first contact lack of common sense?

Discussion in 'Star Trek Movies I-X' started by Pawleygirl, Nov 5, 2012.

  1. Pawleygirl

    Pawleygirl Ensign Red Shirt

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    I also have a few questions regarding first contact...when the movie starts, the enterprise is out near the Romulan NZ scanning for whatever. From what I can recall, the RNZ is pretty far from earth, yet they're able to warp back to earth so quickly to join the battle against the borg. How is that possible that they can get there so quickly? Also why not stop first contact by destroying the Vulcan ships? Why even try to stop first contact? In that period in earth history, aren't the borg strong enough just to simply go down to earth where the majors powers are and just assimilate them? I love first contact, but that's always bugged me.
     
  2. Tiberius

    Tiberius Commodore Commodore

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    The DITL website suggests that the battle actually went for a few days. The fleet engaged the Cube in the typhon sector (which is far enough from the core of the Federation that the Enterprise D was only the second ship to investigate it (after the Bozeman in Cause and Effect). The battle, according the DITL, lasted for a few days with the fleet attacking the Cube as they all made their way towards Earth.

    Maybe they didn't know the course the vulcans would be approaching earth from. Hard to know where to find them if you don't know which direction they are coming from.

    Actually, the Borg seem to spend most of the movies trying to get in contact with the Borg living in that time period, with the deflector dish. It's only after the dish is destroyed that the Queen says there has been a change of plans and they start trying to stop first contact again.

    When the Enterprise is going back in time, we see that Earth is indeed assimilated. They probably wanted to get the Enterprise out of the way first.
     
  3. SmoothieX

    SmoothieX Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Uhhh, they know that First Contact is the pivotal moment that leads to an end to war, poverty, hunger etc. for humanity. Why would you want to stop it?

    (Alternately, if they went back in time another 60 years or so, and leveled Bozeman, MT, I wouldn't have met my ex-wife. Now that would be an academy award movie in my book.)
     
  4. F. King Daniel

    F. King Daniel Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Trek ships move at the speed of plot. According to TOS: "Where No Man...", "That Which Survives" and STV, the TOS Enterprise could have managed Voyager's 75-year galaxy-crossing journey in days or weeks.
     
  5. TiberiusMaximus

    TiberiusMaximus Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

    ^^ Um, I think the OP is asking why the Borg didn't destroy the Vulcan ships.
     
  6. CobraCommander

    CobraCommander Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    You're right about it not making sense. In reality, the Borg only needed to send 50 cubes to guarantee the end of the Federation. Also, if the Borg wanted to time travel, why attract the Federation's attention doing it on Earth's doorstep? Cobra
     
  7. SonicRanger

    SonicRanger Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Presumably Borg temporal sensors have a very short range, so they needed to get close to Earth before figure out their time travel calculations or something.

    http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Temporal_sensor
     
  8. Tiberius

    Tiberius Commodore Commodore

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    Another thing to remember is the message sent in Regeneration. It would have undoubtedly had information about the future. As well as future technological information it would have had something like, "In 2373, the Borg Queen will launch a mission in which a Sphere travels to Earth in a Cube. Attacked by Federation Forces, the Sphere leaves the Cube and uses a temporal rift to travel back in time to 2063. Once there, you will launch an attack on the Phoenix's hanger, but will be quickly destroyed. You must beam aboard the Enterprise with some drones and attempt to assimilate the ship. Once your attempt to create an interplexing beacon fails, attempt to destroy the Pheonix after it is launched. This attempt will also fail, and the drones aboard the Enterprise will all be destroyed. However, some drones on the surface that withstood the crash of the Sphere's wreckage will be able to send this message at a later date."

    Now, if the Queen in 24th Century gets that message and attempts to do something different, it is possible that something will go wrong. For example, in Regeneration, we see they recover two drones, let's call them 1 of 2 and 2 of 2, or 1 and 2, respectively.

    If the Queen decides to do something other than what the message said, she could make it impossible for 1 and 2 to send the message. Let's say that instead of sending the Sphere to Earth inside the Cube, she sends it by herself. In that case, without the Cube to protect the sphere, it's possible the fleet could have destroyed it, thus ending the mission and creating a problem - if 1 and 2 are killed, they won't exist in Regeneration to send the message, and thus the mission would never have been launched.

    Or if the Queen decides to send the sphere back in time first and then travel to Earth. Then something could happen en route which would damage the sphere or kill 1 and 2. Again, the message is not sent.

    In short, the Queen knew of only one way for her to have received that message, and that was to do exactly what the message described. And that's why she did it that way.
     
  9. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    The one thing we unarguably witness in ST:FC is the Borg attempting something awfully complicated, and using time travel for it.

    The former aspect suggests their goal is not a simple one - because they almost invariably achieve simple goals through generous overkill, and basically never go for subtlety in things as mundane as assimilation of a culture.

    The latter aspect suggests that whatever they try, they will be capable of trying it again, and again, and again, until they get it right. No need to be afraid of ruining a delicate balance, such as with the above musings, because if something goes horribly wrong, there's always the possibility of a second, completely different attempt. That is, the basic secret and technology of time travel isn't something the Borg have to pass on to themselves through a time loop: in the late 24th century, they will have the ability to build Timespheres no matter what.

    The two aspects are somewhat counterbalancing: the ability to time travel would suggest the Borg eventually get exactly what they want, but since what they want is apparently very demanding, perhaps they will give up before reaching their goal?

    We don't know if ST:FC depicted the ultimate attempt, hiding the existence of umpteen preceding iterative loops - or if we saw one of the middle iterations where the heroes factually triumphed and the Borg decided to try again a bit differently (and possibly a bit less interestingly).

    I think that in no case should we assume that this was an attempt to assimilate Earth. The Borg always do that differently: we have witnessed invincible fleets of Cubes on at least two VOY occasions, and Guinan spoke of "swarming" in the El-Aurian case as well. There is also very little reason to believe a single word of what the Queen said. Nor does this appear to be a standard scouting mission, or standard anything. Arguing that it doesn't meet our expectations doesn't get us anywhere, because our expectations for something this exotic will be wrong by default.

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  10. Tiberius

    Tiberius Commodore Commodore

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    They did in Dark Frontier.
     
  11. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    What was subtle about "Dark Frontier"?

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  12. Tyberius

    Tyberius Commander Red Shirt

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    I don't think the goal of the Borg in First Contact was to stop first contact or assimilate earth of the past at all. That was what our protagonists thought and said, but I think they didn't have the opportunity to think it all the way through.

    I think the Borg were simply seeding the past, to allow the Federation to grow into a power from which the future Borg could learn. I also believe that had the Borg not gone into the past, first contact likely never would have happened at all.
     
  13. Tiberius

    Tiberius Commodore Commodore

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    Using a virus to assimilate Earth instyead of beaming down lots of drones and using hand tubes to assimilate people. It would take months though.

    QUEEN: Our previous attempts to assimilate them were all direct assaults. They failed. So we've created a more surreptitious strategy.

    SEVEN: You intend to detonate a biogenic charge in Earth's atmosphere.

    QUEEN: It would infect all life forms with nanoprobe viruses. Assimilation would be gradual. By the time they realised what was happening, half their population would be drones.​

    Definitely more subtle than the Borg's usual strategy.
     
  14. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Ah, right, I thought you meant the assimilation we actually saw where the Queen's ship was but part of a customary armada.

    I wonder if there was any truth to what the Queen was describing to Seven... The Queen's main interest appeared to be Seven, after all, not Earth.

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  15. Tiberius

    Tiberius Commodore Commodore

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    Personally, I see the Queen as a spoiled brat. She's never done anything to dispell that notion. So when she said that she allowed Seven to leave the Collective in the first place, I see her as speaking out of her ass. She saw the whole thing as a way to jerk with Voyager and possibly get revenge on Seven for leaving.

    But I do think that the Queen had an interest in Earth. What we've seen supports that.