^ Actually, they are, since the Alpha Centauri colony was founded BY humans.
Not according to the Sarek/Amanda fanfic series I've been reading...Vulcans "do it" once every 7 years...
It's just that every 7 years they HAVE to have sex (at least the males do).
That doesn't agree with what was shown in "Amok Time."According to Enterprise, it applies to the females as well.It's just that every 7 years they HAVE to have sex (at least the males do).
That doesn't agree with what was shown in "Amok Time."According to Enterprise, it applies to the females as well.It's just that every 7 years they HAVE to have sex (at least the males do).
That's has never made sense to me.Well, if you consider founding worlds, Alpha Centaurans are human ...
Of the limited number of founder worlds of the Federation, two were Human? To me it would make more sense if each of the Federation's five founders were of a different species.
February 7, 2163
Hansen's Planet
"You're crazy!" Valeria Williams cried. "Sir," she remembered to add as Travis Mayweather glared down at her. "You really want a different Council president every year? They'll never get anything done!"
Mayweather maneuvered around a low outcropping of basalt, working his way gingerly down the slope toward the savanna where the shuttlepod's sensors had registered the anthropoid biosigns. If he were still Val's age, he thought, he could've hopped over it like a mountain goat, as effortlessly as the taut-figured, auburn-haired tactical officer did herself. He was still in fine shape for a thirty-six-year-old, if he said so himself, but he'd still rather be a twenty-six-year-old. "Depends on how much power you give the president," he replied. "The Council's supposed to make most of the decisions, after all."
"But they only meet twice a year! Someone has to speak for them the rest of the time."
Heralded by a cascade of loose pebbles, Reynaldo Sangupta slide awkwardly past Mayweather, almost losing his footing until Val shot out an arm and caught his without even turning her head to look. "Why, thank you, my dear," the science officer said with a gallant flourish, lifting her hand towards his lips. She pulled it away, but gave him a brief smirk that was as much flirtatious as scornful. Sangupta was a good-looking young man, tall with rakish features and rich mahogany skin, and he was fully aware of his own appeal. "But what's wrong with letting the Prime Ministers' Conference make the decisions?" he went on. "The planets shouldn't have to give up too much control to the Feds."
"The ministers are too busy dealing with their own planets' problems. We need a leader for the whole Federation." Her hazel eyes darted back towards Mayweather. "And rotating between councillors isn't going to cut it, Commander."
"I see what you're saying, Val," Travis replied, testing a protruding rock with his foot and deciding it was firm enough to rest his weight on. "But I still think we need to spread the wealth more. We've got an Earth president, the capital's on Earth, the Council meets on Earth...."
"We're the only ones everybody trusts as a neutral broker," Williams pointed out.
"That's just it." He hopped down to the next firm protrusion, feeling the impact more in his knees than he would have a few years ago. "The Vulcans, Andorians, and Tellarites aren't going to get over their suspicions if they don't get to see each other in action as leaders, working for the good of everyone. I'm just afraid humans could end up dominating too much."
"That's gonna happen anyway, sir," Sangupta said as he gingerly lowered himself off the same rock Mayweather had jumped from--making the older officer feel a little better about his own condition. He paused to take a reading on his scanner, checking the position of the group of anthropoids they were tracking. Hansens's Planet had been discovered by the crew of the E.C.S. Bjarni Herjolfsson, who had staked a mining claim on its two dilithium-rich moons but had less interest in the planet (named in honor of the Herjolfsson captain's favorite prizefighter, Sven"Buttercup" Hansen), for its dilithium deposits were too deeply buried. However, Starfleet had taken an interest in their reports of a tool-using anthropoid species, and had sent Pioneer to investigate.
"What do you mean?" Williams challenged.
"Think about it," Sangupta went on. "With Mars in now, half the full members of the Federation are human words. The others, they have a few colonies and outposts here and there, but all still under their homeworld governments. But us, we're expansionists by nature. We spread out, we diversify." He pointed a little bit to the east of their current course, and they adjusted their descent accordingly. "And really, what's so bad about that? It's not like humans are all one bloc. Look at us. A Terran, a Centaurian, a space boomer," he said, gesturing to Williams, himself, and Mayweather in turn. "We're all human, but we're not all agreeing on this."
"That's a good point," Mayweather said. "I'm not sure other species would see it that way, though."
"All the more reason to give as much power as possible to the planets instead of the central government," Sangupta went on. "They'll be less likely to see humans as a single political unit."
"But look at what a mess the government already is," Williams countered as they reached the bottom of the slope. The savanna stretched out before them, a vast field of high, green-gold reeds flexing subtly in the breeze. It was punctuated at wide, fairly regular intervals by small copses of exotic pseudo-trees, multiple bamboo-like trunks spreading out from a common base to support wide, round photosynthetic caps like spongy chartreuse parasols. "Too much compromise, too many different institutions trying to represent every world's vision of government. The Council, the Commission, the Ministerial Conferences... I mean, it took them six months even to decide we should have a president at all!"
"Maybe we shouldn't," Sangupta said. "That's a relic of the days before modern communications. I say open-source the decision process. Give it to the people. For any problem, there are going to be dozens of experts out there with fresh and innovative ideas for how to fix it. Concentrate the decisions in the hands of a few politicians and those great ideas won't get heard."
"Just what I'd expect a colonial to say," Williams countered.
Sangupta bristled. "What's wrong with that?"
"Easy, Lieutenants," Mayweather cautioned. "We've got some apes to find. Anything, Rey?"
The science officer sulked for a moment before lifting his scanner. Like most Centaurians, Rey Sangupta took considerable pride in his colonial identity. Alpha Centauri III hadn't been an easy planet to tame; at first, UESPA's colonization board had written it off as too inhospitable, still suffering from a centuries-old impact winter and at too great a risk from future asteroid bombardment. That's why they'd chosen a more temperate world more than four times as distant for Earth's first extrasolar colony, Terra Nova--which had ironically fallen prey to an impact event itself after just five years. After Terra Nova had gone dark, a group whose leaders had included Zefram Cochrane himself had defied the United Earth government and founded an independent colony on Centauri III, and over the past seventy-five years had proven they were capable of taming the harsh world, thought not without significant losses. By now they had large, populous cities, an active terraforming industry, outposts established on the other borderline-habitable worlds around all three of Alpha Centauri's component stars, and enough of a space infrastructure to deflect any future asteroids--plus a strong, independent spirit and intense national pride. The same pride that had made them insist on joining the Federation as a full member, rather than a UE protectorate, also made them wary of surrendering too much of their sovereignty.
I still contend that anything less than 10-15% can be classified as rare.
Yes, there was a Human colony established on one of the worlds orbiting one of the stars in the Rigil Kentaurus system, but does that preclude there being a indigious technological native population prior to their arrival?^ Actually, they are, since the Alpha Centauri colony was founded BY humans.
Does the apply when ordering beef steak in a restaurant?I still contend that anything less than 10-15% can be classified as rare.
I think I have seen something of this story, and read about it as well, and IIRC, there was some debate over whether the man had just been closeted before he came out. I think he had some amnesia, so it was debatable if he himself even knew for sure his true orientation before the accident.I stumbled over this story.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/having-a-stroke-made-me-gay-155075
It's one of the phenomenons tied to neurological restructuring after brain damage. Some people become painters, musicians, or excel at mathematical understanding, and this dude claims it changed his sexual orientation. Which, if true, would basically mean that it's actually possible to change your orientation when you treat certain regions of the brain. Which, by the 24th century, would then probably be an option for people. On the other hand, it could also be possible that, even if it WAS medically possible, that "treatment" would still be a taboo.
The other implication is, but that's beyond this thread, that you could purposefully enhance your abilities by destroying areas of the brain, so that during the healing process the neurological pathways are efficiently restructured. In 300 years, who knows? Maybe that's for the other thread about disabilities in Star Trek.
With a 150 odd species in the federation, Humans would be two-thirds of one percent.
![]()
See, thars not how life workd, though. Other factors come into play than just ratio/percentage of this group or that group per populace. Combined, Chinese and Indians are 33% of the Earth's population, yet they do not make up a third of your graduating class or a third of your friends. Currently this is due to geography and that mist Chinese are in China and Indians in India.
This still illustrates that other factors come into play. One ethnic or genetic group might be more disposed for one activity or another. If men and women were truly treated and viewed as equal in all things, there still may be some things that attract more men than women or vice versa.
Some planets may just not send that many being to Starfeet whereas other beings are better suited or more eager for life in space.
I doubt the Cardassian Union would tolerate homosexuals, their society seems to be obsessed with preserving nuclear families and they don't have much time for orphans, so it seems there would be no place for homosexuals in their society. Likewise the Romulan Empire seems to perform a sort of eugenics program, with a Romulan officer saying they dispose of any children with any physical problems (like blindness) from birth, that doesn't seem like the kind of place that would tolerate homosexuals.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.