My main point was intended as "the Borg cannot exist without killing other people first." Obviously, that's not a trait the Federation wants in its member planets (or ship cultures, etc.).
No, because the Bajorans were about to be not accepted into the Federation because of the return of their Dijaras (sp?), and cast systems were against the Federation charter. The Borg would certainly fit the cast-system description.
That just sounds plausible as Darth Vader and Palpatine travels to the different dimension and become the presidents of the Federation.
If the Borg became something that could be admitted by the Federation they'd no longer be Borg.
For the Borg to join the Federation they would essentially have to stop being Borg. They would have to abandon their entire way of life--the assimilation of other life-forms and their technology.
No matter how many times the Borg are devastated/destroyed, they keep coming back as galactic powers, I suppose. Probably the best one could hope for would be stalemate, détente or cold war across a "neutral zone".
Sisko: "You realize that caste-based discrimination goes against theFederation charter. If Bajor returns to the D'jarra system, Ihave no doubt its petition to jointhe Federation will be rejected."
For the Borg to join the Federation they would essentially have to stop being Borg. They would have to abandon their entire way of life--the assimilation of other life-forms and their technology.
These two statements really cut into the heart of the matter, I think. An excellent point.
One way or another the Borg must support peace or face and end to their existing form. Treaty and eventually joining the Federation is one option.
The Federation has already recognized the Borg as a race deserving the same protections as any other ("I, Borg" TNG). I doubt the Federation forbids nomadics from membership. The Borg have a simple nomatic state (non-planetary). The Queen brings order to chaos; government cannot get much more simple than that. Still, it is a government. The Borg have culture and spiritual belief. Unlike many other cultures, they do not hide faith in the guise of seemingly irreligious terms such as "science" or "principals", their faith, the worship of perfection, just is. Their culture, is a "culture of one", due to their nature. Split them irreparably into two or more equal collectives, I guarantee the worship of perfection would remain with all factions and divergence in culture and religion among factions would propagate faster than any fully biological species. Note, Seven of Nine was disconnected from the collective, effectively becoming a collective of one, and still worshiped perfection. Echeb continued to have a strong drive toward perfection after a much shorter time with the Borg. Hugh and his contemporaries were unwilling to assimilate the unwilling, and willing to follow an insane homicidal leader to progress again toward perfection. The Federation would accept and protect Borg government, culture, religion, their race, and their goals, just as with any other member. It is the merely methods the Borg way of life that must change. Mainly, no more destruction in the pursuit of perfection. There are cultures within Federation membership that have no concerns about physical bodies of the dead and no concerns of souls returning to a body after death. Dead bodies can be used to make new drones. Some may even like the idea of the 'immorality' of the process; having one's life experiences recorded into the immortal Borg collective. The ultimate organ donor, knowledge and maybe even personality included. Entering the collective might also become a limited experience. Non-destructive entrance and ability to leave the collective not only to return to one's previous identity but retention of the knowledge and experience of the collective. Chakotay entered and left one such limited collective (but later that same collective forced their will on him, "Unity" VOY). Another limited form of the collective could have _all_ individuals in the Federation as drones. Parts of each person's mind is used only if they are not currently using it for themselves. Similar to distributing computing that only utilizes unused CPU cycles. Finally, drones could simply be replaced with artificial life-forms. Though this is a problem as such life-forms apparently require sentience and therefore have the right to individuality.
But even without the Borg adapting to meet Federation principles, the Borg have a big obstacle in their path they cannot overcome without changing their methods. Species do not continue their biological and technological advancement after being assimilated. Eventually, the Borg will be forced adapt without outside stimulus. Something they do not seem to be very good at, and for practical reasons, never will be. Should they succeed in assimilating the universe (including even non-corporal, artificial, photonic, and n-dimensional life-forms and whatever else). They would then use their collective knowledge and biological stores to reconstruct their victims, so that species could start advancing again. Something they may as well do as Federation members for efficiency's sake.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.