The vocal hardliners make it seem as though people are kicking down the door of this forum, left and right, only to barge in and declare that TOS was terrible and had no redeeming factors. Does that happen? Are there people who
hate TOS the way there are people who
hate Abrams' film, and every other incarnation of Trek? If there are they're the quietest group of discontented viewers. The way "opposition" (which in most cases I've noted is little more than subtle critiques and self declared differing personal tastes) is immediately squashed (again, by the vocal hardliners) makes it seem as though that group were the rampaging horde. Does it even exist
at all on this forum?
The Kelvin was sitting right on the edge of enemy territory and probably already had defensive systems ready vs. a group of ships that thought they were simply on a humanitarian aid mission.
Vulcan sent out a distress call that made some mention of seismic activity. So, either they took it too seriously by sending a fleet of ships to do something about it,
or they were just being kind of silly by "warping into a crisis" without at least being at yellow alert. Not to mention that the Kelvin was two decades older than, at least, Enterprise. Shouldn't the other ships have been able to hold out a little longer than they did? I mean not a lot longer... but at least a little bit?
Now answer me why they sent a 170 year old Ambassador with a beach ball sized container of Red Matter when you only need a drop to create a black hole?
That's a fair question. Why Spock was the one who volunteered to save Romulus can only be answered if we assume his role from TNG continued. Otherwise it would seemingly be silly to send him, alone, on such a mission when there were a stock of other scientifically minded people in the STU that could've done it. As to the the beach ball sized red matter? Well, that one is easy; First of all the Abrams' people have a thing with red balls. (Its in other movies). Secondly, it would have been boring and unimpressive, visually (something I've noted doesn't really seem to matter as much to an older generation), to look at drop of red matter in a beaker as opposed to a mass ton of it in a futuristic looking storage container.
-Withers-