Saquist said:Why are gloating? Check your facts first before gloating.
You're deducing things you can't deduce logically. The movie doesn't say "Klingon-Federation border"....EVER....
This only provides further evidence that you have no idea what is going on in this film. "Could this be Klingon?" "Negative... we're 75,000 kilometers..."
Saquist said:Logic dictates that it's not impossible for the star in question to Hobus just because it was 70,000 kilometers from Klingon Space. Since they didn't say it was Federation or Romulan space or Neutral Territory.
So why exactly would a Federation starship be patrolling behind Romulan borders at the beginning of the film? Why is this incursion into Romulan territory conspicuously never mentioned? You seem to misunderstand the fact that when Kirk says "the Kelvin attack took place at the edge of Klingon space", it is implicit that he's talking about the border with the Federation.
Saquist said:And since said star could threaten the entire Galaxy proximity of local area isn't a big issue.
It's clear that you think "threatens the entire galaxy" means the Hobus star can be wherever you want, but it's not really that simple. It is significant that Romulus was destroyed before any Federation or Klingon planet worthy of note, and that Spock's priority was to save Romulus.
Saquist said:There is only one Neutral Zone in the film.
Wrong. That is only your assumption, which you cannot prove but insist on projecting upon the film. In Star Trek there are at least two Neutral Zones. The one involved in the Kobayashi Maru scenario is the KNZ, just as seen in TWOK. Spock's emergence point is in the RNZ, the one with a relative degree of spatial proximity to Vulcan. You're still not identifying plot holes in the film. You're merely rewriting the film into an apparently plot-hole-ridden version and then criticizing the resulting rewrite as though confusing it with the actual film.
Saquist said:On the one hand...coordinates implies a different location (not necessarily a different region) but black holes don't transport in space but rather in time.
Since we've never seen red matter black holes before, there is no previously existing precedent for how they work. Thus, they work the way the film requires them to, which involves transportation in space as well as time.
Saquist said:So how do we know that ship is at Vulcan?
What we know is the logic behind Kirk's guess that it was.
Saquist said:How does two Romulan attacks bring us to the same ship that attack 25 years ago?
How does what happened in the film have any similarity to a generic "Romulan attack"? The two factors of the massive Romulan ship and the lightning storm were only seen that one time in 2233 and never seen again until 2258 ( when both factors were observed in relatively close temporal proximity ).
Saquist said:Which didn't make it into the movie for us to consider as part of the plot of said movie so "twiddling Thumbs" still stands...
Unfortunately, "if we didn't see it, it didn't happen" is still wrong and in no way logical. The Rura Penthe plot line is still consistent with the film, and is even implied by Uhura's dialogue to some extent. Otherwise, why attack a prison planet? Just for the hell of it? Once more, you can't prove that it didn't happen. If you're going to claim that the plot has unanswered questions you can't just ignore the answers that have been presented.
Saquist said:I didn't say it was the Neutral Zone.
Actually, you did:
But that was in the closed thread.Saquist said:You're saying the Federation/Klingon border CAN'T be the Same as the Neutral Zone where 47 klingon ships were destroyed?
Saquist said:Just because you looked up Delta Vega on Memory Alpha and liked their explanation doesn't mean you've found anything logical.
I didn't look up anything. I used the fact that place names are not unique in the real world, a fact which your so-called "logic" can't seem to handle.
Saquist said:Yes, you did.
Have fun putting words in my mouth. As I already explained, I have no idea what the overall percentages are on this issue, so I have no idea who is in the majority. The point is that the things you claim not to have understood were understood by at least one other person.
Saquist said:Don't require us all to be Trek Fanatics in order for you to tell a proper story.
I don't think access to the online script of the film would qualify as being a "Trek fanatic", and you don't need the script anyway. The film alone made it sufficiently clear that they were near the Klingon-Federation border. I'd point out that I thought the film told a "proper story" by itself without any outside help, but that would be the dreaded "appeal to majority" again ( the majority of one against one ).
Saquist said:My determinations are based on the contradictions within the film and are not false.
Your so-called "determinations" are based on rewriting the film into an unrecognizable condition, and thus they have no merit because they have nothing to do with the actual film. Case in point: unable to decided exactly what he wanted an how he wanted to go about getting it done. Nothing like that was ever shown in the film; you made it up. The same is true of: the character's scattered-brained actions through out the film...to which there was no rhythm or reason to despite his statements otherwise. These are false statements.
Saquist said:If there are two people named Michael you give a last name...other wise there is only one Michael.

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