The Motion Picture
Re: The Motion Picture
*puts fingers in ears and sings "Two Tickets To Paradise"*
"I have nothing to say, I am saying it, and that is poetry."
John Cage
John Cage
Re: The Motion Picture
Don't forget, Starfleet in it's infinite wisdom sent an Oberth class science ship out as part of its fleet at Wolf 359. Not sure what they thought it's pitiful weapons could do against the Borg, but they did, nevertheless.stitch626 wrote:Why would the USS Nova be in the fleet? Its a science ship.
They say that in the Army,
the women are mighty fine.
They look like Phyllis Diller,
and walk like Frankenstein.
the women are mighty fine.
They look like Phyllis Diller,
and walk like Frankenstein.
Re: The Motion Picture
But thats a great song!Grundig wrote:*puts fingers in ears and sings "Two Tickets To Paradise"*
"You ain't gonna get off down the trail a mile or two, and go missing your wife or something, like our last cook done, are you?"
"My wife is in hell, where I sent her. She could make good biscuits, but her behavior was terrible."
"My wife is in hell, where I sent her. She could make good biscuits, but her behavior was terrible."
Re: The Motion Picture
I know, it's my defense mechanism!
"I have nothing to say, I am saying it, and that is poetry."
John Cage
John Cage
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Re: The Motion Picture
The admirals misunderstood the concept of "The power of science"...Mark wrote:Don't forget, Starfleet in it's infinite wisdom sent an Oberth class science ship out as part of its fleet at Wolf 359. Not sure what they thought it's pitiful weapons could do against the Borg, but they did, nevertheless.stitch626 wrote:Why would the USS Nova be in the fleet? Its a science ship.
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Re: The Motion Picture
I assume it was there for the same reasons it was there against the Borg: desperation. You get reports of a super-ship that can destroy planets heading towards Earth, and you pull anything with a gun on board to fight it off.
"You've all been selected for this mission because you each have a special skill. Professor Hawking, John Leslie, Phil Neville, the Wu-Tang Clan, Usher, the Sugar Puffs Monster and Daniel Day-Lewis! Welcome to Operation MindFuck!"
- Deepcrush
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Re: The Motion Picture
Just like the Battle of the Line.
You just got to try.
You just got to try.
Jinsei wa cho no yume, shi no tsubasa no bitodesu
Re: The Motion Picture
I equate that move with this..........Rochey wrote:I assume it was there for the same reasons it was there against the Borg: desperation. You get reports of a super-ship that can destroy planets heading towards Earth, and you pull anything with a gun on board to fight it off.
An enemy tank is rolling up main street. It has already rolled right through the National Guard. In desperation, the Police turn out to try and stop it using assault rifles, shotguns, and various other tricks and weapons. Would one more man, armed with a pistol, REALLY make ANY difference in the outcome? Or would you be putting him unnessessarily in harms way when he REALLY could do no good there?
They say that in the Army,
the women are mighty fine.
They look like Phyllis Diller,
and walk like Frankenstein.
the women are mighty fine.
They look like Phyllis Diller,
and walk like Frankenstein.
Re: The Motion Picture
You never know. A bullet from that pistal may lodge itself somewhere that leads to the destruction of the tank.
No trees were killed in transmission of this message. However, some electrons were mildly inconvenienced.
Re: The Motion Picture
There is a good reason why destroyers are employed in task forces:
1) Extra sensor capability. A destroyer radar/sonar operator might see something the aircraft carrier does not. Perhaps the job of the Oberth and 359 was to focus sensors upon the Borg cube to discern possible weaknesses. The Nova in Nemesis may have been there for the same reason, it's high-powered sensors perhaps having a better chance of spotting the "perfect" cloak.
2) Defense of larger ships. During ww II one of a destroyer's functions was to act as a screen to protect more valuable ships, either with anti-aircraft guns, hunting subs or at the very least taking a torpedo meant for a carrier.
So little ships can have a function in a major battle.
1) Extra sensor capability. A destroyer radar/sonar operator might see something the aircraft carrier does not. Perhaps the job of the Oberth and 359 was to focus sensors upon the Borg cube to discern possible weaknesses. The Nova in Nemesis may have been there for the same reason, it's high-powered sensors perhaps having a better chance of spotting the "perfect" cloak.
2) Defense of larger ships. During ww II one of a destroyer's functions was to act as a screen to protect more valuable ships, either with anti-aircraft guns, hunting subs or at the very least taking a torpedo meant for a carrier.
So little ships can have a function in a major battle.
Re: The Motion Picture
That could make sense to me, if the Oberth WASN'T seen running up on the Borg cube and firing at point blank range.1) Extra sensor capability. A destroyer radar/sonar operator might see something the aircraft carrier does not. Perhaps the job of the Oberth and 359 was to focus sensors upon the Borg cube to discern possible weaknesses. The Nova in Nemesis may have been there for the same reason, it's high-powered sensors perhaps having a better chance of spotting the "perfect" cloak.
A lightly armored, lightly shielded, and lightly armed science ship really couldn't do much more than draw fire for a couple of seconds before it gets destroyed, killing everyone aboard. It wouldn't really be anything more than cannon fodder, IMHO.2) Defense of larger ships. During ww II one of a destroyer's functions was to act as a screen to protect more valuable ships, either with anti-aircraft guns, hunting subs or at the very least taking a torpedo meant for a carrier.
They say that in the Army,
the women are mighty fine.
They look like Phyllis Diller,
and walk like Frankenstein.
the women are mighty fine.
They look like Phyllis Diller,
and walk like Frankenstein.
Re: The Motion Picture
I could see the captain of the Oberth heroically ordering his ship to slide in between the Borg cube and a tractor beam holding a poor helpless Ambassador class to free it. 80 crew to save 550 seems like a good trade off. We know it would have all bee moot at 359, of course, but the Oberth captain would not have known that.A lightly armored, lightly shielded, and lightly armed science ship really couldn't do much more than draw fire for a couple of seconds before it gets destroyed, killing everyone aboard. It wouldn't really be anything more than cannon fodder, IMHO.
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Re: The Motion Picture
That's not really that analogous.I equate that move with this..........
An enemy tank is rolling up main street. It has already rolled right through the National Guard. In desperation, the Police turn out to try and stop it using assault rifles, shotguns, and various other tricks and weapons. Would one more man, armed with a pistol, REALLY make ANY difference in the outcome? Or would you be putting him unnessessarily in harms way when he REALLY could do no good there?
A better example would be a battleship going up against a group of smaller, weaker ships during WW2. The commander in charge of the fleet of small ships figures that beating the battleship will be difficult, so he starts conscripting armed merchantmen into the fight to help them. The merchentmen won't be that much use, but they'll still be able to do something, as they still have guns that can harm the battleship.
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Re: The Motion Picture
On an unrelated but interesting note I saw a really good doco last night about the naval battle that the Yamato fought in. Apparently a few US destroyers were pretty much forced to go up against a bunch of Japanese battle cruisers and they did really well for what they were. Seafort probably knows the name of the battle.A better example would be a battleship going up against a group of smaller, weaker ships during WW2. The commander in charge of the fleet of small ships figures that beating the battleship will be difficult, so he starts conscripting armed merchantmen into the fight to help them.
What does defeat mean to you?
Nothing it will never come. Death before defeat. I don’t bend or break. I end, if I meet a foe capable of it. Victory is in forcing the opponent to back down. I do not. There is no defeat.
Nothing it will never come. Death before defeat. I don’t bend or break. I end, if I meet a foe capable of it. Victory is in forcing the opponent to back down. I do not. There is no defeat.
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Re: The Motion Picture
The Battle of Leyte Gulf - specifically the action off Samar. Basically the Japanese carrier force (with virtually no aircraft left) was used as a decoy, to draw the US fast carriers, with their Iowa class escort away from the US landing force. Then two battleship forces were intended to strike through the San Bernadino and Surigao straits to attack and sink the vessels carrying the Phillipine invasion force. Only the San Bernadino force got through, losing Yamato's sister ship, the Mushashi, to air attack en route (the other force was engaged and sunk by a US battle line in the Surigao strait), and it ran into a force of escort carriers and light forces. The US lost one escort carrier and three destroyers, the Japanese lost a cruiser, and promptly retired back through the strait.
Only two things are infinite - the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the universe: Albert Einstein.