Your "comparisons" are so intellectually dishonest that you literally asked "Who said a damn thing about Britain?" 11 real-time minutes after you specifically used Britain in a comparison, in a post that you included in your quote. Which means you either forgot you'd made a point despite it being right in front of you, or even you think your comparison was irrelevant to the overall discussion. Pick one.Worffan101 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 14, 2020 12:47 am
They put a bomb under the Klingon homeworld that would've blown it up. I don't see how I can give any more evidence or reasoning than restating what was actually said and done on the show, and giving the closest possible real-life comparisons. Everything I add to that will be superfluous.
You have also directly stated that committing genocide as an end-goal in itself (the objective of Nazi Germany) is at best equivalent to and at worst better than merely threatening large civilian casualties in order to end a war of unprovoked aggression in which the other side has already shown willingness to murder civilians and violate flags of truce. See here:
Which is nonsensical. If literally nothing else, there are circumstances under which The Federation will allow Klingons to go about their lives peacefully: the same can not be said for the SS and whoever they deem "undesirables." One of these groups is capable of peaceful co-existance with its former enemies: guess which one?Worffan101 wrote: ↑Sat Sep 12, 2020 11:13 pm It's also not about the views espoused on-screen, it's the way that the cartoonishly evil actions of the protagonist and the genocidal wishes of Starfleet are not treated as unconscionable monstrosities. STD's Federation does not deserve to exist. Michael Burnham is a monster, and her Starfleet on par with the Schutzstaffel.