Dennis?
The method of time travel wouldn't change how changing the past affects the timeline or creating/not creating an alternate timeline.
Previous Trek plainly establishes in EVERY time-change episode that the timeline of a single universe is changed by changes in history, and in turn can be restored to pretty much how it should be.
Please give up trying to convince anyone of anything different.
Decades of episodes prove you wrong.
You are right when you say
Spock can't set time to rights even if he buys into the Guardian's version of time travel, because he arrives thirty years after the events that alter the timeline and has no method of time travel available to him.
I agree totally, except for one little thing.
Would "our" Spock, no matter how old he was, just leave this continuity as it is (Amanda dead far too early, Vulcan destroyed, etc.) simply because the changes started 25 (*ahem*) years earlier?
He'd find a way to go back and destroy the Narada before it even SAW the Kelvin.
The method of time travel wouldn't change how changing the past affects the timeline or creating/not creating an alternate timeline.
Previous Trek plainly establishes in EVERY time-change episode that the timeline of a single universe is changed by changes in history, and in turn can be restored to pretty much how it should be.
Please give up trying to convince anyone of anything different.
Decades of episodes prove you wrong.
You are right when you say
Spock can't set time to rights even if he buys into the Guardian's version of time travel, because he arrives thirty years after the events that alter the timeline and has no method of time travel available to him.
I agree totally, except for one little thing.
Would "our" Spock, no matter how old he was, just leave this continuity as it is (Amanda dead far too early, Vulcan destroyed, etc.) simply because the changes started 25 (*ahem*) years earlier?
He'd find a way to go back and destroy the Narada before it even SAW the Kelvin.