The Typhoon Pact, on the other hand, is a rival association of weather forecasters.
The only one denying the menace they represent is Michael Fish.
The Typhoon Pact, on the other hand, is a rival association of weather forecasters.
If your talking about the whole use the terraforming device and frying the people alredy living on the planet that was from the faction backed by the Gorn government as well as being backed by a Typoon Pact fleet.
the rogue group was a bunch of irradiated loonies that were planning to steal the device and set up their own breeding planet.
^Okay, one more time... it's not "Typhoon." That's a type of tropical storm in the Pacific Ocean. It's the Typhon Pact, one O, rhymes with "python," after the "Father of All Monsters" from Greek mythology.
^Okay, one more time... it's not "Typhoon." That's a type of tropical storm in the Pacific Ocean. It's the Typhon Pact, one O, rhymes with "python," after the "Father of All Monsters" from Greek mythology.
Considering the view you support in this thread, you really shouldn't emphasize the etymology of 'typhon' - father of all monsters.
He's got a point, maybe they should have called it something like the Confederation of Allied Systems, the Mutual Defense League of Planets, or the Interstellar Concordat of Planets (feel free to use those names by the way).
He's got a point, maybe they should have called it something like the Confederation of Allied Systems, the Mutual Defense League of Planets, or the Interstellar Concordat of Planets (feel free to use those names by the way).
It was originally going to be the Allied Cartel, and then it briefly became the Covenant until they realized HALO was already using that.
Look, nobody's saying that the Pact wasn't meant to be adversarial or intimidating. Of course it was; as I've said, the idea was to create a new source of conflict and challenge now that so many of the old antagonists had gone away or become allies. But we expect Star Trek fans to understand that ST antagonists are usually not cartoon villains out to blow up the universe, but nuanced, multifaceted, and often sympathetic; and that conflicts with antagonistic powers in ST are usually not about open warfare.
He's got a point, maybe they should have called it something like the Confederation of Allied Systems, the Mutual Defense League of Planets, or the Interstellar Concordat of Planets (feel free to use those names by the way).
It was originally going to be the Allied Cartel, and then it briefly became the Covenant until they realized HALO was already using that.
^Okay, one more time... it's not "Typhoon." That's a type of tropical storm in the Pacific Ocean. It's the Typhon Pact, one O, rhymes with "python," after the "Father of All Monsters" from Greek mythology.
Considering the view you support in this thread, you really shouldn't emphasize the etymology of 'typhon' - father of all monsters.
Except, of course, that the name of the Typhon Pact is not a meaningful allusion, anymore than having a character named "Zachary" makes that character an allusion to the Biblical prophet and to belief in a vengeful God. The etymological origin of the word "Typhon" is not a commentary on the Pact's nature.
He's got a point, maybe they should have called it something like the Confederation of Allied Systems, the Mutual Defense League of Planets, or the Interstellar Concordat of Planets (feel free to use those names by the way).
It was originally going to be the Allied Cartel, and then it briefly became the Covenant until they realized HALO was already using that.
Apropos of nothing, but I prefer the name David Mack gave its Mirror Universe counterpart: the Taurus Pact. "Taurus," to me, sounds more dramatic than "Typhon," and it also emphasizes the moral ambiguity of the situation by evoking the Taurus Reach, the site of some really horrible abuses by 23rd Century Federation authorities.
^Awesome! What's the Tzenkethi based on?
^Awesome! What's the Tzenkethi based on?
Except, of course, that the name of the Typhon Pact is not a meaningful allusion, anymore than having a character named "Zachary" makes that character an allusion to the Biblical prophet and to belief in a vengeful God. The etymological origin of the word "Typhon" is not a commentary on the Pact's nature.
It was originally going to be the Allied Cartel, and then it briefly became the Covenant until they realized HALO was already using that.
Plus they probably just used the name because the Typhon Expanse is where it formed.
Meanwhile, at the Legion of Doom...
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