What slave labor? Bajorans were treated like dirt, but we never really heard anything about slavery aboard Terok Nor.
You've never seen the flashback episodes, have you? We saw how the Bajorans were treated. It was obvious slavery.
What slave labor? Bajorans were treated like dirt, but we never really heard anything about slavery aboard Terok Nor.
Several classic indications of slavery were left missing: lack of monetary compensation, lack of free movement from job to job, lack of privacy, lack of right to do things like marry and have kids without consent from the owners.
There are much worse paying jobs today than the ones the Bajorans aboard DS9 were shown doing...
Timo Saloniemi
What slave labor? Bajorans were treated like dirt, but we never really heard anything about slavery aboard Terok Nor.
From By Inferno’s Light:
DUKAT: That space station you're so fond of was built by Cardassia.
SISKO Funny, I thought it was built by Bajoran slave labor.
From A Time to Stand: (Quark comparing the Dominion Occupation with the previous one)
QUARK: I'm not just concerned about profit, major. Look around -- do you see any ghetto fences dividing the Promenade? Or exhausted Bajoran slave laborers, sprawled on the ground after a grueling day in the Ore Processing Center? Do you hear the cries of starving children? I don't. Now don't get me wrong, I miss the Federation, too. All I'm saying is things could be a lot worse.
I wouldn't be surprised if the Feds had installed at least an unseen force field around the lift for when it was not present in ops.
In "Crossfire", a sabotaged and falling lift had no such field to stop Odo from turning himself into a mechanical brake that pressed against the shaft walls. Whether such a field had been there before the sabotage, we don't know.
We don't see what happens to his left arm. He places it pretty close to where the open door space is.^Odo's arms didn't leave the compartment. He didn't press directly against the shaft walls, he pressed the walls of the car outward to press against the shaft walls.
http://ds9.trekcore.com/gallery/thumbnails.php?album=100&page=9
Kira was. Or her alias in "Necessary Evil" was, to be accurate. So was the collaborator the story used as the excuse for the flashbacks. And so was his mysterious girlfriend (the more or less imaginary character inspired by Kira's alias). His wife's movements probably had to be fairly free, too, for the plot to work.The Bajoran workers were not allowed to leave DS9 (no free movement).
Bou hou. That's got nothing to do with the sort of loss of privacy that characterizes slavery. Supposedly, people were having a secret carnal affair in "Necessary Evil", which indicates way more privacy than many paid workers enjoy today at either their workplaces or accommodations.They had to live in community quarters (no privacy).
Nothing obvious about it. The murdered collaborator operated a shop, for Prophet's sakes!They were obviously not paid.
Never stated. Cardassian law was intent on punishing those who killed the Bajoran shopkeeper (even if via executing random bystanders), and OTOH Cardassian law apparently sent certain people to those labor camps to work and die but let others operate private enterprises - but we got no evidence either way whether Bajorans had rights.They had no rights under Cardassian law.
No, none of it does. Now this is closer to it:That means they are slaves.
Why should we believe Sisko? He was not there, and he's the enemy of the Cardassians. He'd call Dukat all sorts of ugly names and feel proud of it. This is the weakest bit of evidence yet...Let’s go to the source, and check with dialogue…
We heard it from Sisko (calling out Dukat on it)
...While this is the strongest. But what we learn here is that the people who worked in the facilities shown in "Civil Defense" were slaves; the people more or less freely coming and going on the Promenade, enjoying their secret affairs and running their businesses and schemes were not.QUARK: I'm not just concerned about profit, major. Look around -- do you see any ghetto fences dividing the Promenade? Or exhausted Bajoran slave laborers, sprawled on the ground after a grueling day in the Ore Processing Center?
...do you see any ghetto fences dividing the Promenade?
To nitpick, deforming the lift from one side should be enough to jam it in the shaft. But how Odo could achieve that without pushing on two opposite walls is another question. Yes, he could push against the shaft wall speeding past, but he probably wouldn't opt to, if lift deformation was his purpose.So of course he pushed the walls outward from the inside, both walls, because that's the only way it would've had the desired effect.
But that already defies the idea that Bajorans would categorically have been slaves, and it especially contradicts the exact claim made earlier, namely all Bajorans aboard Terok Nor being slaves.
Then how do you explain "Civil Defense"?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.