Jedipilot24 wrote:There's a theory I read somewhere that speculates that there were, in fact, TWO battles at Wolf 359. In the first one the Borg took their time assimilating each ship as it attacked and this delayed them long enough for the Klingons and the E-D to arrive and finish the cube off. The Queen and a selection of drones escaped in the sphere and traveled back in time to tell the incoming cube to just destroy the ships as they attacked. Then the sphere returned to the DQ while the cube continued on. Then there was the 'second' battle of Wolf 359, which is what we actually see in the episode. Since the Borg aren't wasting time, they plow through the fleet much faster and so the Klingons and the E-D don't arrive in time.
This explains both the Queen's comment to Picard in FC and also why Voyager later encountered a group of ex-Borg who had been assimilated at Wolf-359.
This also means that we shift to an alternate timeline in BOBW and that some people living in the AQ have duplicates living as drones or ex-drones in the DQ.
This theory also speculates that the Borg Nanoprobes that featured so prominently in Voyager were inspired by Picard's knowledge of Wesley Crusher's nanites.
I've heard that explanation before.
IMO, it begs the question: why didn't the Queen send yet
another timeship back when Data accessed the Collective via Locutus? Even though his access was limited to low-priority directives (e.g., "sleep"/regenerate), the Queen had to know such access could doom that cube, too, right?
I mean, in fairness, she IS the Collective, so she could override any order Data tried to plant. And contrary to Dr. Crusher's off-the-cuff guess in that episode, the Queen COULD have simply cut Locutus' access to the Hive Mind, just as she did a drone or more in "Unimatrix Zero" (to say nothing of the several hundred thousand Borg she terminated through self-destruct ops).
My only guess is that the Queen never thought Data, whom Locutus regarded as a "primitive artificial lifeform, obsolete in the 'new order'," could be a threat. By the time he gave the order to sleep, she realized she'd underestimated him and initiated the cube's self-destruct, which the E-D crew interpreted as a "feedback loop."
The whole nanoprobe thing is bogus, however. We know they and assimilation tubules used well before the encounter at J-25; e.g., flashbacks and statements from "Dark Frontier" and "The Raven" among others. Why we didn't see Picard jabbed in the neck with the things is extremely simple:
A. We didn't exactly see every part of his assimilation process, did we? Back when I had a perforated colon in August '08, my doctor "fed" me IV opiates roughly every four hours for 6-7 days straight. But he didn't film that. Neither did any of my nurses or visitors (I was certainly in no shape to film anything; I was lucky if I was coherent).
Are we to assume, then, I never received potent pain-killers "offscreen," particularly in spite of the fact my pain levels were literally side-splitting at the time?
B. Recall the dialogue from "First Contact." The Queen didn't
want just another drone in Picard; she wanted a kind of counterpart. As such, it stands to reason that, while he was assimilated and largely under Borg control, they didn't go "all out" in turning him into one of them. This is quite obviously evident in the tears we see him shed AND his freedom enough to say, "Sleep. SLEEP, Data." That's far more freedom than we've
ever seen from a Borg still hooked up to the Hive Mind. Even "Hugh" took some time, in complete isolation, to begin to display the vestiges of individuality.