(Or whoever intros the Twilight Zone...)This post narrated by Morgan Freeman.
(Or whoever intros the Twilight Zone...)This post narrated by Morgan Freeman.
tl:dr There is no precedent for Starfleet officers destroying their ship to prevent capture of technology by the enemy.
We've seen a couple of ships where all life has perished and they didn't self-destruct.What about General Order no. 6?
If all life aboard a Federation starship had perished, the ship would self-destruct within twenty-four hours to protect other ships from potential hazards within.
That is along similar lines, imo.
But you're not repeating yourself now. You keep changing positions every time someone points out that your previous position makes no sense. The only thing you've been consistent about is "Discovery has bad writing!" but you can't seem to decide WHY it's bad.This is sort like Groundhog Day, in a way. Everyone is repeating themselves because we believe what we say is the better answer.
WE know the dilithium processor just happened to be the one missing component the Klingons needed to get their ship moving, by what has to be the most ironic coincidence in the history of Star Trek. SARU, however, had no way of knowing that this one component out of literally billions of parts would prove (theoretically) valuable to T'Kuvma's band of merry men. Had he known that, he would have simply unplugged it and taken it with him.The Shenzhou was in old Federation territory that the Klingons had victory in. However no matter how you slice and dice it she had resources the enemy could use. We know that because they did.
Of course they had time. What they didn't have was any reason to do it in the first place. It's not as if scuttling the Shenzhou would have kept the Ship of the Dead out of the war permanently; at most, it would have added four days to Kol's repair time and drained some of the sexual tension between L'Rell and Voq.There was ample opportunity to destroy her.
Those aren't contradictory. The system had fallen behind enemy lines and Starfleet would have to re-take that sector before recovery of the Shenzhou would be possible. If they had any reason to believe there was anything of military value on the Shenzhou, they would have sent a ship behind enemy lines to either demolish the ship or recover those valuable assets.I think (and I'm not saying you Fireproof) that I am reading two contrary reasons here. The Shenzhou was left floating around because she was in enemy territory and that was a dangerous scenario. The Shenzhou was left floating around because Starfleet had no reason to think the enemy was going to be around to take advantage.
Well, no, it was left floating around because it had gotten shot full of holes and was no longer capable of sustaining life. 50 years of Trek precedent tells us that when Starfleet vessels get this badly damaged, they usually just get left behind fully intact:This is what really happened. The Shenzhou was left floating around because although it makes Starfleet look like incompetent dills
Why do you keep ignoring all the cases where this EXACT SAME THING happens in almost identical circumstances and instead focus on the cases where the circumstances are completely different?It either fits the story even with examples of Starfleet sanctioning the opposite
They had no reason to scuttle the ship. As far as they knew, it wasn't going anywhere.My position is the same and always has been. They should've scuttled the ship.
"You give the enemy nothing" is not Starfleet procedure.Zar this is tiresome. You give the enemy nothing.
And it's wrong.That is the answer.
No it is not wrong."You give the enemy nothing" is not Starfleet procedure.
"You get the hell out of there and let someone else come back and recover your ship at some other time" is Starfleet procedure.
And it's wrong.
Because the dilithium processor turned out to be irrelevant. If Kol had arrived just two days earlier, he would have simply given them a spare part and and it wouldn't have mattered at all.Why do you keep ignoring the fact that the Shenzhou had resource the enemy could use and did?
The Klingons could have just as easily looted the ship's supply of toilet paper, but I don't see how that's a compelling reason to blow it up.You leave the enemy nothing. That is the reason. They might exploit your resources later as L'Rell and Voq did.
It's wrong. "Leave the enemy nothing" isn't a sentiment Starfleet stands behind. There is a truly amazing amount of shit they leave behind on and off the battlefield and not once in all of Trek history has it EVER mattered.No it is not wrong.
I'm guessing we have different EXPERIENCES with military logistics in the real world in that one of us doesn't actually have any.I'm guessing we have a different sense of military and Starfleet 'smarts'.
I am telling you, firsthand, from experience, THAT IS NOT A REAL THING. Even retreating soldiers, on abandoning their position, DO NOT go out of their way to disable or destroy abandoned equipment unless they are specifically ordered to by their commanding officers.There is a basic set of intelligence one uses in war situations. If it hurts you none to destroy something the enemy could use then why not destroy it?
Eventual recovery, salvage and refit, resulting in a fully functional Federation starship for less than the cost of a totally new vessel. In the event the ship is too badly damaged to be restored, the salvage value of the raw materials could be applied to new starships.I ask you what advantage was there to keep the Shenzhou intact?
... except for the salvage value of a very expensive starship. Those things aint cheap.Destroying the ship would lose Starfleet nothing
I do too, with an emphasis on "I think." If you hadn't insisted on lumping Burnham (and apparently everyone else?) in with him from the beginning, and then further zeroed in on her as if she were the Scum of the Galaxy™, we might have agreed considerably more in this thread than we have. (Or perhaps not. I still would have advocated for Lorca to be given the benefit of at least some doubt in at least some matters, as I have in the other thread where we've been discussing him.)I think he is antihero and damaged.
With respect to the opening two-parter, they mostly did everything more or less "right" by traditionally-portrayed Starfleet hero standards, or tried to. But these standards turned out to be ill-suited and inadequate to the situation. T'Kuvma played them like a fiddle, and won, even in death.Apparently not. In reading this thread it would seem that these guys be they hero or antihero have done everything without fault. Who would've thought, lol.
That was a quarantine procedure with particular respect to contagion. And also had to be specifically invoked by the commanding officer beforehand, it wasn't automatic, not even under general quarantine conditions. And obviously it wouldn't be possible if the self-destruct mechanism were rendered inoperable. And it might not even have been issued yet at this point.What about General Order no. 6?
If all life aboard a Federation starship had perished, the ship would self-destruct within twenty-four hours to protect other ships from potential hazards within.
That is along similar lines, imo.
...tech which the Shenzhou did not have. Nor did they have Lorca there to order the battlefield scorched and salted anyway.We've seen the Glenn torpedoed because it had (potentially) sensitive tech aboard.
From where did you develop this sense? It isn't reflected in real war, nor in Trek. According to your sensibilities, it appears the only "smart" military is the Romulans. Were you a Trek viewer prior to Discovery? Did you think Starfleet was dumb all this time? This is a yes or no question, by the way.I'm guessing we have a different sense of military and Starfleet 'smarts'.
We've seen the Glenn torpedoed because it had (potentially) sensitive tech aboard.
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