Wolf 359 was a fixed point in time so he couldn't interfere.
the events in Regeneration were a consequence of First Contact, which involved the Borg meddling with the timeline, so the timeline was altered for sure.
I still think it's likely that there was a 'first time' (in a metasense, of course) that set up the predestination paradox
Tell that to the families of the 18 people who got killed!One might argue that Q flinging the E-D out to meet the Borg was his intervention.
The Borg were already active near the Romulan neutral zone; just imagine what would have happened if they'd decided to visit the AQ and the E-D hadn't encountered them previously.
Not that encountering them previously seemed to do a great deal of good, but it certainly didn't hurt.
By definition, a predestination paradox can't have a "first time" or a "set up". It literally always existed.
Except an argument can be made the Borg weren't really interested in the Federation before Q Who. After all, just a year earlier, they were practically on the Federation's doorstep checking out Romulan outposts along the Neutral Zone and paid the Federation no bother. It wasn't until the Borg encountered the Enterprise at System J25 they became interested enough in the Federation to warrant assimilation.In a way Q did intervene before TBOBW. Enterprise encountered the Borg before the Borg began their attack on the Federation and that was an advantage.
If the Borg just suddenly appeared and had the attack mode they had in 'Q Who' there would be no contest, Federation could have been wiped out. After the events of 'Q Who' in TBOBW the Federation at least knew their enemy a little bit and could prepare.
Given that Q can see the future, I'm sure he knew that all the Federation would get would be a bloody nose, relatively speaking.Not that Q is a particularly moral being, but he did have a soft spot for humans and Picard specifically. And he knows he was the one who brought them in contact with the Borg.
Was he confident that humanity (and the Enterprise) would succeed? Was he confident that they could rescue Picard?
Or did he just treat the whole thing as another test for humanity and was prepared to see them get assimilated if they failed?
Or did he just not really care at all?
Given that Q can see the future, I'm sure he knew that all the Federation would get would be a bloody nose, relatively speaking.
I'm not sure it's ever established that Q can see the future per se, but assuming he can, then for all we know Q thought Wolf 359 would be good to get the Federation into the more militaristic mindset it was going to need going into the Dominion War.
Defiant was, after all, originally intended to fight the Borg.
I don't know that I believe Q's claim of being all-knowing.
Not that Q is a particularly moral being, but he did have a soft spot for humans and Picard specifically. And he knows he was the one who brought them in contact with the Borg.
Was he confident that humanity (and the Enterprise) would succeed? Was he confident that they could rescue Picard?
Or did he just treat the whole thing as another test for humanity and was prepared to see them get assimilated if they failed?
Or did he just not really care at all?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.