So... you're telling me an extra three or four years wouldn't do any good? Best action is to sit and hope the tooth fairy comes and saves your ass?
Frankly, yes. Say you wait three or four more years? What does that mean? It means that the Borg come back in four years and exterminate you then because you'll have shot your wad back in '81 and you have no new superweapons they haven't adapted to already, and in the meantime, all hell breaks out -- if nothing within your space, then just outside it, thus rendering all your potential allies in a Borg invasion impotent, and all because you used a thalaron.
Really, you might as well just ask the Tooth Fairy to help you. It'd do about as much good.
Wow... just wow. We won't do anything because if, by chance, it is successful the bad guys might come back at a later date.
1) No, it's not that the bad guys might come back. They will, and then they will exterminate the Federation. It's not a possibility, it is an absolute certainty.
2) Not, "don't do anything." Pursue other means of neutralizing the Borg threat, up to and including actively soliciting the intervention of more powerful species such as the Caeliar. But trying to develop a new weapon against the Borg is a fool's errand that will end in the death of the Federation; weapons don't work against them.
Or it may cause some strife in the meantime.
Not might. WILL.
Essentially, I'm arguing that it's pointless to go down the thalaron route because there would be no real benefit -- that scenario still ends with the extermination of the Federation -- and the costs would be enormous. It's like deciding to react to a gun pointing at your head by taking up smoking; it accomplishes nothing and it hurts you in the meantime, and all that on top of being absolutely disgusting and immoral.
I mean, hell, at least Sisko's immoral decision during the Dominion War was effective. This wouldn't even be that.
If you destroy seven thousand-four hundred Borg cubes, it may take them a bit longer to recover than the times they sent one cube.
Maybe. Or maybe they'll divert seven thousand more cubes from the Beta Quadrant that hadn't been assigned to target the Federation before. Even if it buys the Federation time, that's just delaying the inevitable. The Borg had decided to exterminate the Federation -- that wasn't going to stop just because a small fraction of ships belonging to the most powerful space force in the Milky Way Galaxy was destroyed.
Plus, we do seem to be pretty adaptive on our own turning back more than one Borg invasion.
Nonsense. The Borg had never invaded en masse before; the Federation only barely defeated a single cube at a time (and then never before the damn thing reached Earth orbit). The idea that the Federation would be able to turn back yet another Borg fleet, especially after suffering the losses it had already suffered from the invasion of 2381, is bordering on delusional.
I'm just bewildered that people chose to just give-up.
I did not advocate just giving up. I said that developing a thalaron weapon would be about as useful as praying to the Tooth Fairy, because, at the end of the day, the inevitable result of either scenario would be the extermination or assimilation of the Federation.
Let's remember that Picard (which was the whole reason I responded in this thread) attempted to block contacting the Caeliar.
And he was wrong to do so.
The morality of Star Trek is not that far off from reality. There is the idealized version... what we want to be, there is also the realist...what we truly are. We are survivors and we would fight to the bitter end. It is who we are. I'm not sure that I would want to be part of a race that just gives up.
Again, I'm not saying just give up. I'm saying that the means to defeating the Borg threat cannot be found in conventional, symmetric warfare. If you want to gain power over the Borg, you have to do so asymmetrically, through nonconventional tactics -- such as convincing an allied species with vastly superior technology to penetrate the Collective consciousness, strip it of its motivating personality, and then dissolve the Collective, liberating every single drone in the universe simultaneously.
Picard said that someone would be better off dead than be a Borg drone in First Contact. If the Federation falls he is essentially condemning the galaxy to being enslaved by the Borg.
Which is why he was wrong to try to prevent contact with the Caeliar and wrong to try to prevent Hernandez from "impersonating a Queen."
You completely misunderstood the book. The Caeliar didn't kick anyone's anything. They redeemed the Borg. They saved the Borg, liberated them from the trap of Sedin's hunger.
Erm. Sort of? Depends on how you define "the Borg." I would argue that in the context of the Caeliar's final confrontation, the term "Borg" refers not to the drones or to the Queen (who is herself as much a slave to the Royal Protocol as the drones are slaves to her), but to the motivating personality and drive behind it all -- to Sedin. And Sedin was not redeemed. She was exposed as a mentally weak creature who had betrayed her own beliefs in the name of survival and then compounded that immoral choice by continuing to act immorally according to her most primitive drives.
She was no more redeemed than, say, Lord Voldemort was at the end of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. And they both had to be destroyed.
Fortunately Picard exercised better judgment here, with help from Geordi.
I'm still trying to figure out how having your race wiped out is somehow better judgement. Guess I'm just one of the simple masses.
How one acts in the face of death is just as important as how one lives.
Yeah, and whether or not you give your children a future is at least as important as both--if not more so.
I should be clear here:
In such an extreme scenario -- the honest-to-goodness extermination and extinction of every single species in the Federation and every species with the bad luck to be located near them -- I don't favor the idea of morality above all. I would have no compulsion against killing every single Borg drone and destroying every piece of Borg technology in the galaxy, because the Borg are not a species and it would therefore not be genocide. If they could build a thalaron weapon that would work, that would permanently end the Borg threat -- and make no mistake, that's what it would take to prevent the destruction of the Federation, the permanent end of everything Borg in existence -- then I'd be all for it. I don't favor making immoral choices when the stakes are high but not existential. But this is existential for both the Federation AND its neighbors.
But by the same time, I'd bloodly well want an immoral choice to work. If the Federation has to sell its soul to the Devil to save both itself and the entire galaxy, then so be it. But there's no point selling your soul to the Devil if he's trading you a defective product.
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