Also, keep in mind that it was the alien crash the caused the disaster that necessitated starting an off-world colony in the first place. Is there anything morally wrong with using the technology that caused the disaster to try and recover from it, even if they didn't originally own it?
I didn't think the world in Netflix LIS was dystopian but it certainly wasn't the super happy world Earth is supposed to be in the later Star Trek shows.
That would depend on whether it crashed on it's own accord or was intentionally shot down without provocation. The impression I got was that it was the latter case.Also, keep in mind that it was the alien crash the caused the disaster that necessitated starting an off-world colony in the first place. Is there anything morally wrong with using the technology that caused the disaster to try and recover from it, even if they didn't originally own it?
That would depend on whether it crashed on it's own accord or was intentionally shot down without provocation. The impression I got was that it was the latter case.
That seems highly unlikely. If it hit hard enough to cause the equivalent of an extinction-level asteroid impact event, then (since it was presumably much less massive than an asteroid) it must have been traveling at very high speed, and Earth missiles would've had no chance of shooting it down. (If the explosion had been the result of the ship's reactor exploding rather than the impact, then I doubt any tech would've survived to be salvaged. Even in the impact scenario, that's iffy, but if it had very robust shielding, interior components would have a better chance of surviving an impact from without than an explosion from within.)
Though the bottom line is that it seems much more likely that by whatever means, the ship was forced down than just happened to randomly crash of it's own accord.
Because the alternative is that the robots are *really* bad drivers, obviously.Why?
I didn't notice before, but now that you mention it, I haven't noticed any.I'm wondering if the new Jupiter 2 has any windows besides the front where the flight deck is.
Because the alternative is that the robots are *really* bad drivers, obviously.
I mean it's difficult enough to hit a tiny planet in the vast emptiness of the cosmos on purpose, but to do it by accident is just a special kind of incompetent.
I didn't notice before, but now that you mention it, I haven't noticed any.
I'm sure that never crossed the writer's minds. (Sorry, I made the mistake of watching Into Darkness after a The Expanse binge. I'm grumpy about the Enterprise crashing into Earth in MINUTES when it was at the orbit of THE MOON.)Because the alternative is that the robots are *really* bad drivers, obviously.
I mean it's difficult enough to hit a tiny planet in the vast emptiness of the cosmos on purpose, but to do it by accident is just a special kind of incompetent.
That seems highly unlikely. If it hit hard enough to cause the equivalent of an extinction-level asteroid impact event, then (since it was presumably much less massive than an asteroid) it must have been traveling at very high speed, and Earth missiles would've had no chance of shooting it down. (If the explosion had been the result of the ship's reactor exploding rather than the impact, then I doubt any tech would've survived to be salvaged. Even in the impact scenario, that's iffy, but if it had very robust shielding, interior components would have a better chance of surviving an impact from without than an explosion from within.)
Assuming that the information we have been given so far is correct and that the data had not been manipulated beforehand.
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