Forum culture? It doesn't matter.Captain Seafort wrote:If it's so obvious then why are you one of the few (if not only) person in this thread calling it obvious?SteveK wrote:*emphasis mine* Yes indeed, that was the discussion. I've made no comment on the validity of the conclusions that the vocal portion of this forum have drawn, I've simply stated that the discussion is irrelevant, for the simple reason that the balance of power has shifted so overwhelmingly (in the Star Trek universe) in favor of the "supporting elements" that removing them leads to an obvious irrelevant conclusion.
When faced with the decisions about the proper allocation of military resources every single race encountered in Trek canon has reached a different conclusion than you. We must then choose between two schools of thought:Captain Seafort wrote: Moreover there are cases when supporting arms are useless. If you want to destroy a city, PTs are fine. If you want to capture a city, you need well-equipped infantry, able to move through it street-by-street and house-by-house, identifying who are the enemy and who are the civilians caught in the crossfire. You need to have the firepower to break into houses and clear out rooms without flattening the thing. You need to have the weapons available to put down sustained suppressive fire on enemy positions to allow your infantry to cross open areas. You need to have heavy firepower on hand to deal with more serious problems immediately, not in five minutes time when your starship has worked its way down the priority list to your unit.
1. Those who are intimately familiar with the capabilities, technology and production capacity of the Star Trek universe (these are the hypothetical military leaders of every race we've seen in Trek)
2. Those who are only casually familiar with the capabilities, technology and production capacity of the Star Trek universe
They've spent their resources on Star ships: we know they can successfully defeat ground forces (Betazed and the Cardassian 11th order), therefore it works.
I don't allege that the comparison was unfair or that the conclusions you reached were incorrect, just that they were irrelevant. What I mean is that it is improper to apply your conclusions to any scenario where those exact, specific conditions don't exist. To put it plainly, your conclusions don't show that if Star Fleet had their ships and their shuttles that modern forces would still be superior. Therefore, when considering a situation like in the thread (UFP vs modern Earth) your analysis does not demonstrate that UFP ground forces would be "curb-stomped".Rochey wrote:Similarly, we aren't talking about whether the USA has a better military than the UFP overall. We're talking about which has the best ground forces. In such a scenario, it's not unfair to remove things like starships or aircraft carriers. Why? Because they are not part of the ground forces. They are there to complement them, not as a part of them.