• @[email protected]
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    342 years ago

    There’s a case to be made for dueling what is essentially a post-scarcity socialist Federation against the embodiment of capitalism-as-cult.

    Conversely, the Borg are in a way aspirational-- growing and assimilating knowledge and improvements seems a bit higher of a goal, but their presentation comes off ham-fisted.

    I feel like there’s a missing explanation of why “assimilating the diversity” of a civilization needs to be a total stripmine rather than taking a few (potentially willing) representatives and regularly coming back in case anything new evolved, like binge-watching a civilization every few years. The stripmining aspect seems necessary to make them recognizabily villianous-- the enemy of sacred individuality rather than just data hoarders whose homelabs turned into giant cubes.

    It does feel like Latinum is very much a MacGuffin for undermining a huge amount of “we have virtually infinite free energy and can replicate anything we need” worldbuilding; they needed a way to make 24th century capitalism seem remotely plausible.

    • SSTF
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      2 years ago

      I almost feel like you’re describing the Trill or the Tokra regarding willing assimilation.

    • Seven
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      272 years ago

      The Borg became a metaphor for colonialism, I think, with assimilation being an “improvement” for it’s victims.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      I’ve always assumed that the Borg were once a truly egalitarian faction. One that seeks out other points of view in order to invite them into a collective where every voice has a share in the overall direction of the whole.

      I could see such a collective evolving into the current Star Trek Borg if things like fascism take root. A rabid xenophobia of thought that seeks to destroy any ‘wrong-think’ within the hive mind.

      It would explain a lot of the problems that the Borg seem to have. Why they never seem to learn from their mistakes despite their adaptability, why they all share one mind despite their quest for distinctiveness, why they have a single load-bearing queen despite their usual priority of hyper redundancy in all things.

  • @[email protected]
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    142 years ago

    Hell of a twist if that was revealed after all the initial interactions. The ultimate grift to put the Federation off guard.

  • BarqsHasBite
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    2 years ago

    It’s all in the writing, I guess. It’d be a kind of bungling, stumbling, weird encounter, random, campy, never know what they’re going to do, villian.

    *There were a decent villian in “Peak Performance” (the strategema episode). You just need that off species to be a counter.

  • @[email protected]
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    192 years ago

    They had no idea what they wanted to do with Ferengi in this episode. By the end, they are downright feral. Wearing furs and jumping around screaming like cavemen. After watching them in later episodes, this one just feels really weird to see.

  • @[email protected]
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    292 years ago

    It still gets me that the Ferengi were mostly unknown to the Federation, yet by the time of DS9 they’re almost a widely known cornerstone of economics in the Alpha Quadrant.

    • teft
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      302 years ago

      Rule of Acquisition #45: Expand or die.

      Rule of Acquisition #75: Home is where the heart is, but the stars are made of latinum.

      Rule of Acquisition #9: Opportunity plus instinct equals profit.

    • FauxPseudo OP
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      202 years ago

      Ferengi move pretty fast. Faster than light if in the right kind of ship.