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The age of the antihero

Not really. As the Glenn was a unique ship rather than a standard vessel. Destruction of Starfleet property does not appear to be standard protocol.


As was Kirk. And Sisko. And Spock.
Lorca blew up the Buran too. I guess his crew were valuable resources. Move the goal posts again and again and it still doesn't negate that these ships can and have been destroyed. That Starfleet has no trouble doing it if they choose and twice on 'Discovery' have proven that.
 
You're right. I confused the year it was laid down with the year it was destroyed. So @ralfy 's argument makes even less sense. In October 1942 the Germans were locked down in massive battles with the Allies in North Africa. The Germans and Soviets were in the middle of the Battle of Stalingrad, by that time the Germans were still winning it. They had even more colossal fish to fry, I still don't know why they would waste resources to protect U-Boats with some codes when they had so many other important things to do.

The Germans weren't protecting U-boats because the latter had "some codes." Rather, the Germans were using code to encrypt messages not only to U-boats but for other operations. The Allies had been trying to break the code and succeeded only by recovering an Enigma machine and code books that a U-boat crew was not able to destroy. Worse, the Germans thought that the machine and books were lost with the sub.

This helped in turning the tide of the war.

Hmmm... If they never cracked those codes, the Nazis would've won WWII ? :shrug: Sure, it was an important thing. It may have saved a lot of lives and that's good. But I really doubt the codes were the reason why the Soviets pushed back after Stalingrad and basically won the War, for example. At the end of the day raw things like manpower and resources matter more. The Nazis lost in the Eastern Front because they lacked that. Not because they lacked codes.

It wasn't a matter of using the codes to win the war but to shorten it as the Allies could now read classified information sent by the German generals to each other concerning defense emplacements, troop movements, etc.

And disabling the core implies that the Federation cares about disabling power cores after evacuating ships. They don't.

And likely because the evacuation proceeded quickly. Otherwise, they would have been disable those easily plus retrieve whatever personal effects they had, plus that of their dead commander.

You said they can't use anti-gravs to move personal effects around while evacuating the ship, because everytime we saw people evacuating ships in Star Trek they were empty handed.

I didn't say that they can't. And if they were empty-handed that's probably because the escape codes already contained emergency supplies, radio transmitters, etc.

Also, if I'm not mistaken, anti-grav devices in the show consist of machines that look like handles and that are attached to heavy objects so that they can be carried easily. That means one can't be empty-handed when using them.

See my response to @Captain of the USS Averof above. I confused the years. Still, North Africa was lost to the Germans because the Nazis couldn't funnel resources and manpower enough there. They were fighting two very distant fronts, remember ? I think it's just silly when people use side details like codes or things like the great man theory to explain entire wars. Just look both Battles of El Alamein, for example. The Allies had the superiority in numbers on those.

Breaking the code allowed the allies to read encrypted communications between Rommel, Rome, and Berlin, thus allowing them to shorten the war. It was only by D-Day that code breaking became less important.

No, but they could've wasted more resources beforehand trying to protect those codes. There's a hundred ways they could've implemented fail safes but they didn't care. They were more concerned with bigger things.

That's because they thought it was unbreakable and secure. And the Nazis did take efforts to make the system secure, even to the point of using only water-soluble ink for code books so that they could easily be destroyed.

People tried to explain to you already, scuttling makes sense when you want to avoid your ship being used against your crew or someone capturing them. Like you just admitted, the Federation had no shortage of Starships. They couldn't care less about these things.

There is no need for others to explain that to me because that's what I've been telling you from the start: the power cores should have been disabled because the enemy could recover and use them. Your counter-argument makes no sense at all: it doesn't matter if they don't have a shortage of resources because what they don't disable can be used by the enemy.

They took some time to recover the Sarcophagus Ship because that was an area already under their control and that had no risk of going back to the Federation. They concerned themselves with the war first and then went there to retrieve the cloaking technology. If they "had little control" over the area, why Kol wandered there so easily, with no major challenges ?

The fact that the ship drifted for months in the area shows that the Klingons had no control of the area. The crew even faced food shortages!

People acting of their own passions can do very horrible stuff, endanger others and commit terrible mistakes. Are you sure... You're a fellow Human ? :vulcan: Because that's Humanity 101.

That's not sentimentality.

And the fact that you now refer to "terrible mistakes" proves that this is a plot hole!

"Being prone to fight silly wars over nothing doesn't mean these wars are likely" said every person before every major war on Human history.

Exactly! That's why not only is this a plot hole but your claim that characters are "hippie" explorers is questionable.

Now, you're beginning to understand my argument! Let's see if you will do more of this in subsequent posts.

What ? The franchise is about Humans and Humans being faulty when compared to non-sentimental species like the Vulcans is a major theme throughout Star Trek...

Now, you're getting it. A plot hole is a gap that may be created by "[c]haracters who lack common sense." Every point you've raised so far points to that.

Yeah, the Federation has it's own NSA. Sure, that's so Star Trek right ? I bet those planets who are interested in joining the Federation get so thrilled by discovering that Federation is sending back home so many encrypted information about them. One thing is encrypting small info, what you are implying here the Federation having top of the line encrypting tech that is generally only common in war time or when you feel the need of being a little bit Orwellian. The whole point of Star Trek is that this is not an Orwellian future.

Apparently, that's the case given STD. And yet Lorca starts blabbering about spore tech used by the Disco to a POW he hardly knows in the Klingon brig.

As I said before, it's a badly written show.

I mean, you were the one implying the Shenzhou had ESPers onboard who could predict the Klingons would not evacuate.

I never made those arguments. Everything that I said is based on common sense: crew members protect themselves first before evacuating, then disable or recover to deny the enemy an advantage, and then act on what you think is sentimentality. You insist it's the other way round!

So what ? Are you implying gun owners are psychopaths ready to kill everyone just because they have guns ? Guns are ultimately a self-defense tool, it doesn't talk about your character and it doesn't stop you from believing in peace.

I didn't argue that the Fed is made up of psychopaths. What is said is that the ships are armed, and that's because those are military vessels with scientific and diplomatic roles. That does not show that their crews are "hippie explorers," as hippies are part of a counterculture which ironically goes against the meritocratic hierarchy that describes Star Fleet!

You keep using words that you can't define correctly!

Implementing stuff that can take down missiles and having anti-aircraft batteries on your own territory is military defense. Military operations are things like military exercises next to enemy territory, proxy conflicts, interventions, etc. Just because something has "military" in the name it doesn't mean it's bad.

I didn't argue that it is bad. What I'm saying is that they're obviously not hippies.

So hippies, yippies, yuppies, whoever you call those related to counter-culture movements, are against mining and self-defense? :rofl: That doesn't make any sense. Material conditions and Culture are two separate spheres. You can still mine, defend yourself, etc. and believe in a certain set of cultural values.

See what I mean? You throw around words whose meanings you don't know! A yuppie is the far removed from a hippie, and if any is ironically a better description of the STD crew. LOL.

Counterculture movements, especially of the 1960s, were very much against anything that they believe destroyed the environment and promoted war, including the formation of standing armies even for self-defense!

Stamets entire life is centered around mushrooms and their interactions with physics, Burnham spent her entire life trying to join a Vulcan Expeditionary Group, Tilly wants to be a Starship Captain and Saru wants to be as great as a Federation Founder like Archer. Those are very Star Trek-ish characters. Those characters are characters who had "improving themselves", like Picard said, as their main goals. Self-improvement is a very 1960s New Age thing. The only characters concerned with mundane things seem to be Lorca and Landry. See how everyone else is thrilled by having a Space Whale onboard and Lorca couldn't give two shits about it.

Of course, they are! But hippies? I don't think so.

Lorca concerns himself only with the mundane? You're probably watching another show. LOL.

You implied things like Dilithium Cores captured from the Feds are essential for the Klingons when they actually are self sufficient on Dilithium.

That is a ridiculous argument, i.e., equipment isn't scuttled because the enemy has lots of it or resources that can be extracted from it. I'll let you figure out why.

If anything, this proves my point even more. The Klingons wanted to hurt the Federation morally. The Klingons are the enemies, remember ? They aren't supposed to have beautiful progressive ideals like the Feds. They were the ones attacking Federation Dilithium Mines, not the other way around. If the Feds weren't a bunch of Leftist Space Explorers they would be the ones coming up with the idea of attacking Klingon Dilithium Mines first. The Federation is not fighting a war of expansion, annexation and occupation. They are fighting a war of self-defense. I hardly doubt those Admirals salivate with the idea of occupying Qo'nos and implementing a puppet government there. Lorca probably does, but that's the point of his character. The Feds just want to defend their coalition and go back to exploring strange new worlds.

Leftist? Leftist is not the same as defensive or even isolationist!

And when resources of the enemy are attacked, it's not necessarily because one is expansionist. I'll let you figure that out as well.

Oh, but I do. And it's always the same stuff that you're doing here. If the small detail has an easy explanation like "the evacuees took the thing with them", people who hate-watch Discovery come up with weird fan fictions to explain how the entire show is plagued with plot holes and that this time Star Trek is definitely dead. That's basically it. It has been hard for some people to accept that after some years we finally have a Star Trek series with tidy writing again, so they need to come up with "Han Solo shot first" scenarios to dispel that.

Fan fiction? All I said is that crews prioritize based on common sense. That means if they were able to retrieve the personal effects of a dead commander (to be given a mutineer), then they could have also disabled the power core. That's similar to destroying an Enigma machine and code books before, say, retrieving personal belongings of a dead officer. And if they didn't because they were hippies, leftists, yuppies, yippies, sentimental, irrational, flawed or anything else you thought of in your fan fiction world, then that doesn't counter this plot hole but proves it, as plot holes are also created by characters who don't follow common sense.

She could've sat on her ass and do nothing like she was planning to do when she first refused Lorca's proposal. So she definitely had control over being useful or not.

No, she didn't, because if she did then she would have been sent back to prison. And in that place, determining whether or not one can be useful becomes irrelevant.
 
We have no idea what circumstances led up to the telescope's placement in that crate. But it was most likely fitted with a box later. Georgiou's will was almost certainly on-file with Starfleet or a civilian solicitor. Note that whoever recovered the scope neglected to take its mount on the Shenzhou. This suggests haste.

The fact that they retrieved the scope but did not disable the power core still shows that it's a plot hole. The only thing that can resolve it is the argument that one of the crew members just happened to be near the captain's quarters or the place where the telescope was found and got it. But since there's no evidence of that, then the plot hole remains.

BTW, there are more plot holes and writing problems in the show, and to remain on-topic, we can connect them to the topic thread. That is, some plot holes involve characters lacking common sense, and the reason for that lack may be one point used to explain why they are anti-heroes.
 
Why would it imply that? They didn't evacuate the ship in the middle of a Klingon boarding action, nor in the middle of a pitched battle. They abandoned ship because they were hopelessly stranded and literally didn't have anything better to do.

If they didn't have time to disable the power core, then it's reasonable to argue that they didn't have time to bring personal effects of dead crew members.

Perhaps Uhura's miniskirt also doubles as a flotation device? No one ever said it wasn't, so we might as well speculate right?

That's a nonsensical point given shows depicting a self-destruct mechanism for ship!

Neither of which Starfleet has ever bothered to do in the past. So why are you acting like it's a given that they would have done that to the Shenzhou? It's not standard procedure and never has been. There are reasons to think that it SHOULD be, but Starfleet evidently does not share that reasoning.

What are those reasons?

I mean, the Cardassians obviously do (Civil Defense) as do the Ferengi probably. But we can conclusively say that asset denial is not something Starfleet has ever really bothered with.

Why not?

The power core was already disabled, and their ship was dead in the water (that is, in fact, the entire reason they abandoned ship in the first place). But Shenzhou is a starship with billions of different parts, and without knowing what the Klingons or anyone else might have been able to salvage and use, the only way to deny them those assets would be to blow up the entire ship.

Then why were the Klingons able to use it?

Which, as I have pointed out, is not something Starfleet has ever done with its abandoned ships. Standard procedure is to just leave it floating in the debris field until someone (usually another ship) can swing by later and retrieve it.

Which is ironically what happened.

Because the possibility of additional Starfleet vessels showing up to tow them home is a pretty strong one. Taking the lifeboats and hoofing it to a rallying point is a far more dangerous move, but it becomes worth it if they have no other alternative.

Except that there was no need to tow the vessel to use the power core, as shown in STD.

The level of damage to the SHIP wouldn't affect the status of its emergency batteries, as that mostly depends on how much load you're putting on them. Suffice to say, they had at least as much time the Enteprise had Khan disabled the main energizer and auxiliary power. Per Spock, that is AT LEAST two hours, though Scotty's repairs probably took quite a bit less time than that.

Either way, that's two hours in which the crew had literally nothing better to do except count their dead, lick their wounds, and prepare to abandon ship. If a crew of 100 officers can't find time in two hours to pack their dead Captain's priceless family heirloom, I shudder to think how you think they'd manage to trigger a self destruct mechanism.

Which is also enough time to disable the core.
 
Once again, if it hadn't turned out that a handful of Klingons stuck around for 6 months scavenging derelicts, none of this would even cross your mind. Even if we grant the idea that the Shenzhou surviving ended up turning the tide of the war (though honestly, it didn't, Kol would have shown up and provided either way), our characters can't see the future. It probably would have seemed gratuitous if they self destructed at the end of the battle for no apparent reason. Even more ridiculous if they explained it. "Let's blow up the ship just in case those stragglers on that ship we just destroyed manage to superglue it back together and happen to require a piece of our ship to adapt to their systems. And first let's vaporize all the other Klingon debris that they'll also use."

I'm looking over @O_Kav's posts and I can't find anywhere they suggested it was "too difficult". Reasonable and unreasonable aren't synonyms for simple and difficult, you know. It also would have been simple for them to shoot down one of the coffins on the ship just in case it contained Zombie Kahless who would arise in 6 months and win the war, but it wouldn't have been reasonable.

Such decisions are not based on seeing the future but common sense.
 
Not if you're planning to salvage it and put it back into service later.


Key word there is "should," which is based on a number of assumptions that are actually relevant only in hindsight, which makes those "should have done" measures beyond the scope of what is normally reasonable.

What you're being asked to demonstrate is whether or not this has ever been standard procedure for Starfleet. There are a dozen examples that suggest it isn't, so we're all sort of confused as to why you keep trying to make this point.

Disabling the power core is logical whatever happens because that makes it difficult for the enemy to use it. And if there are a dozen examples showing that they did otherwise, then that only shows that the plot holes are consistent across the shows.

What needs to be demonstrated, then, isn't whether or not this is SOP for Star Fleet but why is it logical to leave a functional power core given the possibility that the enemy can retrieve and use it.
 
The U.S. Navy didn't think aircraft carriers would be a major advantage until about five minutes into Pearl Harbor. Incidentally, NOBODY thought that submarines were worth anything until the Germans proved everyone wrong in World War I. This, despite the fact that both technologies were decades old by the time anyone realized their full potential.

As it stands, thanks to Starfleet's countermeasures, the cloak STILL doesn't provide much of an advantage by the end of the war. It's brief heyday as a strategic weapon came to an abrupt end at the Battle of Pahvo. So really, if the Klingons thought cloaking tech didn't give them much of an advantage, they're at least half right.

I'm aware that this is off-topic, but one has to wonder why the same cloaking tech still caused problems for the TOS and subsequent crews.
 
...when Shenzhou was evacuated?

What was recovered after the battle? Please quote the rest of the lines from my message.

Is that some sort of not-so-subtly racist dig at Klingons? Kirk would be so proud!:techman:

Actually, it's the other way round.

A pair of Klingons managed to do it, yes, with concerted and carefully coordinated effort, and at great risk of it blowing up in their faces, highly motivated by a heady combination of impending starvation, religious fervor, and sexual tension. Potent.

VOQ: [looking at a PADD displaying holographic images of Georgiou and Burnham] L'Rell. There is nothing worth taking on this deck, or in the captain's ready room.
L'RELL: I have located the dilithium processor. The coupling unit is covered in crystal residue. Unplugging the processor could cause an explosion. One sudden move and we join the Black Fleet.

See, I told you it's the other way round. LOL.

They quite obviously both knew of its significance to Georgiou. Georgiou died and they weren't able to recover her body. It makes perfect sense that they would want it brought back to her family rather than left behind. It was the least they could do, really.

And yet they left the power core functional.

Yes. And there is no suggestion that taking the telescope would have needed to come at the expense of this. None at all.

Which means they had the time to disable the power core.

Well, there is no indication they didn't wipe or fry the computer core, if you prefer to believe that they did. The dilithium processor (I take it that is what you keep referring to as the "power core"?) was found in a precarious condition and could well have blown up at the first attempt to remove it. What reason is there to think other components were in any better shape? Besides, they were inferior components to begin with. Shenzhou was already an old and outdated vessel a decade before any of this. These two particular Klingons only bothered because they were desperate.

Disable or booby trap. Given tech like self-destruct mechanisms, that should not be difficult.

If you were to look into it, I'm sure you would find real-life accounts of exactly such battlefield sentimentality among trained service personnel. But again, the evacuation of the Shenzhou did not take place in the midst of battle. It took place after the battle was over.

And the opposite, which is the default. That's why it's a plot hole, as sentimentality in such circumstances is an example of the lack of common sense.

Again, the container we saw it in later was from Starfleet Command. Not that there's any reason the telescope couldn't have been put in a container when it was initially recovered after the battle...during the evacuation of Shenzhou.

Doesn't counter what I said.

Or it means the none of the other stuff floating around this lifeless hulk of a ship that was already old and outdated a decade earlier was of any value to them. They just happened to need that one particular part, which again, they had a deuce of a time getting away with in one piece.

And yet they did, which is one good reason why it's SOP to disable or booby trap such devices.

The battle took place at the very edge of Federation space, so once the Feds lost the battle and withdrew, the area became de facto Klingon territory.

Where a Klingon ship lay stranded for months, with its crew facing even food shortages.

The Klingons and Feds were busy fighting each other elsewhere. The war had moved on from this initial battleground, further into Federation territory, leaving the area inaccessible to the Feds (because it was now behind the Klingons' lines) and of no interest to the Klingons (because they already had the Feds on the run).

All the more reason for following common sense, which includes disabling the power core.
 
Not that it has any relevance to the current discussion at all, but that's not exactly true. The German Captain radioed his superiors while his crew began destroying their Enigma machine and dumping code books overboard. In his inexperience or panic, he didn’t encode the message, which was picked up by the British who ordered all available ships to the scene. The Germans also ordered U-boats to the area. The U-82 responded, but Allied bombers forced it to leave the area. The British ship HMT Northern Chief finally reached the U-570
I wasn't talking about U-570. I was talking about U-505. That was a completely different incident several years later under significantly different circumstances.

And that's exactly why you do your damn to avoid it when you can. Because it does happen.
Yes. It does happen. The REASON it happens is because preventing the enemy from capturing your hardware and technology is RARELY a priority for any military commander on the battlefield. Their number one priority is to get their people to safety, and their number two priority is to carry out whatever mission or orders they've been given. If your position is about to be overrun and your commanding officer specifically orders you to demolish all your equipment so it can't be captured, you do that. If nobody tells you to do that, then you pack up whatever you can carry and get the hell out of there.

The auto-destruct system (also known as self-destruct or destruct sequence) was a starship system that allowed the total destruction of the vessel. This was typically activated as a last resort, usually to prevent a ship from falling into enemy hands.
Well, they must have cared at least a little about it if they have thought of such a grim contingency! :lol:
This is now the fifth time I have pointed out that self-destruct mechanisms have only ever been activated in order to prevent an enemy from using a starship's equipment and weapons against the ship's own crew. The very first time this mechanism is employed it's to prevent Bele from stealing the Enterprise in "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" and the second time it's used is to prevent Kruge from stealing the Enterprise from Kirk (who, incidentally, had already stolen it from Starfleet).

In fact, the only exception to this standard seems to be "Nemesis" in which Picard orders auto-destruct as a desperation tactic and then gets all sad when it doesn't work.
 
Lorca blew up the Buran too. I guess his crew were valuable resources. Move the goal posts again and again and it still doesn't negate that these ships can and have been destroyed. That Starfleet has no trouble doing it if they choose and twice on 'Discovery' have proven that.
Not moving goal posts. Noting that the Glenn was destroyed due to strategic value, but that the Shenzou did not have the same value. It's not a question of can they be destroyed. We've seen that before, even with Kirk. The question is whether or not it is standard protocol after evacuation. It doesn't appear to be so.
 
If they didn't have time to disable the power core
That is literally the exact opposite of what I said.

The "power core" whatever that is, was ALREADY DISABLED. If there was any hope of the Shenzhou actually leaving the system under its own power, they wouldn't have abandoned ship in the first place.

What are those reasons?
You're asking me? Aren't YOU the one insisting that preventing Starfleet technology from falling into enemy hands is supposed to be their highest priority above all other considerations?

Then why were the Klingons able to use it?
They weren't. They took the engine apart and scavenged a (relatively) intact component of it to repair their OWN "power core" as you call it. This is the equivalent of stealing a coil pack out of a wrecked car with a completely different make and model and using it to get your own busted jalopy moving again just so you can drive it to a service station and fix it for real.

Do you suppose the U.S. Army has standing orders to rip the spark plugs out of all their humvees whenever they abandon them just in case the enemy manages to scavenge the remains?

Which is ironically what happened.
That is literally the OPPOSITE of what happened.

Except that there was no need to tow the vessel to use the power core, as shown in STD.
That is completely NOT what STD showed us. First of all, to repeat, if the "power core" had been serviceable at all, Shenzhou wouldn't still be there in the first place, they would have just limped away at impulse power and met up with another starship or else just repaired their battle damage and flown to the nearest starbase. Second of all, nobody used the "power core" from the Shenzhou, just one intact component of it that probably only worked as a temporary fix.

Which is also enough time to disable the core.
There's nothing to disable. The core was dead. YOU were referring to the effort of going through the entire ship, deck by deck, compartment by compartment, stripping out any engine components that could POSSIBLY be of value to anyone ever. That is a silly thing to ask your crew to do, especially in the case that they are actually sitting in their ship sending out a distress call, trying to get someone from Starfleet to rescue them.
 
Disabling the power core is logical whatever happens
Why would you go out of your way to disable something that has already been rendered inoperable by enemy gunfire?

What needs to be demonstrated, then, isn't whether or not this is SOP for Star Fleet but why is it logical to leave a functional power core given the possibility that the enemy can retrieve and use it.
Because "the enemy retrieving and using it" is not something any of Starfleet's enemies have ever been known to do. This is mainly because anyone with a level of technology sufficient to threaten Starfleet will have their OWN so-called "power cores" in mass production and have ZERO reason whatsoever to scavenge one from Starfleet wrecks. Pirates, freighters and Ferengi might do this on a for-profit basis, but Klingons have shipyards and factories of their own, if they need a power core they just order one from the quartermaster.

T'Kuvma's people weren't military. They're just a bunch of whacky cultists flying an ancient starship that they slapped together by scavenging parts. That Shenzhou had the one missing engine component they actually needed was really just an amazing coincidence. More importantly, it's an irrelevant one: if the dilithium processor HADN'T been recovered, Kol would have just had one of his ships deliver one from his own supplies. He probably intended to do this anyway, but then L'Rell handed him the processor and started eating chicken and he was all "Well, fuck it, we can leave right now."

I'm aware that this is off-topic, but one has to wonder why the same cloaking tech still caused problems for the TOS and subsequent crews.
What makes you think it's the same tech?
 
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No one has asked me that
I have. Several times now.

why is it a requirement for common sense?
Because "common sense" and "What I feel makes sense without having to actually research the topic in depth" are completely different things. Common sense develops from common experience, and none of us have any experience operating starships.

However it must have been some kind of Starfleet procedure to destroy sensitive Starfleet resources. The Glenn was blown up.
And Shenzhou wasn't. So Shenzhou wasn't a "sensitive Starfleet resource."
 
No one has asked me [to show that it's standard procedure] and why is it a requirement for common sense? However it must have been some kind of Starfleet procedure to destroy sensitive Starfleet resources. The Glenn was blown up.
That's the main question being asked in the last several pages of this thread which as yet no one has answered. You've been making this exact argument since at least a full week ago and have received responses but haven't replied directly to any of them. Do you want to have a conversation or to just repeat yourself?


Such decisions are not based on seeing the future but common sense.
And by this point you've made it clear that your definition of "common sense" involves seeing into the future:

The Klingons and Feds were busy fighting each other elsewhere. The war had moved on from this initial battleground, further into Federation territory, leaving the area inaccessible to the Feds (because it was now behind the Klingons' lines) and of no interest to the Klingons (because they already had the Feds on the run) [in the future].
All the more reason for following common sense, which includes disabling the power core [in the past].

:rolleyes:

Put yourself back in September when we've all just seen episode 2. Without referencing future episodes, explain precisely why they should have "disabled the power core" of their defeated vessel. And, why did you not mention it back then?
 
I don't remember, was it explicitly stated that Saru or someone recovered the telescope during the evacuation, and not during a later salvage operation?

If it was during the evacuation I think it was bad writing because it is not plausible to recover a telescope during a time-critical situation, without showing us that it happened. If your characters are going to do something that is not the most likely course of action, you should show the audience.

If it was in a later salvage operation I think it was bad writing because they should have destroyed the ship or in some other manner deal with the Klingon ship or give us an explanation on screen as to why either didn't happen.
 
If it was during the evacuation I think it was bad writing because it is not plausible to recover a telescope during a time-critical situation
You're a little late to this party, but it was earlier asked, Why are we talking about the evacuation like it was a time-critical situation? With their ship dead in the water and the battle effectively over, they wouldn't have been in any particular hurry. They weren't evacuating because the ship was about to explode, they were evacuating because they were stranded and were running out of power. Basically, the same reason Picard's crew evacuated the Stargazer after the Battle of Maxia.
 
You're a little late to this party, but it was earlier asked, Why are we talking about the evacuation like it was a time-critical situation?

I don't know, it was just the impression I had from trying to remember the pilot episodes. I'd have to go back and check to see if there was any urgency presented. Anyway, my point wasn't that it was bad writing that someone brought the telescope, the badness is in the fact that we have to have this long speculation because they didn't tell us. There's having to read behind the lines and there's having to guess between the lines.
 
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