What is there to be "called bullshit" on? Unlike some people, I don't think what their government did was at ALL good and I am more than willing to call them on it. I see so much potential in the Cardassians, always did--but I am not at all blind to the fact that the potential was often terribly used. It is the dissidents I have admired above all among the Cardassians because they SAW the need to restore a better and possibly democratic government, and they acted.
Yeah, they acted, all right-way too late, and in not enough number for there to be any real impact. Where was the Cardassian equivalent of the White Rose Society in Nazi Germany, or of ARA in Portugal during the Salazar/Caetano regime that staged bombings of military barracks, equipment stores, or military/police communications centers? Where were these people during the short-lived sham Deetapa Council administration, and why didn't they use whatever freedom they had during that period to start some alternative media, cyberhacking sabotage organizations, etc to frustrate and wreck the military and the Obsidian Order (especially after half of it was wiped out in that joint venture with the Tal Shiar?) What did these people
truly do to make themselves free?
And it is the existence and substantive actions of the dissidents that I see as the main thing that makes the Cardassians far more compelling than the Klingons: these people recognized there was something wrong. They knew they could be something better. And they stood up against what has to be one of the most oppressive governments you can imagine short of the Matrix. What is there not to admire about that sort of heroism?
A lot, except when it comes way too late, and in not enough numbers, and only after the Dominion alliance became the Dominion occupation.
Kind of like what happened in Nazi Germany in 1944.
I hardly ever saw Klingons stand up and demand something better of themselves, something that would represent a true break from their bloodthirsty ways--only perpetuation of those ways in different forms. I think an argument could be made for Chancellor Gorkon having the necessary vision, but sadly we never got to see him carry it out in the long term thanks to General Chang. The only other people that seem like "Klingon dissidents" in a sense do not live within the Empire (Worf, for one) and in some cases (K'Ehlyer (sp?) and B'Elanna) do not even really care for it.
Okay, I'll grant you that, but please try to remember that the Klingons were like this since antiquity, and that this forms a part of their culture (as evidenced by Kahless and his teachings.)
B'Elanna may not have cared for it that much, or
seemed to, but judging by the visit she paid to Kronos and the undertaking of a survival ritual in the post return to Earth
Star Trek Voyager novel, I never would have guessed. The same also holds true for Alexander, who seemed to have embraced the Klingon culture enough to be in the armed forces during the Dominion War, and his stepmother's embracing of Klingon culture as seen by her joining Kor, Kang and Koloth on a mission of blood vengeance, not to mention her drinking and eating Klingon food, and her getting married to Worf in the traditional Klingon manner. Obviously, it didn't faze them or put them off that much.
Had we seen real dissent among the Klingons the way we did with the Cardassians, I might feel differently about the Klingons. As it is, I do not see much that is worthy of admiration.
The Cardies didn't do much dissenting until it was too late-at least
some Klingons have tried to change.
What is there to admire in Cardie society? Shitty novels where everybody is guilty? Where generations of one family are shown as being proud to have served a totalitarian regime? Pouring the same sauce over everything that they eat (similar to putting ketchup on everything one eats)? Chronic addiction to kanar? That's not much of a culture to admire.
(Oh, and that stuff you said about the Galor, while an interesting theory, is not onscreen canon; it came out of a book.)
Hey, I liked it, and it sound like a great concept for Star Trek-a superhero on another planet!