Nope.Are you going to watch Into Darkness, too?
Nope.Are you going to watch Into Darkness, too?
Khan is said to be one the best of the tyrants. There were no massacres, but order was strict. This is consistent with Khan in that he hasn't killed anyone, but he does rule with an iron first.
I don't think Kirk knew that Ceti Alpha VI was about to explode when he left Khan on Ceti Alpha V.
Of other interest is that the genetic supermen came from all around the globe, explaining how they can all be of different ethnicities.
I agree with this. I didn't even think about combat in war, that was an oversight on my part. I was thinking of him more as a ruler. I'll make a change in my post to distinguish between the two. Thanks!Oh, I'm sure he killed plenty of people, just enemy combatants in the heat of battle rather than civilians.
Agreed, but this also makes me think- it's funny that we give Star Trek (2009)/Picard a hard time because realistically, there would be warning signs in advance, but don't tend to criticize TWOK for the same thing. I've always taken it to be that there was some artificial event- often thought it would be interesting if this was just sort of the side fall-out of a completely different story, some vast battle or time-hopping event or inter-Q conflict or something (like the supernovas in The Q and the Grey)... something that might one day be revealed (seems like an STO thing, to be honest, if they haven't already) with Ceti Alpha VI as collateral damage of some totally unrelated plot. (Bonus points if some sort of sensor distortion or echo or general interference leads to the otherwise-inexplicable Reliant's sensor error in not being able to correctly map a solar system or count the number of planets on it).Does that even need to be questioned? Obviously it's a ludicrous suggestion on the face of it. Only a conspiracy nut who knows nothing about Kirk's character could possibly think that.
Agreed, but this also makes me think- it's funny that we give Star Trek (2009)/Picard a hard time because realistically, there would be warning signs in advance, but don't tend to criticize TWOK for the same thing. I've always taken it to be that there was some artificial event- often thought it would be interesting if this was just sort of the side fall-out of a completely different story, some vast battle or time-hopping event or inter-Q conflict or something (like the supernovas in The Q and the Grey)... something that might one day be revealed (seems like an STO thing, to be honest, if they haven't already) with Ceti Alpha VI as collateral damage of some totally unrelated plot. (Bonus points if some sort of sensor distortion or echo or general interference leads to the otherwise-inexplicable Reliant's sensor error in not being able to correctly map a solar system or count the number of planets on it).
While it would require either an alien-invader subplot or uncovered Section 31 conspiracy or something else outlandish, most likely, to realistically fit into the Khan series, I do wonder if they will attempt to provide any explanation for what happened... maybe claim that the instruments left behind by the Enterprise included some basic sensors or something, so that Marla can technobabble explain what they just witnessed in the sky... after all, they seem to have enough knowledge to be aware that a neighboring planet exploded, it would be interesting to see how they determined that. (Unless it was a Vulcan's-sister-planet scenario with a much-closer-than-usual twin planet visible in the sky...)
I can remember three different novel-based explanations for Ceti Alpha VI exploding, all of which involved unforeseeable external influences (New Frontier had a piece of unstable alien technology explode after it was activated by a survey team, Vanguard had it destroyed by an alien weapon of mass destruction that the Starfleet operators who discovered it hadn't realized was a weapon until they started pointing it at things and turning it on, and I think To Reign in Hell had something about a rogue black hole that passed through the system, which has the bonus of nicely explaining how the orbits of the other planets were affected so drastically).
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