AllanO wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 5:04 pmAnd that would be a totally appropriate comment, like there is little motivation for the Borg's fixation with Earth in say Best of Both Worlds.
There actually is. Enterprise successfully escaped the first contact with the Borg by some pretty wierd means, while also displaying an ability to fight the Borg (a couple of Enterprises would have had enough firepower to kill a single cube and even though the initial warp chase went increasingly badly for Enterprise, they showed that the ship wasn't that far off the capacities of a Borg cube). Anyways, the Borg are quite likely not aware of Q at this point in time and assimilating a race that has some pretty outlandish means to traverse space pretty much instantly, without having to rely on a transwarp-webway, is a pretty big deal.
Also, there's another thing at play there. Earth is special in Star Trek, humans as well, to some degree. If you pay attention to the capacities of colonies, most are on a fairly low level of a few million people at most. Even home-planets of other species tend to be rather... lacking in terms of potential manpower and industrial capacity and it takes worlds like Quo'nos, Romulus or Cardassia, to begin talking about the same level of potential strength.
In other words, there's a damn good reason why most Starfleet ships are crewed almost exclusively by humans and that reason is not racism: We have the manpower, we have the industrial base (which is pretty wierd, when talking about a universe at the technological level of the Federation in the late 24th century) and, apparently, humans are absurdly persistent when it comes to "going out there". Klingons are mostly occupied by in-fighting and civil wars and are, actually, pretty weak when it comes to industry and expansion. Romulans aren't really expansionist, wierdly and they tend to do their own thing. If you leave them in peace, they turn in to (not on! usually at least) themselves and begin to stagnate. For a species that has been out there, since over 2,000, possibly even 3,000 years, they are, just like the Vulcans, oddly underdeveloped in terms of technology and expansion. And then there are the Cardassians. It's implied that they aren't really expansionist at heart, but are so by necessity (they were actually fairly similar to the later Bajorans and only became so agressively expansionist, because they ran out of resources in their home system). They are technologically behind the Federation and despite having the potential in terms of manpower and industry, lack the drive to "go out there" and so would be sooner or later beginning to keep to themselves. As for all the minor races... Well, the Vulcan phenomenon. Houndreds, sometimes thousands of years having access to the warp drive and yet, one mildly developed homeworld with a technological level of around Earth's capacities at Archer's time. And those take part in the 24th century Federation, which mostly leaves them to their own devices and doesn't enfore development or expansionism.
[I know this is mostly the result of the writers writing what they do, but that is the world we end up dealing with and discussing about, so it would be kinda useful to limit arguements to the facts of the world as presented. Obviously, once we begin to discuss the writer's lack of imagination or lack of understanding of scale or planet of hats or somesuch, we can throw away any in-world discussions.]
AllanO wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 5:04 pmThis episode makes its Earthcentricness a bit obvious by having Kirk give a we humans have to stand together against aliens speech right before Spock (an alien) calls in to give assistance, as Chuck jokes in his review.
While you can argue about the earth-centrism prevalent in much of Sci-Fi, you can't argue that we have, linguistically speaking (heh) a tendency to extend the term "human" to anything that is relatively close to us in some somewhat unspecific way, due to it's metaphysical meaning induced by the lack of anything close to us so far. If a species is about as intelligent as us or is relatively close in appearance (or both), then we consider them roughly as equals and tend to incorporate them into the umbrella-term "human". You see, "human" is not so much the name of our species in a certain way, but it is also a concept, an idea. A term to desribe a being with roughly the capabilites or mental capacities that are inherent to an average individual of the species homo sapiens. For example, human rights. We'll use this word for a long time still, even if we are aware that there are aliens and even if we extend the concepts behind those rights to other beings. We won't begin calling it "humanoid rights" for a long while or "sentient rights", in order to incorporate beings that are equal to us in intelligence, but have more appendages or no head or whatever, until another generation of language police comes around.
"If you get shot up by an A6M Reisen and your plane splits into pieces - does that mean it's divided by Zero?
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