"Too big to fail"? To paraphrase Admiral Clancy, that's some hubris.I wonder how they are going to address that the Federation collapsing to anything short of Q is impossible by even just the 26th century...
"Too big to fail"? To paraphrase Admiral Clancy, that's some hubris.I wonder how they are going to address that the Federation collapsing to anything short of Q is impossible by even just the 26th century...
The problem is Replicators."Too big to fail"? To paraphrase Admiral Clancy, that's some hubris.
We'll see what the nature of The Burn is. Send a system-wide virus through the Federation, cause everything to shut down or malfunction at once, and then you're in some serious shit. Especially if you can't get anything to work again. Then the enemy catches you unguarded. They're probably unguarded anyway because most of Starfleet by the 31st or 32nd Century would think, "What can possibly happen?"The problem is Replicators.
By even just the 26th century, to actually wipe out the Federation you would have to completely destroy every Shuttlecraft, Starship, Spacestation, Planetary Facility, and Person in it.
Anything less would just be a 20 to 40 or so year hiccup for even just one survivor to rebuild.
Except no virus would get everything.We'll see what the nature of The Burn is. Send a system-wide virus through the Federation, cause everything to shut down or malfunction at once, and then you're in some serious shit. Especially if you can't get anything to work again. Then the enemy catches you unguarded. They're probably unguarded anyway because most of Starfleet by the 31st or 32nd Century would think, "What can possibly happen?"
The Federation was already complacent in the 24th Century. Add 700 more years of that onto the mentality they already had, and it's the perfect set-up for the right enemy to strike if they know what they're doing.
Speculating in the dark. Maybe what causes The Burn is something else.
Warp Drive isn't the only way to travel Faster Then Light in Star Trek.CAN'T WAIT!
And it looks like they're still using the spore drive. There was a brief shot of the ship making a jump.
I didn't really see any other ships in the clip, so if "The Burn" is something like the Omega particle from VOY making warp drive impossible, maybe that's why the Federation mostly collapsed (aside from worlds that are reachable without warp), so the spore drive would be invaluable. It might be why Burnham says "The Federation isn't just about ships..."
While I didn't think the Omega episode from VOY was that great, it would still be a way to connect the future cataclysm to something we previously know of. Or it could be something totally different, of course.
Except not, because information is everywhere.That assumes that there are people who remember how to use the other technological options.
Again, if the catastrophe is big enough, knock out enough rungs of information, then it doesn't matter who knows what if they can't communicate that to someone else.
The problem is Replicators.
By even just the 26th century, to actually wipe out the Federation you would have to completely destroy every Shuttlecraft, Starship, Spacestation, Planetary Facility, and Person in it.
Anything less would just be a 20 to 40 or so year hiccup for even just one survivor to rebuild.
You'd need political unity to achieve what's basically rebooting the entire galaxy from a backup. Even if there are replicators or much of the infrastructure remains, you need to take it into account that galactic civilization in Star Trek truly depends on two things - physical FTL travel and real-time FTL communication. Take any of those two away and the Federation collapses in a matter of weeks because of the sheer impossibility of maintaining any semblance of day-to-day operations..Except not, because information is everywhere.
And there are backups to backups to backups to backups.
The problem is, Omega molecules, which some are suspecting to be the reason for the burn, do not wipe warp travel out. They destroy subspace itself. Any kind of drive that utilizes subspace would be rendered useless. And it's never as simple as just switching to a different kind of propulsion. If all traces of oil were suddenly removed from Earth, would people just collectively shrug and switch to electric engines and society would go on unchanged? If warp drives became useless, all kinds of non-subspace-based drives that have only been developed by aliens halfway across the galaxy and never documented, or have only existed as dangerous prototypes, would have to be developed independently by the various people that are currently unable to reach one another, not to mention they'd have to be lucky enough to have all the required materials at their disposal. Not every colony has industrial replicators and infinite replicator matter to use. It would still lead to decades of chaos and a political collapse.Warp Drive isn't the only way to travel Faster Then Light in Star Trek.
So if Warp travel somehow got wiped out they would just switch to one of the others.
So you attack the system and those who guard it. Basically, like the virus that infected the Great Link or the Borg. Get in to the system and destroy it from within. Combined with a complacent populous and you'll undo civilization.Except not, because information is everywhere.
And there are backups to backups to backups to backups.
This worries me. If we have a whole season and then they go back and "fix" things so none of it happened... I will not be a happy bunny.
Except no virus would get everything.
There would be inactive stuff in mothballs they could pull out and start a tiny bit set back with.
Or stuff owned by people that isn't connected to whatever network.
Or stuff in other galaxies.
Or stuff in other times.
It 's fiction. Something teched the tech and now they are teched.I wonder how they are going to address that the Federation collapsing to anything short of Q is impossible by even just the 26th century...
I really like the long haired Andorian with beard that is seen briefly.
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