Within canon, it's claimed that 30% percent of the population was killed (about 2.3 billion people given current 2023 numbers) and 600,000 species were destroyed.
Maybe this is from me going through a recent spate of re-watching old 1980s nuclear war movies like The Day After and Threads, but both of those movies predict damage from a nuclear war that would be a near extinction-level event for humanity. That to rebuild civilization would take multiple, upon multiple generations, and even then it wouldn't necessarily be a given we'd make it, and it would involve people having to endure a totally changed world environmentally (e.g., agriculture would be a mess, EMP effects in the upper atmosphere would limit electricity generation, mutations and stillbirths in pregnancies, lack of organized education for future generations, etc.).
But is what we see in First Contact consistent with that? Would radiation levels from a full-scale nuclear war allow people to be able to live above ground normally 30 years after global nuclear war? Would weather patterns have returned to normal from nuclear winter by that time?
Depending on the factions, either both sides went HAM and pushed all the buttons and burned it all. Or maybe it was a mix of limited strikes and conventional warfare. The latter might explain how a major city (and in all likelihood a strategic target given that it's a major port) like San Francisco seemed to survive World War III, unless the Transamerica Pyramid and the Golden Gate Bridge are rebuilt replicas.
Maybe this is from me going through a recent spate of re-watching old 1980s nuclear war movies like The Day After and Threads, but both of those movies predict damage from a nuclear war that would be a near extinction-level event for humanity. That to rebuild civilization would take multiple, upon multiple generations, and even then it wouldn't necessarily be a given we'd make it, and it would involve people having to endure a totally changed world environmentally (e.g., agriculture would be a mess, EMP effects in the upper atmosphere would limit electricity generation, mutations and stillbirths in pregnancies, lack of organized education for future generations, etc.).
But is what we see in First Contact consistent with that? Would radiation levels from a full-scale nuclear war allow people to be able to live above ground normally 30 years after global nuclear war? Would weather patterns have returned to normal from nuclear winter by that time?
Depending on the factions, either both sides went HAM and pushed all the buttons and burned it all. Or maybe it was a mix of limited strikes and conventional warfare. The latter might explain how a major city (and in all likelihood a strategic target given that it's a major port) like San Francisco seemed to survive World War III, unless the Transamerica Pyramid and the Golden Gate Bridge are rebuilt replicas.
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