Like the allies retook France in the second world war.Part of the confusion for me is that the war with the Klingons includes the Federation retaking of Nausicaa. If it’s independent, what’s to retake?
Like the allies retook France in the second world war.Part of the confusion for me is that the war with the Klingons includes the Federation retaking of Nausicaa. If it’s independent, what’s to retake?
If you want statistics brought into this, 22 out of the 40 Bolians seen in all Star Trek are either serving in Starfleet, civilians employed by Starfleet, or posing as a Starfleet cadet. The main reason why their Federation membership is even a question is because there was a deleted scene in TNG establishing they were in fact non members (though, IIRC the Federation had just granted their request for membership, with the signing in ceremony expected "within a year"). But deleted scenes aren't canon, so within my own head canon, I can still consider Bolians Federation members. Even if you want to acknowledge the deleted scene, it was from TNG's 5th or 6th season, so assuming they did indeed get signed in "within a year" they're still Federation members by the time TNG ended.Regarding Bolians...
I think they are members of the Federation. We have seen multiple Bolian officers in the 24th century, possibly the most notable being the Lt. on the Saratoga in "EMISSARY" and Captain Rixx on "Conspiracy". And despite her being a fake, Picard was not surprised to see a Bolian cadet in "Allegiance". We have seen others around various episodes. If you are not from a Federation member world, you would need the backing of a command level officer, like how Sisko backed Nog. So ALL the various Bolian officers got in Starfleet the same way Nog did?
Not likely, which puts me in the mind of the Bolians being a Federation member.
Fine, then I'll do a time travel episode to the event, complete with visible date on the computer displays and a twenty minute technobabble explanation on subspace whatsits establishing this is indeed the Prime Universe with no room for interpretation.Ah, but holodeck evidence is always FAAAKEEEE!!!!
^ Enemies prior to membership? Or members since then?
I don’t think TPTB are suggesting that the main (or only) Federation aliens they’re constantly showing us are secretly not Federation aliens “we never said they were.”
Besides, wasn’t the Bolian Ambassador referred to in such a way as to suggest ambassador of the Bolian people, not in reference to his personal race?
The Bajorans we know are not members so their infrequent and usually low-level presence creates a different effect.
Cut scenes (from decades ago) carry less weight than Treklit. That is, none in canon. And I’d be keener to accept Treklit than cut scenes overall.Not their place to still worry about maintaining in either case...
Me neither. It's just that not only have they failed to make their case yet, they have also made the suggestion these aren't members (once onscreen, once in a cut scene), so it's a situation of at least some of them actually thinking unlike most of them, and/or of at least some of them once having thought unlike most if them now do.
Not any differently from the usual "Vulcan Ambassador". It's in fact basically unheard of to learn whom a diplomat might represent exactly, and to whom - but there's one case in TAS "Yesteryear" of Sarek being said to be the "Ambassador to seventeen Federation planets".
No less frequent or lower-level than the Bolian presence, though, which is sort of the point. Sure, Bajoran diplomats in the UFP are 100% less common than Bolian ones (that is, zero vs. one), but there is even explicit dialogue about Starfleet sucking in as many Bajorans as they can.
It's just a matter of exposure, as you also say: if not for TNG and VOY, we might think there are no Bolians in Starfleet, and if not for DSC, we might think there are no Andorians nor Tellarites there...
Timo Saloniemi
Thing is, in all Star Trek we've seen many more Bajorans than Bolians. But of all the Bajorans we've seen, only seven were in Starfleet. And of those, one (Kira) was a Bajoran Militia officer granted a wartime commission, and three were Maquis serving on Voyager. And of them, one was in fact a Cardassian disguised as a Bajoran. Meaning only there's only three Bajorans who got into Starfleet the traditional way.but there is even explicit dialogue about Starfleet sucking in as many Bajorans as they can.
My (never submitted) TNG spec script was about an independent world within Federation space that, after a change of government, decides to ally with the Romulans. Sort of Cuban missile crisis.I'd imagine there are probably just as many independent worlds within the Federation's sphere of influence as there are actual member worlds. Some of these independent worlds may have treaties or official alliances with the Federation, while others may not and have no allegiance to the Federation whatsoever, IMO.
joint policy sure, but there would be times for individual action too. show that they don't need the federation for every little thing.Why would it fall upon the Bolians to maintain anything in a conflict, hot or frozen or whatever? Least of all a truce, that is, a state of war? If the UFP does not even get to conduct joint foreign policy for its members, what does it get to do?
given that treklit counts for nothing, yeah sure.Cut scenes (from decades ago) carry less weight than Treklit.
it was on screen so would count for more.TAS may carry less weight than the Treklit
given that treklit counts for nothing, yeah sure.
Cut scenes, by definition, never made it on screen. They were judged unworthy and cut before release to the masses for artistic consideration. Unlike Treklit.it was on screen so would count for more.
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