No quarter means (among other things) take no prisoners, not take prisoners and then kill them.
We almost never see the Federation take prisoners...usually, if there are lifeboats, they must leave them for their own groups to pick up. Space combat doesn't lend itself well to survivors and prisoners after all.
I'd rather consider BoT on its own and in isolation from all the nonsense that's followed. It's more interesting that way.
True but as has been stated, according to Star Trek Beyond, the MACOs fought in the Romulan War. Now, whatever your feelings on the Kelvin films are, it is onscreen, it's before the Kelvin incident, therefore it's canon in the Prime timeline.
This opens up a whole other issue of ground battles, very possibly in close quarters. Sure, Romulans wear helmets. But can we reasonably suggest that no human survivors ever managed to see a dead Romulan in a planetary battle? Beyond throws a huge wrinkle in this whole "we never saw the Romulans' faces."
Maybe only the Remans were used as ground troops. Maybe only drone ships were used in space conflict. That's all very possible. But if the Romulans are THAT technologically advanced, why did they lose the war? Why didn't they continue to use drone ships and Remans? There's a logical disconnect here that if you take everything in the Prime timeline so exactly, it doesn't quite work.
Just my $0.02.
IMO this is just showing that the "timeline" is really just one of the many, many alt reality that Trek has shown that deviated far before the movie.
Not including the new films, there is just one timeline. Sometimes that timeline is altered, and then usually repaired in some way.
We do see other alt realities however.Not including the new films, there is just one timeline. Sometimes that timeline is altered, and then usually repaired in some way.
It's quite often not repaired at all - Voyager in particular is a complete mess of timelines which happened in the unaltered 'prime' universe then got reset, changed, or overwritten. In fact, it's the whole plot of at least two episodes - Timeless and Endgame.Not including the new films, there is just one timeline. Sometimes that timeline is altered, and then usually repaired in some way.
And alternate realities started with TOS.We do see other alt realities however.
Then you get the entire season-long Xindi arc which - explicitly - was an alteration to the timeline which is never repaired.It's quite often not repaired at all - Voyager in particular is a complete mess of timelines which happened in the unaltered 'prime' universe then got reset, changed, or overwritten. In fact, it's the whole plot of at least two episodes - Timeless and Endgame.
Yes. When Edith Keeler is saved by McCoy, history was changed, but when Kirk goes back and prevents her from being saved, history has been restored to what is was. The timeline where she lived no longer exists.Is it? Is it really? How many little changes along the way are there that have happened? And when the people doing the time traveling to back, do they go back to their timeline or the butterfly effected timeline?
Yes. When Edith Keeler is saved by McCoy, history was changed, but when Kirk goes back and prevents her from being saved, history has been restored to what is was. The timeline where she lived no longer exists.
Except the plot of that movie relies on that not being the case - history must be alterable for the Borg to be able to change the future. They change it, including some things that were never undone (we see several deaths in Montana for example), the the E-E crew change it again by going back and making the first warp flight happen.Or when Picard takes the Enterprise back to earth, and Riker and Geordi participate in the warp flight...it always happened that way.
City on the Edge, Past Tense, and First Contact all suggest strongly otherwise. Times Arrow, on the other hand, agrees with you. Trek was anything but consistent on this score.With very few exceptions, you can't prove that any supposed changes to the timeline were not actually part of history all along (i.e. predestination paradoxes).
Except the plot of that movie relies on that not being the case - history must be alterable for the Borg to be able to change the future. They change it, including some things that were never undone (we see several deaths in Montana for example), the the E-E crew change it again by going back and making the first warp flight happen.
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