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How would the Federation have treated Jem'Hadar prisoners of war?

Meh, that's a very specific scenario. The Talosians weren't just incarcerating people for punishment/rehab. They were putting them on display/using them for their own means.
well, yes, to preserve their kind. But, I found the line to be rather appropriate given the conversation.

Yes, of course some humans would prefer captivity to death but not all humans are like that.
 
To be fair, the Klingon example is riddled with contradictions. In TNG's "Birthright, Part I", Worf said capture would mean dishonor for several generations. But a few years later, in DS9's "IN PURGATORY'S SHADOW", Garak asked 'aren't you Klingons supposed to kill yourselves when captured', and Worf responded with, "Not when there are still enemies to fight." And Martok chimed in with, "Or hope of escape."

So there are definite allowances and exceptions with Klingons, otherwise Martok would have been massively dishonored when he returned from 2 years of Dominion imprisonment, and certainly couldn't have stayed a General. (And the audience would have been robbed of an outstanding character.)

Yeah, Klingon law and tradition is seemingly wracked with with apparent inconsistencies.

There are surely some intricacies that totally make sense to Klingons. I suspect it has something to do with "Surrendering and willfully putting down arms" vs. "Being forcibly taken prisoner and continuing to fight against your captors". If a Klingon was simply overpowered, taken into custody, and they spend their energy fighting or trying to to escape... they maintain their honor. If they actively surrender and allow themselves to be taken willingly, dishonor.

As for the Jem'Hadar, there probably were shockingly few P.O.W.s... in fact, we only know of the gassed ones from the Defiant in "ONE LITTLE SHIP". (Though Sisko did say a 'camp', which implies others were captured. How many was never stated.) A vast majority were probably like Remata'klan in "ROCKS AND SHOALS"... "It was never my life to give up."

I would imagine there are some. I personally envision something closer to a hands-off penal colony, the Federation basically drops them into a secure area, provides supplies and just kind of leaves them alone.

It's possible that in the situation, they may just kind of... stop. They're captured. Their life is over, it's meaningless. They can never go back to the Dominion. They become useless shells of a soldier. So they just kind of wait to die.

Side note: speaking of "ONE LITTLE SHIP", my favorite aspect of it was something that should have been seen again... the differing philosophies and tactics between the Gamma and Alpha Jem'Hadar. To extend the question of the thread, it was Alpha Jem'Hadar that were captured in "ONE LITTLE SHIP". Would the two types react much differently than the other to capture?

Yeah it is a bit sad we didn't get to explore that more. It was interesting that the Jem Hadar had developed different cultural groups.

I actually think Gamma Jem Hadar would be "easier" to capture and hold. Alpha Jem's were "young" and felt the need to prove themselves. Gamma Jem's seemed to be slightly more pragmatic.
 
Vorta will betray their soldiers, but it is always in the interests of saving themselves, which in turn they view as serving the Founders, as Vorta see themselves as more valuable than Jem' Hadar. Vorta have a stronger sense of self preservation that can potentially override their programming and accept a non-ideal situation in order to remain alive.

They may think so, but those aren't the Dominion guidelines, at least according to Keevan in The Magnificent Ferengi:

KEEVAN: Vorta are supposed to commit suicide when they're captured. I failed to follow that rather... harsh policy.
ROM: They're going to execute you?
KEEVAN: After what is surely going to be a most unpleasant debriefing.


They are willing to let entire civilizations die due to the Prime Directive, but aren't necessarily willing to allow someone to ritualistically commit suicide.

Also depends on the circumstances. They refused Worf to die, but decided in Q(uinn)'s favor on that very issue, even when they advised him to not immediately kill himself).
 
They may think so, but those aren't the Dominion guidelines, at least according to Keevan in The Magnificent Ferengi:






Also depends on the circumstances. They refused Worf to die, but decided in Q(uinn)'s favor on that very issue, even when they advised him to not immediately kill himself).

Crusher was the one who refused to let Worf die. Picard was arguing (and rightly, I might add) that it was Worf's decision, not hers. Probably the only reason Picard didn't try to use hus authority over her was because in medical matters, the CMO has the final say.

(This is ultimately why Crusher is my least favorite doctor in the franchise... she was imposing her values onto a patient and trying to force a decision that he was against.)


Worf's case was a cultural issue, which also started to step into freedom of choice territory. In Quinn's case, it was literally the right to self-determination and choosing, from start to finish.
 
They may think so, but those aren't the Dominion guidelines, at least according to Keevan in The Magnificent Ferengi:

Yes... the Vorta see themselves as more valuable. The Dominion writ large doesn't care.

I get a sense than the Vorta would unquestionably sacrifice their life for a Founder directly, or if ordered by a Founder directly... otherwise... they will rules lawyer in their minds to make the case that its better for them to live. Likewise, they will sacrifice however many Jem Hadar as necessary to save themselves.
 
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Crusher was the one who refused to let Worf die. Picard was arguing (and rightly, I might add) that it was Worf's decision, not hers. Probably the only reason Picard didn't try to use hus authority over her was because in medical matters, the CMO has the final say.

That's her initial stance, yes. But she does acquiesce to Picard's argument that for Worf a less than 100% recovery is not a life worth living, a journey he can't make, and that therefore, he should have the right to undergo the genotronic procedure, even if it isn't 'good medicine', but a 'try or die' approach.

(So, yes, I was wrong in my previous post about 'them not letting Worf die')
 
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We see a Klingon exobiologist in "The Drumhead", a Klingon scientist in "Suspicions", and a Klingon restauranteur in "Melora". If they have such a wide range of occupations, they should have a wide variety of outlooks on life. A homogeneous culture can exist (the Jem'Hadar are an example), but it can't be self sustaining.
 
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We see a Klingon exobiologist in "The Drumhead", a Klingon scientist in "Suspicions", and a Klingon restauranteur in "Melora". If they have such a wide range of occupations, they should have a wide variety of outlooks on life. A homogeneous culture can exist (the Jem'Hadar are an example), but it can't be self sustaining.

And even in the case of the Jem'Hadar, that enforced homogeneity is constantly being strained. Personally, I think there's probably a lot more diversity of thought within Jem'Hadar culture than we're giving them credit for having -- and to the extent that there is homogeneity of behavior, it's probably in significant part a function of how short a Jem'Hadar lifespan is, what with 20-year-olds being considered "honored elders." If Jem'Hadar lived longer, that cultural homogeneity would probably be impossible.
 
We see a Klingon exobiologist in "The Drumhead", a Klingon scientist in "Suspicions", and a Klingon restauranteur in "Melora". If they have such a wide range of occupations, they should have a wide variety of outlooks on life. A homogeneous culture can exist (the Jem'Hadar are an example), but it can't be self sustaining.

And let's not forget the Klingon lawyer in "Rules of Engagement", a great character who showed that a lawyer can be just as much a warrior as a solider in the KDF.
 
And let's not forget the Klingon lawyer in "Rules of Engagement", a great character who showed that a lawyer can be just as much a warrior as a solider in the KDF.

This...

Is an honorable post.

Qapla'!!!:klingon::klingon:

(These Klingon icons look angry, but my intention is to show Klingons who are very agreeable to the post. We don't seem to have laughing Klingon icons here...)
 
This...

Is an honorable post.

Qapla'!!!:klingon::klingon:

(These Klingon icons look angry, but my intention is to show Klingons who are very agreeable to the post. We don't seem to have laughing Klingon icons here...)
The follow up song, "A laughing Klingon and his cat" was much less successful than the Vulcan song.
 
Having Worf encounter both father and son does make the Klingon Defense Forces seem a little small. But there's no need for Worf and Ch'Pok to feel any ill will between them. Ch'Pok lost his extradition case because Odo discovered the deceit that Klingon Intelligence or whoever set up. If Intelligence had done a better job - like using names of people who hadn't died elsewhere - Ch'Pok would probably have won.

Faking a massacre is probably very dishonorable.
 
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