In the shows, its not. In the books, it might be?
In the books, it definitely is. I guess I just assumed it was onscreen as well.

In the shows, its not. In the books, it might be?
Something I don't understand is why Paramount not wanting to explore this era of the ST universe.
They love to go back to prequels over and over but never really put any effort in this aspect.
Fans have desired to see the Earth-Romulan war over and over and TPTB had perfect allignment with Enterprise but they would rather create the Xindi than make it the beginning of the Earth-Romulan war.
Baffling.
Something I don't understand is why Paramount not wanting to explore this era of the ST universe.
They love to go back to prequels over and over but never really put any effort in this aspect.
Fans have desired to see the Earth-Romulan war over and over and TPTB had perfect allignment with Enterprise but they would rather create the Xindi than make it the beginning of the Earth-Romulan war.
Baffling.
Unless you retcon a lot of the backstory from TOS, the Earth-Romulan War has some elements that would be extremely limiting as a narrative, while also being boxed-in as to where the story can ultimately go and how. For example, it's red-letter canon that humanity never "officially" finds out what a Romulan looks like in the war.Something I don't understand is why Paramount not wanting to explore this era of the ST universe.
They love to go back to prequels over and over but never really put any effort in this aspect.
Fans have desired to see the Earth-Romulan war over and over and TPTB had perfect allignment with Enterprise but they would rather create the Xindi than make it the beginning of the Earth-Romulan war.
Baffling.
One of my issues with Star Trek since 2009 has been how much it feels like everything kind of "winks at the camera" and sometimes doesn't feel like it takes Star Trek seriously at all. It rests on tracing over the past, changing it some, pointing at it and saying "remember this and doesn't it look cooler with the new CGI" and thinking that's innovative in showing hidden depths to old characters and subjects.The current people in charge seem to think fans want Star Trek to be a comedy show or 90210 in space.
From The Hollywood Reporter:
Paramount has two Trek films in development. One is prequel focusing on humanity’s early contact with aliens and the formation of the Federation. Andor director Toby Haynes is attached to direct a script by Seth Grahame-Smith that is rumored to take place largely on Earth. The studio sees the project as an entry point for new fans who do not need to know about decades of canon (or keep up with the myriad shows on Paramount+). No cast or release date is set, but it’s in pole position to be the next Trek to hit the big screen.
Standard nuTrek.
Fans: "We would really like something like Legacy that advances the timeline..."
Paramount: "Fuck you, only prequels."
We see Washington, New York, and Paris blow up in SNW as Pike goes on about the eradication of 600,000 species of animals and plants and 30% of Earth's population. I didn’t get the impression it was limited mostly to Asia at all. There was probably a nuclear winter over the former BosWash megalopolis as well.To some extent all of this happens.
I have a perhaps controversial take on Trek's WW3. I really think that while it was globally destructive, the bulk of the nuclear destruction was in Asia. Elsewhere got hit, but the the true devastation was across Asia.
I always wondered what other worlds they were helping out.The Vulcans come down and provide quite a bit of help in getting Earth back up and running. Vulcans seem to have had some interest in Earth since at least Sputnik, so they poured quite a bit of resources into getting Earth into better shape.
That’s creative. The three stars always bugged me too; I just imagine them as an abstract representation of space without further significance.Thinking of that, I always found the Federation's emblem to be odd... there's three stars, not four...
Of course i've come up with my own reason why... it was sort of an accident. That emblem was never actually meant to be the Federation's logo. It had its origins immediately post-war, when I have Earth going on a massive humanitarian mission to aid Vulcan, Andor and Tellar. That symbol we know as the Federation symbol was something drawn up sort of on the fly to symbolize the humanitarian effort... three stars being within the United Earth emblem, intended to symbolize Earth's mission to help their three allied worlds. Nobody really thought much of it at the time, it was just a graphic Earth started using.
Where the accident comes was that when the leaders were all meeting to sign the Federation charter, the humanitarian mission emblem had been emblazoned on everything. It just because an incredibly common symbol immediately after the war. It was quite literally stamped on the document of the Federation charter...
The other founders reactions ranged from... none (Vulcans) to mildly perturbed (Tellarites). Some couldn't help point that the emblem of the Federation itself made it look like this new Federation was some kind of human hegemony. Earth offered to redraw up the document, but the other races really didn't see it as all that big of a deal, more of an "of course the humans would do that." Nobody pushed the issue because that symbol did actually mean something to alot of people... all of those supplies coming in from Earth featured it, and it very quickly became a symbol of unity, despite having its origins as an Earth-centric symbol.
I wondered about that too when ENT was going. I think maybe it wouldn’t have made sense for them to do a first contact story with our nearest star when they’d have been going there for a while by that point.I think Alpha Centauri is somewhat of an asterisk. It has been mentioned.
I would probably explain that away that Alpha Centauri entered the Federation along with Earth, but not as a "member". Alpha Centauri was still an Earth colony, so it WAS part of the Federation but legally considered as part of Earth. Alpha Centuari probably had a representative there.
AC may be different as opposed to Vega, which we know was a human colony... but seemed to be independent of Earth.
We probably only get some mentions of AC because it's a human world and we are... humans. There were certainly other colonies in there too on the initial wave.
This is only a problem if you try to tell the story in the typical Trek way. Navy ships didn’t have view screens on WWII yet the tension was pretty high.Unless you retcon a lot of the backstory from TOS, the Earth-Romulan War has some elements that would be extremely limiting as a narrative, while also being boxed-in as to where the story can ultimately go and how. For example, it's red-letter canon that humanity never "officially" finds out what a Romulan looks like in the war.
So you would have a story where either the protagonists and antagonists never meet face-to-face,
I remember in the pre-internet days some debate regarding Alpha Centauri. There were those in the camp that it was an independent Human colony and others that took the stance that it was an inhabited alien planet and home of the "Centaurans," the first extraterrestrial species Humans encountered (this was decades before First Contact hit the theatres.) Under the latter scenario, "Zephram Cochrane of Alpha Centauri" was a Human expatriate who developed warp drive there instead of on Earth.I think Alpha Centauri is somewhat of an asterisk. It has been mentioned.
I would probably explain that away that Alpha Centauri entered the Federation along with Earth, but not as a "member". Alpha Centauri was still an Earth colony, so it WAS part of the Federation but legally considered as part of Earth. Alpha Centuari probably had a representative there.
AC may be different as opposed to Vega, which we know was a human colony... but seemed to be independent of Earth.
We probably only get some mentions of AC because it's a human world and we are... humans. There were certainly other colonies in there too on the initial wave.
We see Washington, New York, and Paris blow up in SNW as Pike goes on about the eradication of 600,000 species of animals and plants and 30% of Earth's population. I didn’t get the impression it was limited mostly to Asia at all. There was probably a nuclear winter over the former BosWash megalopolis as well.
My personal headcanon for why there are “three stars” on the Federation flag when there are four-founding members is that the view of the stars represents Earth.The three stars always bugged me too; I just imagine them as an abstract representation of space without further significance.
I do think at a certain point it becomes too much to believe there was a full-scale nuclear war in the 2030s and Bozeman, Montana looks like it does in First Contact in the early 2060s.New York and Washington make some sense. Even in my version here, the US got hit... just not as hard. I think there's a reason why San Francisco became so important... it just got through WW3 largely unscathed and became something of the center for the western powers.
Paris... is still and oddball, although I like to think that perhaps as United Earth was gearing up, as a sign of unity to the world they got together and rebuilt one of the destroyed cities. Paris just happened to be it and became the capital because of it.
I don’t think it’s odd but speaks to it being rebuilt using advanced future technologies. You might rebuild one day if you’re lucky enough to be capital world of a vast interstellar civilization, but I think most of us get that we won’t in the real world, so seeing our world burn was powerful — and fucking awesome for it.Still not totally off the track though. Paris is the oddball because we see Paris in the 24th AND 25th centuries... and... it looks like Paris.
Except, I believe, there are certain oddities with the location of the Eiffel Tower.Still not totally off the track though. Paris is the oddball because we see Paris in the 24th AND 25th centuries... and... it looks like Paris.
It's plausible. It's hinted in the first season of ENT, through Reed and Sato, that the Vulcans could have landed somewhere else. I'd imagine that UK, Japan and Brazil were in a similar situation as Montana at the time - more economic depression than nuclear wasteland. It's really just the US, from Indiana to the Eastern Seaboard, and Paris that are the confirmed nuclear wastelands. That the Vulcans landed in Montana also allowed for a resurgance in American culture.I have a perhaps controversial take on Trek's WW3. I really think that while it was globally destructive, the bulk of the nuclear destruction was in Asia. Elsewhere got hit, but the the true devastation was across Asia.
By 2063, there's "very few governments". Not no governments. I think some of the western governments are still working. I didn't take Cochrane's situation as living in a crazy post-apocalyptic nuclear wasteland... it was more just an economical depression. He seems to think he will make money off the Phoenix, so... there is somebody who could pay him. He talks of travelling, taking trains. I think the situation in Bozeman is less that Cochrane just like, idk, took over a missile silo... moreso that he bought the missile and silo from the government, who quite frankly just didn't care and needed any resources they could get.
Meanwhile in Asia, the "Post-Atomic Horror" is well underway. There probably are people who think "we need to finish off those Eastern Coalition bastards" and... they probably kind of do?
Where did you get 5 from? It's always been four founders.
thought it was five?
Earth, Vulcan, Tellar, Andor and Alpha Centauri.
It's not the problem you think it is.the Earth-Romulan War has some elements that would be extremely limiting as a narrative, while also being boxed-in as to where the story can ultimately go and how.
a) Yes. Telepathically controlled drone ships. A.I. controlled ships, nebula based warfare.you would have a story where either the protagonists and antagonists never meet face-to-face, or maybe you put the Romulans (and I guess the Remans) in encounter suits like the Breen where for some reason they're destroyed in death, or you say fuck all of it and have the villains be known and come up with convoluted reasons for why the truth was covered up.
How powerful are the photonic torpedoes compared to a nuclear warhead in the ENT era? Maybe the torpedoes don't pack a big enough punch and are better used as mines.Spock's description of how the war was fought already doesn't exactly mesh with Enterprise, since it's made to sound incredibly crude in "Balance of Terror," where humanity and the Romulans were lobbing nuclear warheads at each other. But Enterprise establishes Earth already had phasers, photon torpedoes, and the Romulans had warbirds and drone ships with disruptors.
Since Archer is set up as an incredibly consequential figure to all of this, you'd either need Scott Bakula to reprise his role, basically making it a sort-of Enterprise continuation, which from Paramount's perspective the question would be whether there's any market for revisiting a show they canceled in the 2000s for low ratings with none of the actors being big draws beyond their affection within the existing fanbase.
It's the reason I feel that Earth going through an Imperial Starfleet phase was a more accurate history of late 21st and early 22nd century Earth, up to a point - the 2120s.It always bugged me that upstart Earth managed to defeat a two thousand year old interstellar civilization. I’ve got multiple head canons for what might have happened, including the Diane Duane and Erik Jendresen versions and an indeterminate one.
I’d started to think some calamity might have befallen the Romulans in the intervening years since their arrival on the planet(s). Maybe their warring ways nearly destroyed them on Romulus as it did on Vulcan, and they were stuck in a dark age for a while.
Maybe along with that something similar to what’s going on in the real world now happened with Earth, and the greater powers funneled technology and aid to Earth to defend itself against Romulan aggression.
It's plausible. It's hinted in the first season of ENT, through Reed and Sato, that the Vulcans could have landed somewhere else. I'd imagine that UK, Japan and Brazil were in a similar situation as Montana at the time - more economic depression than nuclear wasteland. It's really just the US, from Indiana to the Eastern Seaboard, and Paris that are the confirmed nuclear wastelands. That the Vulcans landed in Montana also allowed for a resurgance in American culture.
As for the Eastern Coalition, if they were an Augment faction, then yes, they would probably be finished off.
Althugh, if the Romulan War is all hands on deck, would humans refuse to utilize Augments if it helped them to turn the tide of the war? Do humans trust them that little?
Didn’t read them—what?I like what the novels did that nukes were used as sensor flashbangs.
Didn’t read them—what?
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