I provided a link to Wikipedia's analysis on the first page of this thread which features the essential variations of the fable. Here's my take on it:
The Borg won't change their ways because they feel that their way is the best to improve living conditions and bring order to the galaxy. You can't really reason with them because they think they're right and everybody else is wrong.
It has been mentioned that the fable of the Frog and the Scorpion doesn't really make sense. Why should the frog offer a natural enemy a free ride. The rationalization had been that somehow the frog needs the scorpion as a navigator, so they are mutually dependent on one another to embark on this fateful ride together. Again, it works in the context of the VOY episode.
Bob
- The Frog and the Mouse: The frog is the anatgonist and offers the mouse a free ride. But while carrying the mouse across the river he deliberately submerges to drown the mouse. But the mouse is holding on to the frog, both are spotted by a bird of prey which eats the mouse and the frog. The morality of this fable: What goes around comes around
- The Turtle and the Snake / the Scorpion: The snake / scorpion is the antagonist and tries to bite / sting the turtle while crossing the river. The turtle submerges, the snake / scorpion drowns. The morality of this fable: Don't bite the hand that feeds you
- The Frog / Fox and the Scorpion: The scorpion is the antagonist, the frog / fox is being naive. The reasoning of the carrier is that the scorpion won't sting because then he would also drown. But the scorpion can't help it because it's in his "nature". The morality of this fable: Once a street rat always a street rat (my own bad personal experience would suggest this isn't too far from the truth, but I might be biased)
The Borg won't change their ways because they feel that their way is the best to improve living conditions and bring order to the galaxy. You can't really reason with them because they think they're right and everybody else is wrong.
It has been mentioned that the fable of the Frog and the Scorpion doesn't really make sense. Why should the frog offer a natural enemy a free ride. The rationalization had been that somehow the frog needs the scorpion as a navigator, so they are mutually dependent on one another to embark on this fateful ride together. Again, it works in the context of the VOY episode.
Bob