The UFP has been around for a couple of hundred years; Earth hasn't been starfaring for much longer than that. The Romulans have supposedly been around for two thousand years or so, though. How come they face such a staggeringly lower number of world-ending challenges?
We don't know how long the Klingons have been operating a starfaring empire; old Kahless already spoke of going to a distant star, but perhaps just figuratively? They, too, are older players than the Federation, though, even if only by a century or two. And how come anybody outside the UFP is standing, allied into a star empire or not? The universe has had millions or billions of years to do nasty things to them.
It almost seems like the UFP is a disaster magnet rather than just a player especially qualified to deal with disasters. Perhaps the two do go hand in hand? But only the DDM in TOS was encountered in distant space by curiosity-killed-the-cat-careless long range explorers; the Space Amoeba, NOMAD, V'Ger, the antimatter cloud that made One of Our Planets go Missing, etc. all came to the UFP, not waiting for its explorers to come out and find them.
Timo Saloniemi
We don't know how long the Klingons have been operating a starfaring empire; old Kahless already spoke of going to a distant star, but perhaps just figuratively? They, too, are older players than the Federation, though, even if only by a century or two. And how come anybody outside the UFP is standing, allied into a star empire or not? The universe has had millions or billions of years to do nasty things to them.
It almost seems like the UFP is a disaster magnet rather than just a player especially qualified to deal with disasters. Perhaps the two do go hand in hand? But only the DDM in TOS was encountered in distant space by curiosity-killed-the-cat-careless long range explorers; the Space Amoeba, NOMAD, V'Ger, the antimatter cloud that made One of Our Planets go Missing, etc. all came to the UFP, not waiting for its explorers to come out and find them.
Timo Saloniemi