I was speaking more of when the triangle trade was established when they for the most part simply bought slaves at the local markets of the coast African chiefs. Only the Portuguese tried to slave raid themselves in Africa, and they didn't too well at it to keep trying.Jonathan101 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 15, 2019 8:43 pm And also, early European colonisation absolutely consisted of slave raiding- that was one of the key ventures Columbus undertook when he arrived in the Caribbean.
Early in the Age of Discovery is a muddled area. Not simply for what they tried with the local Caribbeans that you describe, but that it was also looked into enslaving and importing fellow Christian Europeans given that slavery hadn't been abolished there, but was near nonexistent by the 15th Century. The Church made trouble for that asap and then it was dropped once it became well know how short Europeans typically lasted in the tropics from disease.
That gets into the muddled territory of what the Collective is supposed to be. You'd think it would be, well, a collective, a gestalt of all the minds of the Borg, but there's that subordinating element that's always made a big deal of, especially when someone is free.Where slave raiding fails as an analogy itself is that the Borg don't consider those they assimilate to be slaves but as part of their Collective, so I suppose Marxist-Leninism is closer still.
I think it ignores the appeal that collectivism has, of having the whole take on the burden of responsibility while you can be a seemingly passive or more facet of it ignoring your part in it. And I don't even mean the actions done, as shown with Seven of Nine, almost as a passive participant having things done against their will, but surrendering most of that will to be able to seemingly be free of responsibility while possibly allowing you to revel in your own prejudices.
That last bit in mind of the the Borg could explain some of their more arbitrary, callous actions have as the multitude enjoy enforcing their own bit of will upon others through the Collective while being free from the full repercussions, similar to a minor bureaucrat hating being irreverent in the large span of things, but enjoying the machine they're a part of because of the power it allows them over others.
Long story short, I think Trek's always ignored or underplayed the psychological aspects of the Borg even when they've touched on them.