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| The Next Generation All Good Things come to an end...but not here. |
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#61 | |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Great Britain
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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On the continent of wild endeavour in the mountains of solace and solitude there stood the citadel of the time lords, the oldest and most mighty race in the universe looking down on the galaxies below sworn never to interfere only to watch. |
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#62 | |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Star Trekkin Across the universe.
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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#63 | |
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Writer
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
In principle, the E-D was just as heavily armed as DS9 was. In fact, it was more heavily armed than DS9 was in seasons 1-3. The ship was specifically designed to be as safe as possible for its inhabitants, which is why a ship that was intended as a research vessel had such massive phaser strips all around the top and bottom of the saucer. The ship wasn't meant to get into fights, but its designers made sure that if it did, it would be able to protect the people within. That was fundamental to the design philosophy. The problem, again, is that the rules of fiction trump the rules of common sense. Dramatic tension required making the ship seem more vulnerable than it realistically would've been. In countless ways, good safety design was ignored in order to make things as perilous as possible -- there were no seatbelts, security had no armor, holodeck safeties could be deactivated, and systems that should've had multiply redundant safeguards didn't have them. I mean, come on, fiction requires putting characters in danger, so even if the series had been set at Starfleet Headquarters, you can bet that San Francisco would've become the most dangerous city on Earth. (How many times has New York City been trashed in the Marvel Universe? How many times has London been invaded in Doctor Who? Yet people still live there and raise families there, in real life and in fiction.)
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#64 | ||
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Continuity Spackle
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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"My dream is to eat candy and poop emeralds. I'm halfway successful." Catbert, Evil Director of Human Resources |
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#65 | ||||
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Vice Admiral
Location: Saint Louis (aka Defiance)
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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"Shout, shout, let it all out..." |
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#66 | |
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Italy
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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#67 | ||
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Earth
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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#68 |
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Captain
Location: Out there. Thatta way.
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
Evil Holographic Lincoln is BACKKKKK!!!!!
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An egotist is someone more interested in himself than me. |
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#69 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
they had HOURS to prepare for the battle ITs seems contrived that they DIDNT at least evacuate the children. |
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#70 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: In pre-production
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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John |
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#71 |
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Denver
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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"Divine intervention is...unlikely" - The Doctor |
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#72 |
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Writer
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
__________________
Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#73 | ||
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Vice Admiral
Location: In pre-production
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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John Last edited by CorporalCaptain; February 17 2013 at 06:46 PM. |
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#74 | |
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Captain
Location: Southern Sweden
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
Overall, Star Trek is kind of oblivious to the value of life. They just don't seem to care. |
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#75 |
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Fleet Captain
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
Riker's mom? Dead Beverly's husband, Wesley's dad? Dead Geordi's mom? Dead Data's creator & daughter? Dead (Brother deactivated) Worf's Klingon parents & baby mama? Dead Troi's dad & sister? Dead Ro Laren's dad? Tortured to death in front of her Picard's entire family except maybe his sister-in-law? Dead Tasha's parents? Dead Tasha? Dead Data? Destroyed & that's just from TNG, the show people complained was too squeaky clean. Hell, the only person seemingly untouched by an untimely death is nutty Barkley. The 24th century is a damn dangerous place |
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