For those of you who haven't seen the episode, spoilers ahead.
First, let's talk about Vox. What came out of this episode was the revelation that Picard never truly left the Borg collective, that his original genetic code was overwritten with organic Borg code. And when he and Beverly had Jack, he passed on that organic Borg code to him, essentially making Jack a transponder.
Furthermore, the changelings and the Borg had been working on an alliance in the shadows to destroy the federation by using Picard's borg DNA and putting it in the transporter's common pattern, essentially assimilating any young Starfleet personnel subversively. We see that on frontier day when the entire fleet goes online, as young officers are assimilated they take control of the ships and turn it into an extension of the Borg collective.
With the entire fleet now compromised, it's now up to the original TNG crew, no Seven of Nine, no Rafi, no Jack Crusher, no Capt. Shaw, to fight back using their own ship, which was not connected to the network.
Now this raises the obvious question. Is this an allegory into the vaccine, the allegations that nanotechnology has been included in the mRNA shots, the Human Genome project, and the Cabal's desire to control humanity? It seems like the perfect allegory. Plus, bringing back the entire OG Trek cast, having Terry Matales, who created the show "12 Monkeys" about a time traveling organization fighting against a criminal cabal, serve as showrunner, something tells me that this season's themes align with current affairs.
The fact that the central themes have circled around fighting an unseen enemy and bringing back the old to fight the new tells me that this season of Picard is a very White Hat production. Compare it to the last two seasons, people have stated their dissatisfaction with it, to the point where they had to bring the entire old crew back and get rid of almost the entire new cast. Now, Picard Season 3 is seeing a massive surge in popularity. Supposedly the series finale is expected to be one of the most watched episodes in Star Trek history, to the point where it's being shown in IMAX screens in addition to being available on the Paramount Plus app.
I'm curious what you all think. It seems like this, coupled with Trump's most recent point about fighting an enemy "from within" is an effort to wake up the population to what's going on. I don't expect the finale to directly point it out, but I would imagine there is a possibility that something might be dropped that anons might find useful and normies might find to jolt awake.
Time will tell. I'm thinking no.