They couldn't take the risk that somebody might SEE the communicator disappear in a flash of a transporter effect.
Right.
Because sending people armed with phase pistols was a much better plan.
Don't worry. It looks bad right now, all these puns flying around, but if we're patient we just Mayweather the storm.I'm with you, R. Star.That's a terrible pun.I suspect one of the producers didn't REED the script before approving it.![]()
But as ArcherNX01 has pointed out, so what if someone did? Anyone who claimed to have seen it vanish into thin air would just be accused of stealing or losing it. Look at what happened to Doc Silberman in T3 - he saw the T-1000 in action with his own eyes, and still managed to more or less convince himself he'd been delusional at the time.The risk of somebody seeing the communicator disappear into thin air would be much greater than sending crewmembers in, undercover, who might be able to grab the communicator and get away without anyone noticing. The fact that it got more complicated doesn't change the fact that the risk that it would do so was less.
^ What if there had been a crowd gathered round the communicator? Perhaps a group of scientists trying to take it apart and analyze it? Couldn't take that chance.
^ You saw what that society was like. Very warlike and paranoid. What if the disappearance of the communicator provoked fears that the other side had developed a doomsday weapon, and thus both sides went to war and destroyed themselves?
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