Agreed, the Federation has always had a long history of none intervention (it's the first general order of Starfleet) and making bad and immoral decisions or treaties that don't live up to the ideals of the Federation.AllanO wrote: ↑Thu Nov 19, 2020 8:00 pm Like I think the Romulan refugees are a bigger deal than the Bajorian refugees (or any of the other waifs and strays they ran into across all the series), both in terms of number and the sort of implied geo-politics of the future, however even in older shows there was a sense that outside of the Federation things could get pretty wild and lawless with Orion pirates slavery wandering about and so on. The failure of the Federation to help the Romulans is a serious sort of failure of the ideals of the Federation, but heck when the Klingons faced a similar crisis in Star Trek 6 there were factions inside Star Fleet willing to resort to murder and intrigue rather than try to find a way to help the Klingons and end decades of feuding and war. Yesterday's Enterprise implies that the Federation and Klingons were one star ship away from devolving into another destructive war. So the failure of Federation ideal in the Romulan crisis seems not unprecedented in the hall of Federation failures to live up to its own ideals.
And while I disagree with the Federations inactions in Star Trek Picard, I do understand why those decisions were made, much like how there was mistrust between the Federation and the Klingons that lead to people on both sides conspiring together to continue the conflict, there has been even less trust between the Federation and the Romulans, with an even longer history of conflict between the two, with that and the Federations none intervention policy, it's easy to see why people in the Federation didn't want to help, plus with the Borg invasions, the Klingon and Dominion wars, and everything in-between, I'd imagine that people in the Federation just isn't want to be dragged into another crisis and just wanted to heal.
But what is important is that Picard himself did and still stood by those Starfleet ideals, even if the actual Starfleet didn't, and that the message of Star Trek Picard was to stand by those ideals and not give into fear and paranoia, even if it feels like no one else does.