Setting aside the few species that got away without being assimilated and the few species who managed to go unnoticed by the Dominion... would you rather kiss the Dominion's butt (figuratively) or be turned into a space zombie?
Kiss Dominion butt.Setting aside the few species that got away without being assimilated and the few species who managed to go unnoticed by the Dominion... would you rather kiss the Dominion's butt (figuratively) or be turned into a space zombie?
The Dominion still allows free will.
Compared to assimilation, yeah they do.The Dominion still allows free will.
No, actually, they don't.
The fact that Borg space appeared to be so small was a classic example of bad story-telling/continuity on the part of Voyager's writers.
The fact that Borg space appeared to be so small was a classic example of bad story-telling/continuity on the part of Voyager's writers.
Oddly enough, a complaint I ran into was that Voyager made Borg space too BIG and the Borg too numerous.
So it seems they were screwed either way, and the audience wouldn't accept anything they did with the Borg.
Quick, somebody que up: "When Doves Cry".The fact that Borg space appeared to be so small was a classic example of bad story-telling/continuity on the part of Voyager's writers.
Oddly enough, a complaint I ran into was that Voyager made Borg space too BIG and the Borg too numerous.
So it seems they were screwed either way, and the audience wouldn't accept anything they did with the Borg.
That's your average Star Trek fan for ya. Never satisfied.
^ In practice however, you can rebel against totalitarian regime... but once you're a drone, theres not much in the way of free will at all.
Voyager's warp drive is a brand new design and mentioned in "Innocence" that it's twice as energy efficient than any other Starfleet ship before it. Doesn't it also run on a better power source than dilithium?Replicators still need power, hence why Star Fleet and other civilizations still mine for dilithium, instead of just replicating it, they can't do it. Also unless they had a giant replicator around, they couldn't replicate a whole shuttle in a second, they may be able to replicate parts of shuttle and maybe put one together, but without the resources of the Federation, that would waste a lot of time and man power, so being careful with the shuttles actually makes sense. Why would Cardassians need to raid other planets for resources, if replicators could get rid of any shortage right away?
They could replicate shuttle parts without the Federation.
1) "Non-Sequitur", showed that Harry had expertise in shuttle design. Wasn't that one of the reasons he was top of his class?
2) we watched them build the Delta Flyer.......and they did it twice.
So they already showed us Voyager was fully capible of building their own shuttles with the resources that already had. They just had to sacrifice replicator rations for a month and live off of home cooking instead.
Cardassia was just coming out of a war.
What do you think all of O'Brian's talk of Setlik 3 and the treaty of the Demilierized Zone was about?
The Federation has thousands of worlds to trade with for supplies. Cardassia is one plantary system allied with nobody. Due to that, they had to raid other worlds to make up the resources they'd lost.
Seeking out new life and strange new civilzations. Too boldly good where no-one has gone before?there was no point of putting them in the DQ in the first place.
Voyager still holds true to Trek's original premise.
Quick, somebody que up: "When Doves Cry".Oddly enough, a complaint I ran into was that Voyager made Borg space too BIG and the Borg too numerous.
So it seems they were screwed either way, and the audience wouldn't accept anything they did with the Borg.
That's your average Star Trek fan for ya. Never satisfied.
^ In practice however, you can rebel against totalitarian regime... but once you're a drone, theres not much in the way of free will at all.
Cool, so you do get the point I was making.![]()
I guess Farscape was bad for having the crew of a lone unarmed transport ship go around easily getting supplies and repairs while having awesome adventures, hm?
Again, what do you think replicator rations and cooking with real non-replicated food was for? The replicatiors wouldn't have power to feed a crew of 150 3 meals daily & still have resources to build shuttles or repair the ship. Neelix also makes a point of explaining that space debris can be broken down in the replicator and used for more energy(Dark Frontier)They still have to power the warp Drive without any aid from a Star Base or the Federation, meaning power should be issue. Heck some the early episodes suggested they didn't have enough power to run the replicators.
It's called deligation of duty by priority.Except it would take a lot of time and man power to make a new shuttle, assembling the pieces, making all the systems work and. Voyager being reckless with shuttles makes them seem wasteful and foolish, because time and man power are important resources too. Having a large section of engineering crew build another shuttle takes time away from other duties.
....and an entire planet full of billions people compared to a ship of 150 doesn't make a difference in your scenario? I can guarantee you Voyager doesn't even use a quarter of the resources an entire planetary body full of people uses.Cardassia started the war to get resources though, so saying the lack resource was caused by the war makes no sense. All of this proves my point, replicators are not some magic machine that solve any resource problem, so Voyager just having replicators doesn't instantly take care of any and all resource problems.
So does repeating that point for 7 years..........and beyond.They can do that in the AQ. AQ has more interesting alien civilizations then the DQ anyway. If they are going to be stuck in the DQ, there should be stories about how desperate the situation and how they need to be careful and manage resources well to survive. Just ignoring that makes for bland TV.
Hugh was set free.Quick, somebody que up: "When Doves Cry".That's your average Star Trek fan for ya. Never satisfied.
^ In practice however, you can rebel against totalitarian regime... but once you're a drone, theres not much in the way of free will at all.
Cool, so you do get the point I was making.![]()
Except that Voyager and TNG kind of nixed that idea with Hugh and Unimatrix Zero![]()
Yep, for all the complaints VOY gets for the Borg most of the decay started in TNG itself.
Hell if TNG had introduced the 8472 storyline no one would care and they'd think it was a good story and that it made sense there were other beings powerful enough to defeat the Borg, instead of hating it and saying it ruined the Borg forever like they did with VOY.
Hugh was set free.Quick, somebody que up: "When Doves Cry".
Cool, so you do get the point I was making.![]()
Except that Voyager and TNG kind of nixed that idea with Hugh and Unimatrix Zero![]()
Unimatrix Zero existed in the equivient of being in the Matrix, a dream state.
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