The Dominion aren't as boring as the Borg, so they CAN be kept around if their power level is decreased a tad. After all, they are a facet of an otherwise unexplored area of space associated with them in the Gamma Quadrant so it's not like they're taking up space in the AQ from the Klingons/Romulans/Cardassians/etc. But DS9 should've done more to lessen their power so it doesn't necessarily mean the destruction of the Alpha Quadrant if they break the Treaty. Plus without the wormhole they're still far away enough that they don't pose an immediate threat. They aren't as omnicidal as the Borg and the 8472.
Uh... "without the wormhole"? Since the wormhole isn't going anywhere according to the last moments of DS9, I'm not sure what bearing that has on anything. In any case: it DOESN'T necessarily mean the destruction of the AQ if they attack again. The four AQ powers that ended up fighting against the Dominion in WYLB combined
can stand up to them. Now, WOULD all four of those powers be able to work together if the Dominion threat resurfaced. Dunno. But it could be an interesting story, finding out what would happen. Your idea is to cut off all possibilities of a future "Dominion threat is back", for reasons known only to you.
The Borg and 8472, on the other hand, are in the totally different league. No way to settle things diplomatically (in a way that the audience would enjoy, anyways),
Sure there are ways to settle things diplomatically that the audience would enjoy. It's just that the way the writers chose to go wasn't one of them.
and the thought of the good guys being able to fight them off only infuriates the audience more, also they can appear anywhere in the Galaxy at any moment (which just makes this another no-win since the audience doesn't want the good guys to be able to fight their enemies OR talk them down
Putting aside that you are AGAIN speaking for many people whose opinion you don't actually have any way of knowing... or perhaps you're not trying to speak for us, but assert again the existence of this imaginary hatedome, I don't know... anyway: I STILL don't buy the idea that this was a no-win scenario. The writers came up with a story ("In the Flesh") for 8472 that many people didn't like.
That does not mean that those people wouldn't have liked ANY non-action story, nor does it mean that the writers couldn't have come up with anything better than what we got.
And! Even if I
accepted the idea that the writers were in a no-win scenario (which, mind you, I
don't), then it was one of their
own making! They created 8472, and made them as powerful as they felt they needed to be for the Scorpion story. If that was such a big problem, well, guess they shouldn't have made them like that.
so I don't know WHAT is it they want...).
Truest thing you've ever said about Voyager's audience.
So there really isn't any "further possibilities" with either of them. The best choice is to just get rid of them, permanently.
No, that's what YOU would have done, apparently, were you in charge. Doesn't make it "the best choice" except in your opinion. You feel that Voyager should have gotten rid of 8472 decisively, you feel that TNG should have gotten rid of the Borg decisively, fine... I won't begrudge you your right to simply hold those opinions. But don't act like you are defending some kind of universally accepted/objective standard of fiction writing with this preposterous notion that a major, galaxy-shaking threat MUST be completely and utterly pacified (note, by your own words, "pacified" means literally totally unable to threaten people on the same scale they once did EVER again) by the end of that same production.
If you REALLY want, you can leave a very small number of them alive for future appearances but their power and threat level should go down the toilet. They're too dangerous otherwise.
Right, because, you know... they're real. They're "dangerous", since it's not like they're controlled by writers and producers, who can at any time just come up with a scenario wherein the good guys discover some way to
counter the immense power these bad guys have. (Cue
Anwar asserting that since it's Voyager, the audience would have hated it no matter what it was.)
I mean seriously creating TWO foes whose goals are the destruction, one way or another, of all life in existence either through assimilation or annihilation, overpowering them so it's a real possibility this might happen, given them the NUMBERS to pull this off, and then not doing anything to resolve this?! That's not "leaving things open", that's lazy writing. Create an Omnicidal Maniac, give them the power to commit Omnicide, give them the NUMBERS to Omnicide, and then just LEAVE THEM BE?! WTF?!
sigh
This probably won't do any good, but I'm just going to point out that I never said that the show should just "leave them be." That would be silly. All I said is A) there is no need for them to be damaged/changed/made peace with
specifically to the degree that they could never POSSIBLY pose their initial level of threat again. And B) I said that what we got in the show as far as wrapping up the 8472 story, I didn't like. Not "they should never have wrapped up the 8472 story", not "all avenues involving diplomacy or talks with 8472 are dumb", just "I didn't like 'In the Flesh'". Yeesh.
Who decided that the Borg are boring?
Anwar, apparently.