So on the show if we had seen more of Earth outside of the mountain the stun weapons should have started being marketed to the police and civilians around the time of Stargate Universe.Nitpick: SG-1 did reverse-engineer the Intar stun weapons - they use them for live-action training exercises.
Nitpick: SG-1 did reverse-engineer the Intar stun weapons - they use them for live-action training exercises.
So on the show if we had seen more of Earth outside of the mountain the stun weapons should have started being marketed to the police and civilians around the time of Stargate Universe.
It's not hard to imagine that the treaty negotiated between the major powers in 'Disclosure' forbade the use of alien, or reverse engineered alien weaponry on Earth, outside of SG related operations. Pretty much the reverse of the 'Outer Space Treaty' which (broadly speaking) forbids the use of WMDs in space. That probably also included naquadah reactors since those can be easily weaponized.Shows like SG-1 try to keep it to the "real world" to keep production costs down. If you suddenly (for example) introduced fly car technology then you've just added a major headache from a production point of view every time you want the action to tale place in the "real world".
The only one I was surprised Four killed was his brother, the step mother and the Seers had it coming. I guess Four thinks by killing his brother, there will never be anyone who can legitimately threaten his position on the throne.
That was a disappointing turn. Ryo is supposed to be smart, yet there was no just cause for killing his brother. He knows that Hiro is the last person that would ever want the throne, or challenge him in any way. The only possible explanation is that he may have feared Hiro would be angry over Ryo killing his mother-because I can't see him banishing her as the Seers prognosticated. And over time, would grow to oppose him. Shock for the sake of shock, is how this feels.The only one I was surprised Four killed was his brother, the step mother and the Seers had it coming. I guess Four thinks by killing his brother, there will never be anyone who can legitimately threaten his position on the throne.
I think its a bit more than the rest of the Raza crew had bad pasts. Besides Six who was a cop, even if he concluded for a bent government after turning on the crew to end the first season, the rest didn't have anything positive to point to with the glimpses of their past. Where as Ryo can reclaim royal status rather than just remain a mercenary.That was a disappointing turn. Ryo is supposed to be smart, yet there was no just cause for killing his brother. He knows that Hiro is the last person that would ever want the throne, or challenge him in any way. The only possible explanation is that he may have feared Hiro would be angry over Ryo killing his mother-because I can't see him banishing her as the Seers prognosticated. And over time, would grow to oppose him. Shock for the sake of shock, is how this feels.
I don't have a problem with him going full blown villian, as we all know the Raza gang weren't the nicest people in the world to start with. I will miss the dynamic he brought to the crew though, assuming there won't be a reset button pressed during season 3. Perhaps the reassimilation of his memories isn't going as smoothly as he thinks.... Yeah, cop out.
The cast has been the nicest asset the show has had-and yes, that includes Marc Bendavid, who I feel got stuck with some poor writing as One, coupled with the unwanted romance of doom with Two.
In any case, I'm at least glad this whole Ishida arc moved forward. Its been an albatross around Four's neck, progressing through news vids, with very little connection or impact on him or the crew until now.
It's not hard to imagine that the treaty negotiated between the major powers in 'Disclosure' forbade the use of alien, or reverse engineered alien weaponry on Earth, outside of SG related operations. Pretty much the reverse of the 'Outer Space Treaty' which (broadly speaking) forbids the use of WMDs in space. That probably also included naquadah reactors since those can be easily weaponized.
I imagine any other technology moved into the public awareness would have been tightly controlled and trickle fed by *tiny* increments through shell R&D think tanks. As great as it sounds to leap forward a thousand years, it can be utterly disastrous for a society that's not ready for it yet, to say nothing of the destabilising effect it'd have on the global economy.
Yeah, given the problems SG-1 had with folk like that rich guy who was dying and wanted a cloned symbiote, I'd say even introducing low-level alien tech would potentially cause nightmares.
... he has been involved with Nyx and we saw him playing with her cognitive abilities....
What'd I do with that Groucho smiley?That sounds dirty.![]()
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