What on earth are you talking about? The Germans lost U-boat U-559 and it’s Enigma code books in
1942. The Germans successfully invaded France in
1940.
You're right. I confused the year it was laid down with the year it was destroyed. So
@ralfy 's argument makes even less sense. In October 1942 the Germans were locked down in massive battles with the Allies in North Africa. The Germans and Soviets were in the middle of the Battle of Stalingrad, by that time the Germans were still winning it. They had even more colossal fish to fry, I still don't know why they would waste resources to protect U-Boats with some codes when they had so many other important things to do.
It’s common knowledge that the captured Enigma material they retrieved was immensely valuable and helped turn the tide of war in the Allies' favor.
Hmmm... If they never cracked those codes, the Nazis would've won WWII ?

Sure, it was an important thing. It may have saved a lot of lives and that's good. But I really doubt the codes were the reason why the Soviets pushed back after Stalingrad and basically won the War, for example. At the end of the day
raw things like manpower and resources matter more. The Nazis lost in the Eastern Front because they lacked that. Not because they lacked codes.
But that implies that the evacuation took place slowly, which means they would have had time to disable the power core.
And disabling the core implies that the Federation cares about disabling power cores after evacuating ships. They don't.
Also, I don't think I argued that certain events can only happen if they were depicted before.
You said they can't use anti-gravs to move personal effects around while evacuating the ship, because everytime we saw people evacuating ships in Star Trek they were empty handed.
Germany did not invade France after losing the code books. Enigma as part of Ultra helped in stopping Rommel in North Africa and determining Axis defenses in France prior to D-Day.
See my response to
@Captain of the USS Averof above. I confused the years. Still, North Africa was lost to the Germans because the Nazis couldn't funnel resources and manpower enough there. They were fighting two very distant fronts, remember ? I think it's just silly when people use side details like codes or things like the great man theory to explain entire wars. Just look both Battles of El Alamein, for example. The Allies had the superiority in numbers on those.
The Germans didn't know that the code was broken.
No, but they could've wasted more resources beforehand trying to protect those codes. There's a hundred ways they could've implemented fail safes but they didn't care. They were more concerned with bigger things.
But that would have not mattered, as it is rational to scuttle what the enemy might find useful.
People tried to explain to you already, scuttling makes sense when you want to avoid your ship being used against your crew or someone capturing them. Like you just admitted, the Federation had no shortage of Starships. They couldn't care less about these things.
Thus, it's not exactly in Klingon territory. The Feds did lose, but the Sacrophogus was stranded in the area for months, which implies that the Klingons had little control in the area.
They took some time to recover the Sarcophagus Ship because that was an area already under their control and that had no risk of going back to the Federation. They concerned themselves with the war first and then went there to retrieve the cloaking technology. If they "had little control" over the area, why Kol wandered there so easily, with no major challenges ?
Feelings leading to killing others is not sentimentality.
People acting of their own passions can do very horrible stuff, endanger others and commit terrible mistakes. Are you sure... You're a fellow Human ?

Because that's Humanity 101.
Being prone to do something does not mean it is more likely.
"Being prone to fight silly wars over nothing doesn't mean these wars are likely" said every person before every major war on Human history.
unless you believe that for this franchise characters making mistakes is more the norm than the exception.
What ? The franchise is about Humans and Humans being faulty when compared to non-sentimental species like the Vulcans is a major theme throughout Star Trek...
which you now imply did not feel the need to protect information that they transmitted to each other.
Yeah, the Federation has it's own NSA. Sure, that's so Star Trek right ? I bet those planets who are interested in joining the Federation get so thrilled by discovering that Federation is sending back home so many encrypted information about them. One thing is encrypting small info, what you are implying here the Federation having top of the line encrypting tech that is generally only common in war time or when you feel the need of being a little bit Orwellian. The whole point of Star Trek is that this is not an Orwellian future.
That's a ridiculous assumption, unless you are saying this because that's the only thing that reinforces your view that Starfleet personnel are hippies. That certainly explains why you keep referring to clairvoyance.
I mean, you were the one implying the Shenzhou had ESPers onboard who could predict the Klingons would not evacuate.
And yet the ships are armed.
So what ? Are you implying gun owners are psychopaths ready to kill everyone just because they have guns ? Guns are ultimately a self-defense tool, it doesn't talk about your character and it doesn't stop you from believing in peace.
There's a reason why "military operations" and "military defense" have the word "military" in them. I'll let you figure out why.
Implementing stuff that can take down missiles and having anti-aircraft batteries on your own territory is military defense. Military operations are things like military exercises next to enemy territory, proxy conflicts, interventions, etc. Just because something has "military" in the name it doesn't mean it's bad.
But the same franchise also had armed personnel in armed ships and worked with businesses such as mining groups to supply the fleet with resources. Those are part of mainstream societies, not counter-cultures.
So hippies, yippies, yuppies, whoever you call those related to counter-culture movements, are against mining and self-defense?

That doesn't make any sense. Material conditions and Culture are two separate spheres. You can still mine, defend yourself, etc. and believe in a certain set of cultural values.
Completely the opposite, as clearly seen in STD and this very thread. I'll let you figure out why.
Stamets entire life is centered around mushrooms and their interactions with physics, Burnham spent her entire life trying to join a Vulcan Expeditionary Group, Tilly wants to be a Starship Captain and Saru wants to be as great as a Federation Founder like Archer. Those are very Star Trek-ish characters. Those characters are characters who had "improving themselves", like Picard said, as their main goals. Self-improvement is a very 1960s New Age thing. The only characters concerned with mundane things seem to be Lorca and Landry. See how everyone else is thrilled by having a Space Whale onboard and Lorca couldn't give two shits about it.
I wasn't referring to what causes resource wars.
You implied things like Dilithium Cores captured from the Feds are essential for the Klingons when they actually are self sufficient on Dilithium.
Now that you agree with me on that, you should now reconsider your view that the whole show is simply about some hippie archetype. Believe me, it's not just that.
If anything, this proves my point even more. The Klingons wanted to hurt the Federation morally. The Klingons are the enemies, remember ? They aren't supposed to have beautiful progressive ideals like the Feds. They were the ones attacking Federation Dilithium Mines, not the other way around. If the Feds weren't a bunch of Leftist Space Explorers they would be the ones coming up with the idea of attacking Klingon Dilithium Mines first. The Federation is not fighting a war of expansion, annexation and occupation. They are fighting a war of self-defense. I hardly doubt those Admirals salivate with the idea of occupying Qo'nos and implementing a puppet government there. Lorca probably does, but that's the point of his character. The Feds just want to defend their coalition and go back to exploring strange new worlds.
I wasn't obsessing over a small detail: you were. I'm merely responding to each point that you raised. But if you want more examples of bad writing in STD, then read the other threads about each episode.
Oh, but I do. And it's always the same stuff that you're doing here. If the small detail has an easy explanation like "the evacuees took the thing with them", people who hate-watch Discovery come up with weird fan fictions to explain how the entire show is plagued with plot holes and that
this time Star Trek is definitely dead. That's basically it. It has been hard for some people to accept that after some years we finally have a Star Trek series with tidy writing again, so they need to come up with "Han Solo shot first" scenarios to dispel that.
It was not for her to decide whether or not she should see herself as useful given the fact that she was sentenced to life in prison and was released from it only because Lorca found a use for her.
She could've sat on her ass and do nothing like she was planning to do when she first refused Lorca's proposal. So she definitely had control over being useful or not.