Part of Bajor's story in DS9 is not just recovering in terms of materiel and social stability, but in coping with who they had to become to regain their independence. I'm not as familiar with the show as I'd like, but Kira's stories frequently visit the idea, and it's something that comes up in almost any real-life struggle against oppression: letting hatred for you enemy drive you will ultimately put the worst people in charge. Because if you organize and mobilize on force of hatred and spite alone, your leaders become those who best embody that hatred and pledge to wreak the most vengeance upon the enemy.Yukaphile wrote: ↑Tue Apr 09, 2019 2:53 pm I severely disagree with Kira's "you're guilty simply being there" assertion. I see so many people abusing that line of thinking today and it gets in the way of comforting and addressing the pain of real victims. I hate it. He's guilty because he murdered unarmed people who couldn't fight back. That's why.
Fundamentally Bajor had to rebuild its soul and ability to love again, and a lot of Kira's plots are about reconciling that need with the equal need to let whatever fuel got her through the day drive her during the occupation itself.
And in a lot of ways, that's why it's a show that's frequently about the Bajoran Gods, the people of Bajor need faith not just to unite them against their oppressors, but to reminds them of how to live and thrive without the need for an external enemy to hate. And in a lot of ways that's why Kai Winn is portrayed in the way she usually is, she wields religion as a means of power, and uses its role in uniting Bajor against Cardassia to legitimize herself. And her learning that lesson in the end, where the devils of her people feed on the hate of their biggest enemy in an attempt to literally burn the entire planet, well, sometimes metaphors are just a bit on the nose.