“Listen. Strange women, hanging from the ceiling, distributing skin, is no basis for a system of government.”
I didn’t know we had a queen - I thought we were an anarcho-syndicalist collective?
You’re fooling yourself. We’re living in a dictatorship: a self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working drones…
What is the point of the Queen then?
Personification that changed the original concept for the sake of the story.
More importantly, it’s just a comic.
Yes, but it works best with the original BORG concept, before they introduced the queen.
The BORG was originally described as a collective, and a collective doesn’t have rulers like a queen.
So I must admit I was a bit disappointed in the introduction of a BORG queen.
Still the BORG remain a very cool part of Star Trek.Do we even know: does the Borg queen truly control the collective, or is she rather a manifestation of something still more deeply hidden?
Perhaps at the core of the core, it really is a collective? I suppose this
like(edit: level) of argumentation is useless, like that thought experiment of glass mountains on the moon, but still I wonder.It depends on who’s writing the episode. In First Contact she was implied to be an avatar of the Collective rather than an individual that controls it. Or possibly a gestalt consciousness formed as a byproduct of the Collective’s structure of interlinking minds. The VOY writers didn’t really get it, though, so she became a true individual on that show and in her future appearances.
She is very much in control. In unimatrix zero double episode, she commands self destruct of whole cubes just because one drone was not under her complete control, that’s how much she is afraid of any independent thought.
And how much control she has over the rest.
- “Suicide, now!”
- “Yes, mah queen”
Right, so she is like a program running with sudo permissions on a Unix machine. She holds the hidden, backdoor keys to control the thoughts of the mere “drones” below her, even as each ship itself had a singular authority (iirc?) who could do similarly for those “below” them. But what I mean is, what above moving back “up” that chain - does she likewise have hidden backdoor keys to control her thoughts, which she would not necessarily (or even likely) be aware of herself?
That, and even if she has sudo perms so to speak, that doesn’t necessarily make it impossible for her to be a manifestation or byproduct of the borg collective consciousness.
There is/was no cube hierarchy. You have the Borg queen and then everything else. Ship sizing wasn’t an indication of anything there than use case iirc.
Plus, a collective, as well as one ran by a leader, has no use case for a tiered authority structure. Unless compromised, Borg already always know the current plan. Thats why any ship could destroy every other ship.
Each drone is a brain-cell of the collective brain, the Queen is the personality that eventually formed.
Still sucks, Borg were better as unpersonal
In order to interact with other groups they evolved a figure head
Oh… that’s very interesting. Is that from the lore? Was it on purpose? It doesn’t matter bc either way it’s fascinating to think about how the “corruption” of the original purpose lead to the masses being controlled by a central figure with absolute authority.
Or another way to say that is that their society itself evolved and adapted to face their external circumstances, but anyway somehow it always ends up with an elite cadre of illuminati-like figures on top, and everyone else is just an entirely disposable peon.
Which makes me wonder now about whether the ocean of changelings themselves has things like “rulers”.
In First Contact, when she died, all of the regular Borg immediately dropped dead.
To show that hack writers didn’t get what made the borg cool and scary. They turned then into normal boring bad guys.
Scrum master
That actually makes sense. Thanks!
central database
Also, someone’s gotta handle all those supply requisitions.
Exploiting the workers.
When they added the Borg “queen”, I was really bummed - because I had definitely thought of them as an autonomous collective.
'We’re the Borg of the Round Table"
The borg dystopia is the best dystopia.
I’m 37.
Well I can’t just call you “Borg.”
You could say 3 of 7.
I didn’t know you were called 3 of 7!
Well you didn’t ask, did you?
I did say ‘sorry’ about the ‘old robot’, but from the behind you looked–
The workers actually think they’re in charge… even while they are not allowed by the GroupThink to have a single thought that runs counter to the collective will.
Have to say I prefer the Queen over Trump/Vance.
At least she admits she’s evil.