If that were true,you would not have been parsing out my statements. You would have looked at the conversation I had with Charles Phipps in its entirety.I've tried to communicate with you in good faith
If that were true,you would not have been parsing out my statements. You would have looked at the conversation I had with Charles Phipps in its entirety.I've tried to communicate with you in good faith
The Bajoran Resistance so far as we know did not primarily target Bajoran or Cardassian civilians; every attack we heard about or saw in flashback seemed to focus on military targets. They seemed to consider Cardassian civilians and Bajoran collaborators acceptable targets if they died during an attack on a Cardassian military base, but we don't hear of them primarily targeting either.
Timo, that you enjoy making provocative statements, but this is offensive bullshit to real-world victims of occupation.
Nothing about the word "occupation" implies nonpermanence. Just ask the Palestinians today, or the centuries of Indians and Irishmen who lived and died under British occupation.
The Resistance is explicitly identified in the early episodes as the reason the Cardassian Central Command withdrew from Bajor.
Yes. And in the real world, it is very common for resistance fighters to retain such belief in their cause after generations, even centuries, of occupation.
You remember correctly. If anything, they stop calling it that slightly before he is elected. They never use the term again after the episode Shakaar, thus it was gone for good less than half-way through the series' run.They stop calling it "the provisional government" after Shakaar is elected First Minister IIRC.
It can also end with outright annexation.
Which then simply makes them criminals by the long-established rule of law, and a disruption to the normal order of things. Really, their utter failure is built into the duration and depth of their hatred. What's the point of not admitting to that failure?
Except the Cardassians already considered it a permanent part of their group. The Cardassians treatment of the Bajorans is based on the fact they are considered a permanent racially inferior slave caste.
Remember, they're partially based on the Nazis.
This is a dumb sentiment. The Rule of Law means nothing to the people it is being used to beat in the face.Ten years, twenty, a hundred, or ten thousand--if the goal is a better life for your children then they should keep fighting.
And from a retributive perspective, if you kill one Cardassian and deprive them of their benefits of slave labor, it's all worth it.
If anything, they stop calling it that slightly before he is elected. They never use the term again after the episode Shakaar, thus it was gone for good less than half-way through the series' run.
...The Bajorans?
After all, they are the ones with the permanent caste system of inferiority and superiority and whatever. (Which Hitler's lunatics never did have, FWIW, being awfully flexible about whatever floated their slave galley.)
And that's the very point. In normal circumstances, say, after generations of stabilization, rule of law means good living. Fighting means bad living. To fight for good living like that is just raping for virginity.
That would presume that there's slave labor to be opposed, though, which is hardly ever the case in longterm occupations. So, what was the situation like on Bajor when Shakaar and Kira were active? There was Gallitep (until suddenly there no longer was, and the Cardassians didn't seem to mind), and there were both paid workers and entrepreneurs and forced (even if potentially paid?) laborers and sex slaves on Terok Nor, but outside those two spots, was there slavery?
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