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The Star Wars vs Star Trek Thread; because it's been awhile.

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  • Originally posted by Boris Godunov
    How does that affect the argument? Considering that the industrial, speed and power advantages of the Empire can only be answered either with deus ex machinae ("Q will save us!") or pitiful responses like "We have the Picard maneuver," I hardly think it is our side that is desperate.
    What speed and power advantages?

    You have never been fully able to counter my argument that Imperial ships cannot fight at FTL speeds, which makes them sitting ducks vs. Fed ships.
    (\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
    (='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
    (")_(") "Starting the fire from within."

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    • RE: Fed fleet. He makes one big ludicrous assumption: That fleet numbers indicate the number of fleets. We know from Earth navies that this is absolutely not true. There aren't 101 air force divisions, after all. The numbering of ships falls to the same false assumption--that they represent all active ships. Considering that many ship numbers are probably retired, and that numbers below a certain range may not even have been used (NC-1?), that's a big assumption.

      Considering the threat that the Dominion posed, it is patently silly that, if the Federation had over 5,000 ships, they'd only cobble together 600 for a big showdown:

      "The Federation dedicated a significant portion of its forces (two complete fleets) to an attack on DS9 in an attempt to regain control of the wormhole during the Dominion war. This task force consisted of roughly 600 ships, including fighters. Therefore, it is reasonable to assume that the Federation possessed no more than a few thousand ships at the time. This is also consistent with dialogue from Way of the Warrior which established that a Klingon attack force comprised over a third of the Klingon military, and that the very first wave of the attack would consist of over a hundred ships. If we assume that there are several waves (three or four) it logically follows that the Klingon fleet is from 1000-2000 ships. The Federation fleet would logically be of similar or smaller size, because the Klingon fleet has a significant proportion of very small BOP-class warships, while the Federation fleet tends to consist of larger vessels, which were usually several hundred metres in length or more."

      Regardless, the Empire has 25,000 Star Destroyers alone, plus millions of other warships, including Frigates, Carrack Cruisers, Corvettes and Dreadnoughts.
      Tutto nel mondo è burla

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      • Originally posted by Lonestar


        Even if we were to accept your argument,(which is nonsense, as George Lucas himself has said EU sources are considered canon unless contradicted by the movies, and even then, only that portion of the book is consideed void), the ANH novelization was written by Lucas.
        EU? Hey! Just you keep the French out of this! You hear?!
        "I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!

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        • Originally posted by Urban Ranger


          What speed and power advantages?

          You have never been fully able to counter my argument that Imperial ships cannot fight at FTL speeds, which makes them sitting ducks vs. Fed ships.
          You've never successfully given any instance wherein the above has happened, nor have you explained how it is even physically possiblt for a ship traveling FTL to attack/engage one that is going at sublight speeds.
          Tutto nel mondo è burla

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          • Originally posted by Boris Godunov


            "We had to destroy planet in order to save it..."
            OOOOhhhhhhhh...... an interstellar John Birch Society!
            "I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!

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            • Originally posted by Urban Ranger
              By the by, what the heck are "canonical sources?" I have already pointed out the silliness of the novels, but you are still sticking with them.
              You only claimed they were silly, but as was pointed out many times, unless they contradict the films, they are considered canon.

              And what's your explanation for your false Lily quote, hmmmmmmmmmmm?
              Tutto nel mondo è burla

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              • Originally posted by Boris Godunov
                If the Federation only consists of 150 planets, as Picard says, then what else can be said?
                1) No you know how I felt after the Han debate.
                2) The article goes into detail how he uses continuity to arrive at that number.

                I think "one million" is a huge exaggeration there...would need to provide sources on that.

                Another way to approach this problem is to look at the population of planets in the galaxy as a whole. McCoy states in "Balance of Terror" that there are likely to be three million Earth-type worlds in the galaxy as a whole. We know that while class M planets are the most suitable for Human life, Humans are capable of living on at least two other classes of planet - class L and H. There are also at least some colonies located in domes or underground on otherwise uninhabitable planets - Janus IV is a good example of this type of colony. So the total population of Human-habitable planets in the galaxy is likely to be somewhere between three and nine million. Since Humanity has explored at least 11% of the galaxy as of TNG, then between 330,000 and one million habitable planets should lie in this explored zone.

                I don't see all that much reason to think the other races would rush to band together to defeat the Empire.

                I fail to see why. History is full of examples where the other powers in the system have formed balancing coalitions to contain or defeat a potential hegemon.

                The Romulans had to be tricked into helping the Federation before.

                We still have the aftermath of Nemesis to consider when constructing this scenario.
                I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
                For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio

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                • Originally posted by monolith94
                  If Ewoks can defeat the Empire, I see no reason why the Vorlons would have trouble. Quality over quantity, you see...
                  Exactly: If I remmebr the movie correctly, you can't possibly point to there being mroe than 200-300 ships battling over Endor: I don't crae about books, just look at the movie. compare that equally as large, if not larger battles shown in Star Trek and B5. Obviously, the empire may have so many ships, but it seems to need ot keep them all spread around all the time, and thus in the movies is neevr able to put together a very large fleet. i emna, for Gods sake, in episode 2, the whole "cloned republican army" is 200,000 strong..come on!

                  B5, B5, B5 yeah!
                  If you don't like reality, change it! me
                  "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
                  "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
                  "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Boris Godunov

                    I don't see how what Lucas has done is any different from what the writers of Star Trek have done. You scoff at "midi-chlorians" (which I also think are dumb), but what about ST's Q race and the Founders? Might as well have magic pixies, too.
                    Didn't Lucas steal the midi-chlorians from the Scientologists? Aren't midi-chlorians supposed to be the aliens who implanted bad "engrams" into our minds that can only be removed by skilled scientologist technicians performing mental "audits" for nominal fees of only a few thousand bucks/session?
                    "I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Boris Godunov
                      You've never successfully given any instance wherein the above has happened, nor have you explained how it is even physically possiblt for a ship traveling FTL to attack/engage one that is going at sublight speeds.
                      I told you, in Balance of Terror, for example. Even if that is not conclusive, I have already shown you it is much more difficult to hit an object travelling at FTL then one at sublight.

                      We are talking about vectors here, not mere scalars.

                      I don't think you want to start on Physics, Boris. Tell me how this Force thing is anything remotely scientific.
                      (\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
                      (='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
                      (")_(") "Starting the fire from within."

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by DinoDoc
                        1) No you know how I felt after the Han debate.
                        2) The article goes into detail how he uses continuity to arrive at that number.
                        The Han debate was different, as there was strong ambiguity in what he said, and an official source explained it.

                        The detail from the article about that is bunk, as it ignores the quotes and relies on unfounded assumptions.

                        Another way to approach this problem is to look at the population of planets in the galaxy as a whole. McCoy states in "Balance of Terror" that there are likely to be three million Earth-type worlds in the galaxy as a whole.
                        Medical Doctor McCoy knows this number how? What are his qualifications? McCoy uses hyperbole often...

                        [QUOTE]We know that while class M planets are the most suitable for Human life, Humans are capable of living on at least two other classes of planet - class L and H. There are also at least some colonies located in domes or underground on otherwise uninhabitable planets - Janus IV is a good example of this type of colony. So the total population of Human-habitable planets in the galaxy is likely to be somewhere between three and nine million. [QUOTE]

                        unfounded assumption. Did McCoy mean only "Class M" planets by what he said, or were L and H included in that? Do we know the commonality of these classes?

                        Regardless, if there are a million inhabitable planets, even within reach of the Federation, what good would that do them if they aren't currently inhabited? ST has the crews of the ships routinely visiting inhabitable worlds that are barren or primitive pre-Warp societies. What good do they do them?

                        I fail to see why. History is full of examples where the other powers in the system have formed balancing coalitions to contain or defeat a potential hegemon.
                        History is also full of incidences of the opposite.

                        The Romulans had to be tricked into helping the Federation before.[/q]
                        We still have the aftermath of Nemesis to consider when constructing this scenario.
                        Who on earth would waste their $$ seeing Nemesis?
                        Tutto nel mondo è burla

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                        • Exactly: If I remmebr the movie correctly, you can't possibly point to there being mroe than 200-300 ships battling over Endor: I don't crae about books, just look at the movie. compare that equally as large, if not larger battles shown in Star Trek and B5. Obviously, the empire may have so many ships, but it seems to need ot keep them all spread around all the time, and thus in the movies is neevr able to put together a very large fleet.
                          As I recall, they kept them spread out because they were looking everywhere for the rebels, or trying to give the appearance of such. Without any kind of organized rebellion, the need to keep them spread out would largely vanish.
                          Last edited by GeneralTacticus; March 30, 2003, 01:15.

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                          • Any "empire" that can have an "elite Legion" of its troops beaten by a bunch of 3 foot tall furballs with neolithic weapons does not inspire much confidence.

                            Also, the political state of these entities need to be accounted for. Obviously the Empire has problems internally, which could be utilized by outsiders. on the other hand, races like the Ancient ones (including Vorlons and Shadows) are nice and fee of internal political probems.
                            If you don't like reality, change it! me
                            "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
                            "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
                            "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

                            Comment


                            • The detail from the article about that is bunk ... relies on unfounded assumptions.

                              Does that mean that we can ignore stardestroyer.net now?
                              I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
                              For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio

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                              • Originally posted by Urban Ranger
                                I told you, in Balance of Terror, for example. Even if that is not conclusive, I have already shown you it is much more difficult to hit an object travelling at FTL then one at sublight.
                                Not only is it inconclusive, it's not an example of it. It's an example of them dodging using warp. An SW ship could, for all we know, do the same thing. Short hyperspace jumps are doable.

                                Why didn't the Federation use this tactic in other battles? Why isn't it common practice? Could it be because maybe it puts enormous strain on a ship's engines to engage and disengage warp so fast?

                                And how would a ship zipping along FTL attack one that isn't going FTL?

                                I don't think you want to start on Physics, Boris. Tell me how this Force thing is anything remotely scientific.
                                Not until you tell me the scientific principles behind the Q or the Founders.
                                Tutto nel mondo è burla

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