Morgaine wrote:She made some bad decisions and Arturis did have a right to be mad at her. No one's saying she should've prostrated herself before him and sacrificed her crew but *some* genuine regret and nuance would've been nice.
It would have gone a long way for her to drop all pretense, hang her shoulders and honestly saying "I'm sorry, and I'm sorry me saying these words is all I can give you" without the corollaries that always seem to follow any Janeway apology that reminds me of when people do something and then say the non-apology "I'm sorry you feel upset".
In Arturis case, I think it would have been good if they'd pushed back explaining what they knew/thought of Species 8472 and provided a dark contrast to his outrage - that his race was effectively screwed no matter what Voyager or anyone else could have done all that would have changed would be if the Borg or 8472 would have finished them off, but doing so while acknowledging the grief someone in his case would feel being the last survivor of his race.
Even if you accept the idea that it's a good plan at first, the situation changed once they developed the nanoprobe, and especially when they discovered that the Borg started the war to begin with. By that point you have a powerful weapon against one "maybe" enemy and no defense against one definite enemy that will get back to assimilating people before long if they aren't stopped. Keeping the deal was just a terrible idea. Give the nanoprobes to other species if you have to
The Realpolitik lover in me loves that, using the Borg to develop such a weapon, then leaving them out to dry.
Put's a larger spin on the "Making a deal with the Devil" in that they do so trying to trick him.
As 8472 and them posing a threat or not posing one, I find it more effective to have Voyager and the drama revolve around them being another Borg-level threat and having to walk a fine line between them while keeping in mind their own interests and those of the rest of the Milky Way that needs to be rid of both of them.
If you bumble into World War II and decide to help Hitler because Stalin's a douche, you're the villain.
That example is more muddled and something I wish had been presented with the Borg and 8472. Essentially, Germany provided more reason for everyone to find it in their interest to focus on them, especially thanks to how evens chained together, while tolerating the Soviet Union. Soviet actions in Eastern Europe after Germany invaded Poland are the best example of that, since the Allies wouldn't have been idiots to declare war on them as well for doing the same thing the Germans had done.
They tried to show that in the relationship Voyager and the Borg have in Scorpion, but it didn't as mesh well, and as much as they try to paint 8472 as a threat, we all know the Borg and the whole appeal of the episode is their large scale return to Trek, so they HAVE to be the big enemy and that fact never leaves the audiences mind.
and they very likely regarded anybody else in that area as little different to the Borg, especially when the Voyager then goes on to go into their space just like the Borg.
That does not excuse their line of reasoning that they should attack everyone in the this newly found space a threat has come from. It at best presents them as something akin to a wild animal attacking everyone as a threat. Simply because it doesn't know any better doesn't mean you don't defend yourself against it.
It's a fallacy to assume that you have the right to communicate with everyone and get involved in their business, the prudent course of action would've been to leave Borg space and not get involved. If that was inconvenient then tough, it's better than getting squashed between a superpower and an ultrapower.
It is when it's in your interests to find out what kind of threat they are to you and your people, then find confirmation that they are.
Another good scenario would be if the Borg ran into the Dominion and began overrunning it. The Founders come asking for help from the Alpha Quadrant powers, what do they do? Turn a blind eye and the Dominion most likely gets assimilated making the Borg all the more powerful while now dominating two quadrants of the galaxy while aiding the Dominion and checking the Borg does aid the Dominion, a power still able to overrun the AQ unchecked if they ever found a way to reach it a no longer had to rely on a single chokepoint that is the Bajorian Wormhole, but it's better than strengthening the Borg.
It reminds me of an old saying of someone I know "You cut off the head of the snake closest to you" - 8472 was that snake in that everything they let on gace the impression they'd continue wiping out life once the Borg were dealt with while the Borg would return to being the long term, chronic problem at the edge of thr known space they'd been since early TNG.
Durandal_1707 wrote:^ Inconvenience is also better than contributing to multiple genocides (Ray Wise's people only being the ones we know about).
To echo what I said about Arturis' race, chances are given what was known of 8472 they were screwed either way, assimilated by the Borg once 8472 was out of the way or wiped out by 8472 as they began to spread their conflict beyond their entry point into our galaxy.
To use good old WWII example, they go Polanded where if Germany hadn't of been the first to invade them, the Soviet Union would have, and despite the outcome of the war, Poland and the rest of East Europe remained under Soviet Dominion for 45 years as a result of the compromises and vagarities of the war.
There was no probably outcome that would have resulted in things being better for Poland that wouldn't result in things being far worse for the Western Allies in that it would turn WWII into a long fight against Germany followed by one against the Soviet Union or both allied against the Western powers until they could be out of the way.
Also to put an odd spin on the "genocide" thing, Arturis' race isn't wiped out, it's assimilated and as small a chance of them ever being freed of the Borg, there is one. If 8472 went on cleaning all space of life as they presented their intentions, they'd all be dead.
I'll also add the the sheer scale of things as they stand in much of Trek makes "genocide" lose much of its meaning. The Dominion War was a stalemate that checked a Dominion advance into the AQ, no races were exterminated and yet
billions died as a result. Is it any less genocide as a result?
That then makes me wonder what people in the past would think of being told of the death count of wars from the 20th Century onward.