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It doesn't matter if you don't know what you're doing as long as you look good doing it.
Interoffice memo:Creating the Gorn for Arena ate our makeup budget, so for the next three episodes, Spock will be on leave, and all the aliens will look just like humans with different costumes.
(Preferably females in skimpy ones.)
--G. R.
As far as the movies, TNG, and later, I'll bet they never thought of it.
--Baloo
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"Just because you know you're right doesn't mean you are."
-- Me
http://www.geocities.com/cyrano_jones.geo/
[This message has been edited by Baloo (edited April 13, 2000).]
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When you're in the Sol system, come visit the Starfleet Museum
Andrew
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"Who wouldn't be the one you love
Who wouldn't stand inside your love." - Stand Inside Your Love, The Smashing Pumpkins
The Corvallen were working for the Romulans in "Face of the Enemy", but weren't necessarily a subjugated race. The Cardassians have had their Kressari and Xepolite allies as well, and again we never learned if these were independent races or subjugated slaves or something in between.
There have been some explicit slave races, but not many. Cardassia enslaved Bajor. The Son'a had the Tarlac and the Ellorians in "First Contact", and the Trill slugs of course have the Trill hosts (who only form a small part of the total population) as their willing slaves of a sort. The Dominion has nothing but slave races.
Perhaps there's something in the logistics of enslaving an alien race that makes extermination (or uneven political alliance, as perhaps with the Cardie-Kressari case) a more practical solution for all but the most advanced slaver races? Perhaps all slave races are likely to rebel the way the meek and spiritual Bajorans did, in which case enslaving simply isn't worth it on the long term?
Timo Saloniemi
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Devil: Oh look at the time! I'm late for services.
Stone: Services?
Devil: A group of young teenagers that have been celebrating the Black Sabbath are planning on deep-sixing their gym teacher tonight. I'm gonna go and give them a little encouragement.
Brimstone. May it rest in syndication.
1: Empires sometimes exterminate the natives for various reasons.
2: The Empires have repressed the other cultures so much that they are seldom seen or represented on board vessels.
3: When the Romulans or Klingons move in, everybody else moves out (there goes the neighborhood!)
4: Their space could be more sparely populated with suitable stars.. say only M or O B and A-type stars (like as we know it is more likely to form around F, G, and K-type stars)
5: The "Preservers" or the "First race" (or the Iconians, or the "First Federation" or the Q, or whoever) seeded the Federation area heavily, but other places less so.
But more likely, it just wasn't in the budget.
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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi
But you know, the delta quad sure has a bunch of aliens in it and it's nowhere near the federation. Maybe the First Race just missed a spot or two.
"Hey you missed a section over there"
"I was going for a little artistic expression. Can't you see the flower I made?"
"Oh yeah...very nice. Can you do a dog?"
[This message has been edited by fructose1 (edited April 14, 2000).]
What do you want from the planet?
1. Minerals and other resources of the planet, such as trees, animals, water
2. Land for colonization and food production
3. A big rock for a military base
4. Something like Risa
What do you want from the people?
1. Consumers for quality Klingon household appliances
2. Taxpayers/Tribute
3. Slave labor/cheap labor
4. Friends/happy members of your enlightened stellar family
5. Technology, intellectual resources, musicians for Klingon opera houses
6. Nothing, just get lost
It seems to me that if you only want the planetary resources and nothing from the people, it might be easiest to just kill everyone. In The Chase (TNG), a single Klingon ship very quickly made a planet uninhabitable (albeit one without an advanced civ). Even if a planet is spacefaring, civil defense for an entire planet would be extremely difficult, unless you already had, for some reason, an entire network of Strangelovian mine shafts. If you want to get something from the people themselves, the benefit of what you can get has to be balanced with the cost of pacification. If pacification costs too much in terms of manpower and materiel, again it's simpler to kill everyone.
You may notice that these kinds of actions are rather like those of the Nazis. Are we assuming that the Klingons are that bad, that they are, in effect, Space Nazis? As someone asked earlier, are these the kind of people that the Federation wants to deal with?
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When you're in the Sol system, come visit the Starfleet Museum
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You are wise, witty, and wonderful, but you spend far too much time reading this sort of trash.
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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven
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When you're in the Sol system, come visit the Starfleet Museum
Yes, I do.
I imagine some of that has to do with changing social mores within the Klingon Empire. The U.S., for instance, doesn't act the same way it did during the Cold War. The concept of honor is so nebulous that there should be surprise that there are several differing interpretations of "what Kahless" meant floating around.
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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven
Klingons are always fighting over this region of space or that. But since when have they actually *won* anything? Perhaps they are like dogs that have no idea what to do with a cat once actually catching one - or cheetahs, unable to figure out what to do with prey that doesn't run away. Ruling over a planet isn't half as fun for a Klingon as fighting over it...
Timo Saloniemi
P.S. for the Klingon friends among us, I grant that the Empire did take Archanis sector from the Feds in DS9. But that's the ONLY successful conquest I know of.
I hope you understand any of this, my English isn't very good today
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"When You're Up to Your Ass in Alligators, Today Is the First Day of the Rest of Your Life."
-- Management slogan, Ridcully-style (Terry Pratchett, The Last Continent, Discworld)
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Prakesh's Star Trek Site
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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven
But how many races have warp drive? Wouldn't it be likely that if the client state, excuse me, planet, DIDN'T have warp drive that the imperial state would refuse to hand the technology over? And in that case the locals wouldn't be able to get away and on-camera so to speak.
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...but the universal nature delights in change, and in obedience to her all things are done well...
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"Oh, it's an anti-anti-WTO song. It's essentially a pro-Starbucks song. I saw this picture of a guy sticking his foot through a plate-glass window in a Starbucks in Seattle, and he was wearing a Nike. Man, couldn't you just change your shoes?"
--
M. Doughty
Garak's aim of eradicating the Founders need not indicate a general Cardassian taste for genocide, though. Garak is an ends-justify-the-ends-of-entire-worlds sort of guy who kills when necessary, be it one person or billions. Dukat might not agree with him at all.
Cardassians might spread a reputation of themselves as genocidal monsters, though. They sort of did that for "Chain of Command" already, to entrap Picard. They might have used fear as a weapon in subjugation of Bajor and other planets. In actual fact, they are the most pragmatic-sounding race of them all, and they also are the only one with explicit subject and slave races and minions. I very much doubt they would support genocide, regardless of later-day Dukat's lunatic rantings.
Small-scale killing seems to be just a tool for them, though - in addition to the public executions of the occupation era, they can even rig the whole Terok Nor to automatically explode in case of a mutiny.
Timo Saloniemi
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Somehow you were linked to this page, which doesn't really exist. Well, this one does, but the one you were trying to get to doesn't. Actually, that's not really true either, because it probably does, but either you mistyped it or our webmaster is asleep at the wheel. If the later is the case (you were linked here from a page within **********.net) then please let us know.
If you were linked here from an external site, which is most often the case, it would be nice of you to let them know.
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"Oh, it's an anti-anti-WTO song. It's essentially a pro-Starbucks song. I saw this picture of a guy sticking his foot through a plate-glass window in a Starbucks in Seattle, and he was wearing a Nike. Man, couldn't you just change your shoes?"
--
M. Doughty