Hopefully they never did.AFAIK, no. But we don't know if they ever fully recovered from Future Janeway's attack.
Hopefully they never did.AFAIK, no. But we don't know if they ever fully recovered from Future Janeway's attack.
Or the Romulans for that matter with their black hole drivesDo Borg use dilithium?
Since Star Trek IV they can "recrystallize" (and I assume that means effectively regenerate); existing dilithium, so yeah I don't know why it's still such a commodity after that.I'm surprised they don't make Synthetic Dilithium by now.
We can already make Syntheic Gasoline and other Hydro Carbon based fuels now, i's just expensive when hey aren't built at scale compared to digging it out of the ground.
A haphazardly conceived McGuffin.
Since Star Trek IV they can "recrystallize" (and I assume that means effectively regenerate); existing dilithium, so yeah I don't know why it's still such a commodity after that.
The Dilithium is used to regulate the matter/antimatter reaction. Since Romulans don't M/AM reactions as their source of power, they wouldn't need dilithium.Or the Romulans for that matter with their black hole drives
Michael's reaction is a bit over the top since the Federation is only a hundred years old at her point in her life. Did she actually think her government would last a thousand years? That's a little creepy.
She was a self-avowed “true believer”. True believers have iron willpower when they know that one thing they believe in is invincible. When that fragile carpet is pulled out from under them and the anchor chain broken, they crumble quickly.Michael's reaction is a bit over the top since the Federation is only a hundred years old at her point in her life. Did she actually think her government would last a thousand years? That's a little creepy.
Even the Peacekeepers with Scorpius liquified people by accident. It isn't a good idea.Guess they didn't have John Crichton.
Finding out what happened seems to be a major arc in the seasonMost likely. Unless they delve into exactly what caused it to happen, instead of just saying 'this is what happened, and now we're dealing with the aftermath.' People are already coming up with theories, but that presumes that the writers had the wherewithal to make this a mystery story, which I'm not at all confident they did.
She is so affected by her arrival there that she needs to tell herself to get up and to walk, and needs to tell herself her name and number just to ground herself. I found that way over the top, actually. Then 'her' organization is called 'ghosts', and she learns it mostly collapsed. I think she has the same feelings for the UFP that Satie had: The most remarkable institution ever conceived. As a fan, I agreeMichael's reaction is a bit over the top since the Federation is only a hundred years old at her point in her life. Did she actually think her government would last a thousand years? That's a little creepy.
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