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SERIOUS pet peeve about TNG

And shields can be used offensively. Tom and B'Elanna proved that when they used the shields of the Delta Flyer to "bump" one of the ships they were racing against.

Bumping a ship is not on same level as locking phasers on a ship and I'm pretty sure the shields were not designed with bumping into other ships in mind. Its like saying a car is the same as a gun, sure you can use a car to kill people, but that's not what it was designed for. The shields were designed as a defensive measuring, so how is raising them provocative?
But you said shields were "purely a defensive tactic." Clearly, as shown, they are not. They can be used offensively.
 
And shields can be used offensively. Tom and B'Elanna proved that when they used the shields of the Delta Flyer to "bump" one of the ships they were racing against.

Bumping a ship is not on same level as locking phasers on a ship and I'm pretty sure the shields were not designed with bumping into other ships in mind. Its like saying a car is the same as a gun, sure you can use a car to kill people, but that's not what it was designed for. The shields were designed as a defensive measuring, so how is raising them provocative?
But you said shields were "purely a defensive tactic." Clearly, as shown, they are not. They can be used offensively.

But often are they used as an offensive weapon and how much damage can they inflict? How is raising shields an offensive tactic when doing so has extremely minimal offensive capabilities? Are alien warships really afraid that a federation ship will use their shields to bump into them?

If something that bumps into is considered an offensive weapon, I suppose a bumper car should be declared an WMD. I don't see why the lives of a ship's crew should be put at risk because the shields might bump into another ship.
 
See, the problem with keeping your defensive shields up all the time is you make the other guy think you don't trust him. And that will piss him off, in most cases.

And yes, I'm sure that defensive shields are entirely seperate from navigational deflectors.
 
See, the problem with keeping your defensive shields up all the time is you make the other guy think you don't trust him. And that will piss him off, in most cases.

And yes, I'm sure that defensive shields are entirely seperate from navigational deflectors.

Trust is earned, not given away, as Worf would say.

I'm not going to trust someone till I know their intentions and I wouldn't trust someone with a bad reputation like Cardassians or Romulans, I certain wouldn't lower my shields to in front of them.
 
Bumping a ship is not on same level as locking phasers on a ship and I'm pretty sure the shields were not designed with bumping into other ships in mind. Its like saying a car is the same as a gun, sure you can use a car to kill people, but that's not what it was designed for. The shields were designed as a defensive measuring, so how is raising them provocative?
But you said shields were "purely a defensive tactic." Clearly, as shown, they are not. They can be used offensively.

But often are they used as an offensive weapon and how much damage can they inflict?
Quite a bit actually, depending on the speed. Going fast enough they call it ramming.

How is raising shields an offensive tactic when doing so has extremely minimal offensive capabilities?
Ramming has extreme offensive capabilities. If you have the ship with the strong shields and more solid spaceframe you win. Usually.

Are alien warships really afraid that a federation ship will use their shields to bump into them?
They should be. Now a little bit of explanation here, I used "bump" because that's what Tom and B'Elanna did to pass a ship in the race. Now I'm using ramming which is just a really, really hard bump. True it may be a tactic of last resort, but it is offensive and it works better if you have shields. Also, if I'm the captain of a Galaxy and a Romulan scout ship turned to fire at me and charge me. I'd drop aft shields, transfer that power to the forward shields, and keep running right at them, my weapons firing too, so they can't try to get around to my unshielded behind. Ram my ship right through their stupid pointy eared arrogant selves.

If something that bumps into is considered an offensive weapon, I suppose a bumper car should be declared an WMD.
Excuse me? WTF does that mean? How can you compare the two? In the Trek Universe a starship itself is a WMD by our 2011 standards, not by theirs. Completely false analogy. I'm truly surprised you used it.

I don't see why the lives of a ship's crew should be put at risk because the shields might bump into another ship.
As I told you before, you called shields purely defensive. They are not. Even the shields and armor knights wore back a few centuries ago, could be use offensively.
 
An energy build up is an energy build up. Opposing aliens see you are raising shields and they have no idea if it's weaponry or not. Intragalactic war commences.
 
But you said shields were "purely a defensive tactic." Clearly, as shown, they are not. They can be used offensively.

But often are they used as an offensive weapon and how much damage can they inflict?
Quite a bit actually, depending on the speed. Going fast enough they call it ramming.

Ramming has extreme offensive capabilities. If you have the ship with the strong shields and more solid spaceframe you win. Usually.

That would be extremely dangerous compared to just shooting the other ship with phasers.

They should be. Now a little bit of explanation here, I used "bump" because that's what Tom and B'Elanna did to pass a ship in the race. Now I'm using ramming which is just a really, really hard bump. True it may be a tactic of last resort, but it is offensive and it works better if you have shields. Also, if I'm the captain of a Galaxy and a Romulan scout ship turned to fire at me and charge me. I'd drop aft shields, transfer that power to the forward shields, and keep running right at them, my weapons firing too, so they can't try to get around to my unshielded behind. Ram my ship right through their stupid pointy eared arrogant selves.

How often has anyone used the shields offensively?

If something that bumps into is considered an offensive weapon, I suppose a bumper car should be declared an WMD.
Excuse me? WTF does that mean? How can you compare the two? In the Trek Universe a starship itself is a WMD by our 2011 standards, not by theirs. Completely false analogy. I'm truly surprised you used it.

I was being factitious with that example.

I don't see why the lives of a ship's crew should be put at risk because the shields might bump into another ship.

As I told you before, you called shields purely defensive. They are not. Even the shields and armor knights wore back a few centuries ago, could be use offensively.

But were they designed to be offensive? Should cars be deemed weapons now, even though transportation is their main function?

Why should raising shields be considered aggressive when the shields were designed to be a purely defensive tactic?


An energy build up is an energy build up. Opposing aliens see you are raising shields and they have no idea if it's weaponry or not. Intragalactic war commences.

So what, a ship could be having technical problems and have a power surge, would that justify some trigger happy nut attacking that ship? It seems pretty trigger happy to assume that any build up in power equals an offensive move.
 
Ramming is a tactic of last resort, unless you're pushing your way through a bunch of small ships with out a powerful engine. Actually pushing the Cardassian mobile weapons platforms with shields extended, while they were not powered would have been a good way to clear a path.

Shields may not have been designed to be weapons, but per Trek history, the explosive reaction between matter and antimatter was first used to power a ship for warp, something neither defensive or offensive. Then came the photon torpedo.

And yes a car can be designated as a deadly weapon. Drunk drivers are charged under that assumption, they made the car a weapon by driving it drunk and hurting or killing someone. Was it designed for killing no, can it be used to kill yes. You can be charged with murder by intentionally running someone over, so yes a car is a deadly weapon when used as such. Shields can be weapons when used as such.

Which seems to be the point you're missing. They can use the shields as weapons.

And if you do have your shields up a race, depending on their cultural mores, could see the shields as a prelude to attack. Why have them up otherwise? Look at it from that perspective. You're looking at it from a a Romulan, Kligon and Cardassian point of view, and even they run with shields down. So either there is some agreement to not run with shields up, or there is no need too since you'd spot a Cardassian ship while it's well out of firing range, and if the Klingons or Romulans wanted to, they could sneak up right next to you and unleash holy hell on you and destroy or hurt you so bad you couldn't defend yourself any way.

Consider "The Defector." The Enterprise went into the Romulan Neutral Zone weapons hot and shields up. They turn to leave, 2 Romulan Warbirds decloak and fire on the Enterprise. Picards does nor order a retaliatory strike, because it was just a tap on the shoulder otherwise they wouldn't be there talking about it. They could have destroyed Enterprise, even with her shields up.

Shields may be made with defense in mind, but creative thinking makes them a weapon.
 
Kind of random.. but why in so many episodes is the Enterprise-D just moseying along through space with their shields down?

Because those things require energy to operate, and if you don't need them it's better to save that energy.

"Keep the man shields off line, we don't want to seem like a threat." -- How is defending yourself from basic interstellar crap being a threat? Radiation exists out there...

They have the navigational deflector for that. If there's something bad enough that they need their shields, then they are generally aware of it.

The worst is encountering an unknown vessel with your shields down like they did in so many first contacts... Nothing is stopping them from blowing you to bits... Yes, you can sense if their weapons are charging, but what if they power up undetected or faster than you can bring your shields online?

And if you met someone, and they decided that they needed bodyguards, how would you feel? If you want to make friends, then you don't act like you are expecting them to attack you.

I just watched "The Wounded" and Picard mentioned one of his dealings with the Cardassians by saying he lowered his shields as "good faith" and they blew out his impulse engines and weapons in a split second and he had to go to warp to escape... Like come on man why???????

Like he said, a show of good faith. he wanted to show that he had no hostile intentions.
 
But apparently shields raised is also treated as a non-diplomatic move.

It is. We have no contemporary analogy for "raising shields", but back then, when the leaders of two factions on the battlefield came together and raised their shields, bad things were going to happens. It's a sign of mistrust.

Oh wait, we HAVE an analogy.

The nuclear missile shield the US want to build. The Russians are not amused. But why? It's just for protection, not attack, isn't it? Well, that's the naive idea. In fact it's the first step before an attack. You raise your shield to protect yourself, and then you attack.
 
The context that Picard made the statement, in The Wounded, is that the Federation and the Cardassians were at war. In a state of war, and in a warzone, it's odd not to have shields up. Hence why Picard felt that no shields signified good faith.
 
I'm no astrophysicist, but in deep space i.e. Interstellar space, where would this radiation becoming from. Within in a solar sytem the star would be emittting radiation.
 
I'm no astrophysicist, but in deep space i.e. Interstellar space, where would this radiation becoming from. Within in a solar sytem the star would be emittting radiation.

Everywhere. Gama ray bursts do travel interstellar distances. There are other forms of background radiation traveling through space, luckily there are no known Gama ray bursts occurring in the Milky way. It is believed that should one hit Earth, it would trigger an extinction level event.
 
I'm no astrophysicist, but in deep space i.e. Interstellar space, where would this radiation becoming from. Within in a solar sytem the star would be emittting radiation.

Everywhere. Gama ray bursts do travel interstellar distances. There are other forms of background radiation traveling through space, luckily there are no known Gama ray bursts occurring in the Milky way. It is believed that should one hit Earth, it would trigger an extinction level event.

Either that or everyone would turn into the Hulk.
 
I'm no astrophysicist, but in deep space i.e. Interstellar space, where would this radiation becoming from. Within in a solar sytem the star would be emittting radiation.

Everywhere. Gama ray bursts do travel interstellar distances. There are other forms of background radiation traveling through space, luckily there are no known Gama ray bursts occurring in the Milky way. It is believed that should one hit Earth, it would trigger an extinction level event.

Either that or everyone would turn into the Hulk.

:guffaw:
 
...Fortunately for us, all known bursts are significantly less than an hour long. So only half of our planet would get fried!

The context that Picard made the statement, in The Wounded...

...was this:

Picard: "I'd been sent to make preliminary overtures to a truce. I'd lowered my shields as a gesture of good will. But the Cardassians were not impressed. They had taken out most of my weapons and damaged the impulse engines before I could regroup and run."

This might well have been something Picard anticipated and accepted. He was specifically sent to propose a truce, in a war that the episode itself suggests was a lopsided one, a disaster for the military-technologically impotent Cardassia. He was doing that from a position of apparent strength. He thus had every reason to approach with shields down; if he got killed for that, it would be the Cardassians' loss and the Federation's gain, because then there would be no truce and Cardassia would suffer greater war damage.

Timo Saloniemi
 
There may be some exceptions...bristling weapons ports of an alien ship, or if they are charged...in some percentage of the cases this MAY make a commander more wary...I could understand the shields being raised in some cases.
 
I'm no astrophysicist, but in deep space i.e. Interstellar space, where would this radiation becoming from. Within in a solar sytem the star would be emittting radiation.

Everywhere. Gama ray bursts do travel interstellar distances. There are other forms of background radiation traveling through space, luckily there are no known Gama ray bursts occurring in the Milky way. It is believed that should one hit Earth, it would trigger an extinction level event.

The thing about space is it's big really big, and the shields should be automatically programmed to come on if enough radiation was detected to be lethal to the crew.
 
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