If someone approached the collective and asked to be assimilated they consider if that person will add to their "perfection".
If someone approached the collective and asked to be assimilated they consider if that person will add to their "perfection".
I've got an old CB radio somewhere I can use to transmit messages requesting assimilation.
An orbital bombardment would accomplish that, which they were doing anyway. A pre-warp civilization which doesn't even offer any biological advantages as drones (according to Voyager Dark Frontier) shouldn't be worth assimilating if a warp capable spacefaring race is rejected.And it's also important to point out the value of assimilating Earth before it can give rise to the Federation in the first place...
The Borg's ostensible rejection of the Kazon is something I just ignore, as it's only established in one passing reference, the removal of which alters none of the plots. But it's impossible to ignore the Borg's unhealthy obsession with humanity. Pointing out humanity's pivotal place in the Federation only shifts the inflated sense of this species' importance from the Borg to the Trek universe more broadly (as, of course, conceived by anthropocentric writers).Admittedly, it is odd that the Kazon aren't worth assimilating, yet 21st century Earth was. Granted the Kazon are on the lower end of advanced Trek species, but they are warp capable, at least, which is more than you can say about Earth in 2063, especially since the Borg targeted them the day before they launched their first warp ship, and that being a refitted nuclear missile. So humans from a post apocalyptic wasteland of which only one person has any knowledge of warp drive are worth assimilating, but a spacefaring warp capable race isn't? For a race that prioritizes other races based on their technology, this seems very backwards.
That explains why the Borg would choose not to prioritize them, but outright rejecting them is still silly and nonsensical.Recall as well with regards to the Kazon they were formerly slaves to the Trabe and hadn't developed any indigenous technologies and sort of lives off whatever limited resources they had and technology they stole/conquered/discovered.
Cybernetic ass paddling is not recommended.The one thing I'd be concerned about, when pledging to get in the Borg, is the hazing
- Crewmember tells Picard they are going to join the borg collective
- Picard draws the line
- Crewmember convinces Picard with literary reference
- Picard defends crewmember's right to join the borg collective
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