The people who don't care for the original TOS. The people who find it too antiquated in its production values or gender values to be enjoyable. Or the people who don't care which version they get as long as it's about the characters they enjoy. You know, like Sherlock Holmes fans, Batman fans, Dracula fans, etc. People who like the fundamental characters and ideas regardless of the more incidental trappings.
By incidental trappings you mean the universe of TOS. OK...
By incidental trappings you mean the universe of TOS. OK...
By incidental trappings you mean the universe of TOS. OK...
Yes, it would have helped. But why would Starfleet (at least whoever gave Terrell his orders to cooperate with Carol Marcus) have known that Terrell would have literally ended up on Khan's doorstep?Didn’t he? He may not have needed to know the specifics of why a small group of people was living on Ceti Alpha V, but his knowing that they were there at all would have averted disaster for him, his ship and crew, the science team on Regula I and the training crew aboard the Enterprise.
I never said he was a security risk. I said he didn't need to know about Khan; it was not information required to find a completely lifeless planet.It’s not as if Terrell was a security risk. He had been part of Operation Vanguard—which, for all we know, may have been why Starfleet trusted him to find a site for Project Genesis—so he clearly could be trusted with classified information. Would it have compromised Starfleet security that much to let a single starship captain know why he couldn’t visit Ceti Alpha V? Marcus might have bitched, but the loss one site would not have set her plans back that much.
You tap dance very well, and your Khan books have made it into my head canon to the point that I can't imagine these events playing out any other way.As to why Chekov didn't say anything about Khan being (supposedly) one planet over . . . well, I had to tap dance around that in my book!![]()
Did the part of Starfleet that knew about Khan also have Terrell's itinerary for finding completely lifeless planets?That’s true. I guess what I’m questioning isn’t so much why the oversight happened but whether the Khan information should have been shared with Terrell had Starfleet realized it was about to step in a humongous pile of its own shit. My sense is that he could have been given enough of the details that he would have avoided the planet.
This is as reasonable an explanation as any. Chekov wouldn't necessarily have known where Khan was exiled, only that he was exiled.I always figured Chekov forgot until he saw the name SS Botany Bay inside the cargo containers.
Not all planets in the Goldilocks zone have life.The planet was in the goldilocks zone and looks (mostly) lifeless.
You sure know how to argue/defend your point.So the world needed a TOS remake? OK, have fun.
Yes, it would have helped. But why would Starfleet (at least whoever gave Terrell his orders to cooperate with Carol Marcus) have known that Terrell would have literally ended up on Khan's doorstep?
The order was to find a world that was completely lifeless - not even a microbe - so when they detected life signs on Ceti Alpha, they should have just gone on to the next world.
I never said he was a security risk. I said he didn't need to know about Khan; it was not information required to find a completely lifeless planet.
As for Operation Vanguard, I have no idea what that refers to.
Did the part of Starfleet that knew about Khan also have Terrell's itinerary for finding completely lifeless planets?
Was it an important assignment? Or did Terrell get it owing to his name being , on top of the low importance assignment duty roster.I doubt that Starfleet would have trusted a commanding officer who didn’t care about his work with such an important assignment.
That's a rather bizarre straw man, given that Star Trek has been many different things over the decades. When TNG was new, there were years of fierce resistance from fans who refused to accept that anything could be Star Trek if it wasn't about Kirk, Spock, and McCoy. But we're not in that era anymore. By now, people should know that Star Trek is still Star Trek even when it changes and reinvents itself.
Exactly. Making them straight prequels to TOS would mean the entire future of the characters and the Federation would be locked in stone.
Was it an important assignment? Or did Terrell get it owing to his name being , on top of the low importance assignment duty roster.
I doubt that Starfleet would have trusted a commanding officer who didn’t care about his work with such an important assignment. While Terrell’s crew appeared to be somewhat weary of the work, there’s no way to know how long they’d been doing it. We know only that they had three months until they were to return to Regula I.
Terrell was certainly a more laid-back commander than Kirk, but that doesn’t mean he or his crew was sloppy. Keep in mind that Terrell gave his own life so that he wouldn’t kill Kirk. Anyone with the courage to first look death in the face and then invite him to come closer isn’t someone who’s not committed to his job. I think Greg’s explanation, i.e., that Starfeet’s left hand didn’t know what it’s right hand was doing, is sufficient justification for why Ceti Alpha V fell through the cracks.
I remember reading that. I’m not questioning why the information was hidden. My issue is more that providing Terrell with some info ahead of time might averted disaster. As Greg pointed out, the classification of the Khan and Genesis information likely led to the oversight regarding Ceti Alpha V; however, had Starfleet realized their mistake, would it not have made sense to provide Terrell with limited information so that he could protect his crew?
You tap dance very well, and your Khan books have made it into my head canon to the point that I can't imagine these events playing out any other way.![]()
Did they make a habit of asking about transplanting? From the "WTF?" tone of Carol's voice, it doesn't sound like it.The issue in TWOK was that the lifeforms might have been transplantable, so Marcus asked Terrell to make sure before moving on.
Thanks, but it's unlikely I will be picking them up any time soon, if at all. Due to limitations of budget and space (even with several dozen bookshelves in my apartment, there are a few hundred books that I'm having trouble finding room for), I've had to really cut back on buying new books these days.I won’t spoil it for you if you’re planning to read those novels, but the project was classified by Starfleet Command. Terrell’s ship was one of several responsible for surveying the region in which the novels took place. As Terrell had safe-guarded sensitive information prior to assisting with Project Genesis (Operation Vanguard took place mainly during TOS), it’s likely he could have been trusted to do so again.
Did they make a habit of asking about transplanting? From the "WTF?" tone of Carol's voice, it doesn't sound like it.
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