No longer want to take risks due to reduced resources. Simple.
especially as Book’s ship could enter the nebula...The Khi'eth was obviously designed with strong shields and hull due to the nature of its mission (which is why it was able to enter the nebula and survive it for such a long time), so another SF ship could have been outfitted with necessary modifications (but by the 32nd century, you'd expect ALL SF ships to be immune to such nebulae
Anyway, I guess we could postulate the distress call which was sent after the first failed rescue didn't reach anyone
But they did contact starfleet, otherwise how could Tilly know all this?Well, that leaves things on USS Hiraga, which may have been in continuous contact with the Khi'eth anyway due to the nature of the ship's mission, and if they were on route, why wouldn't the Hiraga then inform SF/Federation the Khi'eth was stranded so they could be advised on what to do?
this was before the Burn.No longer want to take risks due to reduced resources. Simple.
Jeysus thats bad. Time to sack a few writers me thinksYes Vance said it. I think it might make more sense if the nebula was really really far away, but it wasn't. There is a transwarp conduit between Fed HQ and the nebula that you can travel in a matter of minutes.
You keep saying that but its a stupid reason. If thats the best they can come up with then dont do that story line in the first placeNo longer want to take risks due to reduced resources. Simple.
Fear makes people do stupid things.You keep saying that but its a stupid reason. If thats the best they can come up with then dont do that story line in the first place
They were still facing resource shortages.this was before the Burn.
all more reason to investigate a dilithium nursery.Fear makes people do stupid things.
They were still facing resource shortages.
Logically, yes. But, this wasn't a logical decision. It was fear based.all more reason to investigate a dilithium nursery.
fear of what?Logically, yes. But, this wasn't a logical decision. It was fear based.
I'd have to revisit it but losing ships seemed to cause a pretty big fear reaction. But, I could be misremembering. Just because the Federation was strong doesn't mean they can't overreact to a ship loss.fear of what?
According to the writers, the federation was “as strong as ever” before he burn.
Logically, yes. But, this wasn't a logical decision. It was fear based.
The older I get the more I realize this and the more people who go "Well, they should have just done that" really grinds my gears because it basically treats everyone as lacking emotion. It has become incredibly frustrating over the years because apparently fear is not something that is readily acknowledge in decision making process. I'm probably way oversensitive to it given my line of work but it frustrates me that it isn't acknowledged at all.Anybody who doesn't think that "fear based decisions" by governments and populations isn't a real thing hasn't been alive a day for the past 50 years.
Rationality typically has VERY little to do with decision making, based on my observations.
From what I am recalling a ship was sent but it was two weeks out to get to the nebula and was apparently destroyed. So, there was an attempt and they lost another ship. So, wouldn't you be afraid of losing another ship?The problem is not that, just that there isn’t much to be afraid of here. They had the means to rescue that ship, they had the location and the motivation, so why didn’t they?
i would investigate on *why* the second ship was lost.From what I am recalling a ship was sent but it was two weeks out to get to the nebula and was apparently destroyed. So, there was an attempt and they lost another ship. So, wouldn't you be afraid of losing another ship?
Cool.i would investigate on *why* the second ship was lost.
From what I am recalling a ship was sent but it was two weeks out to get to the nebula and was apparently destroyed. So, there was an attempt and they lost another ship. So, wouldn't you be afraid of losing another ship?
They did send another ship-it was destroyed.I don't think it really adds up here. If you are running out of dilitihum to the point that it's such a crisis that you are ordering all the scientists in the Federation to find a solution and losing member worlds because of it, that you wouldn't chase down every possible lead you could find (especially leads that are easily accessible via transwarp corridors)?
Also, why would the admiral sitting in his chair at some starbase be pissing in his pants at the prospect of sending another ship to investigate why the first one was lost? It's one ship. A fleet admiral oversees, what, 10,000 ships? It just doesn't add up.
They did send another ship-it was destroyed.
How many do you send? From reading this thread it appears that many if they were in charge would send the whole fleet and be OK with however many dying. I suppose that is the easiest part.
i would investigate on *why* the second ship was lost.
They did send another ship-it was destroyed.
How many do you send? From reading this thread it appears that many if they were in charge would send the whole fleet and be OK with however many dying. I suppose that is the easiest part.
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