^ I don't know the particulars, but I believe the fan series Hidden Frontier was set (at least for part of its run) in the "Briar Patch." I don't know of they revisited the Son'a or the Bak'u.
I just can't see any reason for the Son'a to NOT return to Ba'ku. "My face is melting off, and going there will stop it. Gee. Let me think."
It was revealed in the DS9R book Abyss, that he was working with or for Section 31. Well, they say that the Holoship was theirs so I'm assuming he was involved with them.^ Was Dougherty working with others in Starfleet?
It was revealed in the DS9R book Abyss, that he was working with or for Section 31. Well, they say that the Holoship was theirs so I'm assuming he was involved with them.^ Was Dougherty working with others in Starfleet?
^They have cool looking horseshoe-shaped starships created by John Eaves.
They have conquered two cool-looking alien races--the Tarlac and the Ellora.
A writer, who had the interest, could pretty much create the cultures of the Son'a, the Tarlac, and the Ellora from scratch and it would be highly unlikely that their invention would be modified or invalidated by canon.
They could be the guest annoyance in Star Trek story or novel.
^ I'm aware of all of that. The Son'a just didn't do it for me, is all.![]()
Probably because any deeper exploration of the Bak'u would reveal them for what they are, 600 colonists who have claimed the land surface of an entire planet because they don't understand property law, and neither does the Federation.^ I'm aware of all of that. The Son'a just didn't do it for me, is all.![]()
I'm with you. I thik INS was the absolute worst Trek film. Even more than NEM, which was bad in an interesting way.
But then, they've made good VOY novels, so why not this?![]()
Probably because any deeper exploration of the Bak'u would reveal them for what they are, 600 colonists who have claimed the land surface of an entire planet because they don't understand property law, and neither does the Federation.
Which begs the question - why in the hell was Data even there in the first place?
Probably because any deeper exploration of the Bak'u would reveal them for what they are, 600 colonists who have claimed the land surface of an entire planet because they don't understand property law, and neither does the Federation.
Property law had nothing to do with it. The reason Dougherty was trying to force the Baku to relocate was because the Son'a needed to do their incendiary thing with the planet's rings to make the de-aging radiation work for them, and that would've rendered the entire surface of the planet uninhabitable. So sharing the planet wasn't an option. It was an all-or-nothing situation -- either the Son'a didn't get to ignite the rings or the Baku didn't get to keep living on the planet (one way or the other).
Relocating 600 people is something governments do all the time, for example when they need to build a road. Indeed, if the self-determination of peoples comes into it at all, we should be looking at the denied self-determination of the Son'a. They were the ones who were relocated first and denied their basic human(oid) rights.And of course the philosophical point was that the size doesn't matter -- that you shouldn't rationalize a forced relocation of an entire culture just because you consider it small by your parameters, because where do you draw the line? The Choctaw Nation was small compared to the US population, but does that make the Trail of Tears any less of an atrocity?
Relocating 600 people is something governments do all the time, for example when they need to build a road.
I've always been under the impression that he was simply there obseving the Ba'ku, and had no idea what Dougherty and the Son'a were really up to. I'm starting to wonder if I was misunderstanding the whole movie, because I had thought that they were pretending all they were doing was observing the Ba'ku while the whole relocating/radition collection thing was secretly going on behind the scenes.Which begs the question - why in the hell was Data even there in the first place?
I've always been under the impression that he was simply there obseving the Ba'ku, and had no idea what Dougherty and the Son'a were really up to. I'm starting to wonder if I was misunderstanding the whole movie, because I had thought that they were pretending all they were doing was observing the Ba'ku while the whole relocating/radition collection thing was secretly going on behind the scenes.Which begs the question - why in the hell was Data even there in the first place?
Right - my whole point is that if Dougherty had a brain, he'd have simply closed down the observation posts - and damn well not let an officer from the Enterprise any where near the situation.
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