten years, you wouldn't mind so long as it had enough pillows and they gave you pizza and beer?
The only time a government is justified in exercising power over you is to prevent you from harming somebody else's right to life, liberty and property. It's established in the early seasons that you can't even make a significant trade deal in the GQ without getting approval from the Dominion. You certainly can't criticize the government, or interact with anyone the government doesn't like. On Cardassia, citizens had to carry papers around with them at all times.
You kill a man in the US, it takes an expensive trial just to punish you, and you might even get out in 20 years. You kill a man on a Dominion planet they execute 50 of your friends. You can't even make a comparison.
Maybe those blue guys from Alliances would prefer comfortable imprisonment, but Romulans surely would not.
Spectre Of The Gun
From the first time I saw this episode before I understood the nuances of morality etc, I knew that it was established that the UFP did not barge its way in and force contact with cultures who did not desire contact. Unless...
And the part that really pisses me off is that frankly there has to my recollection never been a compelling reason given why Starfleet Command ordered Kirk to force contact with the Melkotians. Neither in the episode itself nor later on in expanded universe materials.
It was a bullshit action for no reason at all.
Didn't they force contact in The Corbomite Maneuver and A Taste of Armageddon?
Spectre Of The Gun
From the first time I saw this episode before I understood the nuances of morality etc, I knew that it was established that the UFP did not barge its way in and force contact with cultures who did not desire contact. Unless...
And the part that really pisses me off is that frankly there has to my recollection never been a compelling reason given why Starfleet Command ordered Kirk to force contact with the Melkotians. Neither in the episode itself nor later on in expanded universe materials.
It was a bullshit action for no reason at all.
Didn't they force contact in The Corbomite Maneuver and A Taste of Armageddon?
There are a host of episodes of TOS where the Federation and Starfleet appear to be forcing Kirk to go somewhere and break the prime directive. There are also some episodes where Kirk himself decides to break the prime directive for no apparent reason or a bad reason.
Upon further viewings, you can start to see Kirk & the Federation as the bad guy.
The PD does apply to post-warp societies. It's not just about contamination, it's also about interfering in the politics of other worlds.
Prescisely. It's the reason why the Federation wasn't allowed to support Gowron's petition to lead the High Council in 2367. Starfleet considered the matter "an internal affair of the Klingon Empire," so Picard wasn't allowed to intervene once his duties as Arbiter of Succession were finished.
He was allowed to stop the Romulans from shipping supplies to the Duras sisters because they were interfering in Klingon politics, but that was as far as Starfleet allowed him to go.
--Sran
Privately, I think the PD is largely up to interpretation. The whole fact Starfleet wouldn't support Bajor against the Cardassians seems like [insert expletive].
Privately, I think the PD is largely up to interpretation. The whole fact Starfleet wouldn't support Bajor against the Cardassians seems like [insert expletive].
Unlike when they instantly came to Cardassia's rescue with military force when the Klingons threatened to invade.
In fact they came to Cardassia's rescue twice.
I'm sure that's the case, but can you really blame Starfleet for that? Even the Federation has to prioritize. Romulans mucking with the Klingon High Council is a bigger deal than Cardassians supplying arms to a Bajoran resistance movement.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.