Hello Stargate,
So I'm thinking that an arc could be based around finding worlds where the Goa'uld once had human farms - I mean 'had power' and explore the long-term genetic effects of the 'rotting strategy' employed by Goa'uld such as in Sg-1 with Hathor's 'breath', Vala's sexual forwardness with similar effects and how they coalesce into rotting genetics barriers that hold value ('power') and how that plays into their limitation against ascending. The line between effective ascension vs. illusory 'ascension' could be explored in how it relates to our psychology and physiology.
One enemy that they face in the rotting aftermath of the rotting power strategy is a species of parasitic wasps that lay their eggs in the women of the human species that mimic characteristics of fertile eggs to capture men's bloodlines. The original concept of the Hathor 'breath' is expanded into psychological and physiological triggers by both natural and technological means.
The nature of power is called into question as the differences between worlds that were once also occupied by the Ancients that were then taken over by the Goa'uld versus planets that were originally 'settled' by the Goa'uld.
I have some revelations that I'd want to save for the writers, if they shoot me an email. I've actually been thinking about this for quite some time, having grown up with Stargate.
QED
So I'm thinking that an arc could be based around finding worlds where the Goa'uld once had human farms - I mean 'had power' and explore the long-term genetic effects of the 'rotting strategy' employed by Goa'uld such as in Sg-1 with Hathor's 'breath', Vala's sexual forwardness with similar effects and how they coalesce into rotting genetics barriers that hold value ('power') and how that plays into their limitation against ascending. The line between effective ascension vs. illusory 'ascension' could be explored in how it relates to our psychology and physiology.
One enemy that they face in the rotting aftermath of the rotting power strategy is a species of parasitic wasps that lay their eggs in the women of the human species that mimic characteristics of fertile eggs to capture men's bloodlines. The original concept of the Hathor 'breath' is expanded into psychological and physiological triggers by both natural and technological means.
The nature of power is called into question as the differences between worlds that were once also occupied by the Ancients that were then taken over by the Goa'uld versus planets that were originally 'settled' by the Goa'uld.
I have some revelations that I'd want to save for the writers, if they shoot me an email. I've actually been thinking about this for quite some time, having grown up with Stargate.
QED
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