Yes. That was what I found to be the most galling thing.FaxModem1 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 12, 2018 3:22 am Regarding the amount of space they need to dump pollution into, it could be some territorial thing, such as different companies have to stake claims on where they dump their pollution, and can't dump in another company's space(and we already know from Juggernaut that they're not supposed to dump in inhabited systems). This makes it to where the Malon are in a sort of California Gold Rush situation, always expanding and looking for new territories to dump, so as to stake a claim somewhere so that other Malon dumpers have to move on and find some other place to claim, giving them a place they can take their pollution and dump away from their homeworld, making a profit.
Of course, if they fixed their ships and power generators, things would be a lot easier, as explained by Voyager's crew in Night:
The issue is, when we run into the artist Captain from Juggernaut:Night wrote:TORRES: The residual anti-matter is then processed in the transkinetic chamber, where it's broken down on the subatomic level.
EMCK: What about the theta radiation?
TORRES: Oh, it's absorbed by a series of radiometric converters. We recycle the energy, use it to power everything from life support to replicators.
EMCK: We don't have this kind of conversion technology.
TORRES: Our scans of your freighter show that you have plasma manifolds. The engineering principles are the same.
CHAKOTAY: We're not saying this won't take some effort. You're looking at several months of retrofitting, depending on the size of your fleet. All the schematics are here, and we'd be willing to work with you, get you started. We can even provide you with some converters.
EMCK: Ingenious design. Our engineers would be pleased. This would solve a lot of problems on my world. Unfortunately, it would also put me out of business.
CHAKOTAY: Sorry?
EMCK: Your technology would throw the waste export industry into chaos. Before long, I'd be obsolete. I came here hoping your claims were exaggerated, but I can see they're not. You can keep your solution.
TORRES: You lying
CHAKOTAY: B'Elanna.
TORRES: We went through this whole song and dance and he never had any intention of working with us.
CHAKOTAY: That's not important. What matters is that we're talking now. We're proposing changes, some of them difficult, but progress can also bring new opportunities. Given time, this could turn to your advantage.
EMCK: I already have the advantage. The vortex. No one knows about it except me and my crew. By ejecting my cargo here I cut expenses in half. I won't sacrifice that.
The issue is, Torres right then and there should have told Fesek about their technology that could fix the Malon's problems. That no one on Voyager thinks to do so is a huge plothole, and would end the Malon as any sort of threat.Juggernaut wrote:TORRES: How can you stand to work in these conditions?
FESEK: You think we're animals, don't you?
TORRES: You said it, not me.
FESEK: I'm a waste controller half the year. Do you know what I do the rest of the time? I'm a sculptor.
TORRES: What's your point?
FESEK: Every year I give up work I love to expose myself to radiation that will probably cut my life in half.
TORRES: Then why do it?
FESEK: Have you ever been to Malon Prime? It's a remarkable place. It's one of the most beautiful worlds you'll ever see. Our planet would choke with industrial wastes if it weren't for the sacrifices of people like me.
TORRES: How many worlds are you willing to contaminate to keep your own home so tidy?
FESEK: Do you have any idea of the trouble we go to, to locate isolated areas? Ah, manual actuators. I'll release them, you monitor the pressure variance.
TORRES: Right.
FESEK: Do you have any children?
TORRES: No.
FESEK: I have a son. He's seven years old. He wants to be a waste controller when he grows up.
TORRES: You must be very proud.
For the most part of kind of liked the Malon in a so-bad-there funny kind of why. Yet I did welcome their attempts to flesh them out somewhat in this episode, even if it suffered the same limitations they had with the Ferengai. When you've got a species meant to represent the worst in society, it's a hard to make any of them sympathetic without straining credibility.
In this case it was already a bizarre that they supposedly run out of space to store there waste on an entire planet, managed to master tech to travel into space, and built an entire industry around waste exports, all without searching for a means of reuse or an alternate energy source. Still if we go with that premise we can see a different in outlooks between EMCK and FESEK.
The former is your standard corporate villain. Greedy, lazy, and indifferent to the more primitive species hurt by their actions. Even though Chakotay makes he clear he could make even more money patenting the new tech, he'd rather take the easy way out. (What's stopping anyone on his crew from leaking the Vortex to his competitors is never addressed). The later by contrast sees his job merely as a mean to an end and he's willing to go outside his route to keep others safer. He knows this job shortens the workers life span and he has little time to spend with his children or his art, but he still prides himself on keeping their planet uncontaminated.
So upon learning he's more benevolent, WHY THE HELL DOESN'T TORRES REINSTATE THE ORIGINAL OFFER? Sure there might be some resistance from the Malon Government, but with FESEK in her court you'd think they'd at least be willing to try it. Heck in Thirty Days when only one member of the aquatic species respected Tom's warnings about what they were doing to their environment even after their council voted against him, it was enough for Torres to talk him into committing what might be considered eco-terrorism!