Star Fleet researchers aren't very persistent. Scotty's sabotage convinced them that there was no point in doing more research in transwarp propulsion.
A good thing as they all could have ended up salamanders.
Or worse, on shrooms.
Star Fleet researchers aren't very persistent. Scotty's sabotage convinced them that there was no point in doing more research in transwarp propulsion.
I'm sure Scotty was humming this as he workedStar Fleet researchers aren't very persistent. Scotty's sabotage convinced them that there was no point in doing more research in transwarp propulsion.
I'm sure Scotty was humming this as he worked
Well, it is considered classical music by the 23rd century.![]()
It was more of Kirk's jam.Kelvin Scotty would, I am sure of it.
It was more of Kirk's jam.
Nah. that was Public Enemy.True, Scotty called it loud and distracting.
"I like the beats and shouting!" just popped into my head.It was more of Kirk's jam.
"I like the beats and shouting!" just popped into my head.
I hope Jaylah's in the next movie.
My dad loaded nukes into planes in the late 60s and told me things that make it easy to believe you.I choose to believe that no security system will overcome human stupidity. It would sound like I was making stuff up if I told you about the time a nuclear missile silo was left open for months.
oh, I’m sure there will be a new Star Trek movie one day. I’m just not too sure that day is coming anytime soon.IMO, we'll only be sure that there is a next movie the day they start filming, which isn't for at least a year and a half until then, they still can change their minds, which they've done several times already.
They keep playing with my heart.IMO, we'll only be sure that there is a next movie the day they start filming, which isn't for at least a year and a half until then, they still can change their minds, which they've done several times already.
He was on a Galaxy bridge in an earlier trailer, IIRCThere is a broad shouldered Boimler with a new hairstyle at 11 seconds in the mid season trailer. He's still an ensign however, so it's apparently not Will Boimler.
Given the number of manmade nuclear accidents aboard bombers and in silos I'm not shocked. It's a miracle we haven't had an ICBM's warhead detonate in its silo and kill untold thousands upon thousands. The 1980 incident in Arkansas came frighteningly close.
I choose to believe that no security system will overcome human stupidity. It would sound like I was making stuff up if I told you about the time a nuclear missile silo was left open for months.
This could be quite plausible. A few months back, my family and I visited a decommissioned nuclear alert launch facility in southeastern Wyoming. To my surprise, the tour guide told us the silo (still active, now controlled directly by NORAD)was 15-20 miles away from the site! None of the launch personnel would actually be able to see the doors (which I think slide open sideways and would be difficult to see even nearby). If that one little circuit conveying the information from the silo to the launch site lighting up the "doors open" light is broken (or if the bulb is burned out), they would literally never know unless someone actually went out to the silo (which is in an extremely remote area where nobody can easily see it from a road or anything), either to inspect it visually or fly nearby and happen to notice the open doors.My dad loaded nukes into planes in the late 60s and told me things that make it easy to believe you.![]()
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