That's basically what happened. The Eminians broadcast code seven ten in the teaser, which meant to approach the planet under no circumstances whatsoever. Kirk said that disregarding the code could provoke interplanetary war, so they knew full well going in that they were in a potentially dangerous situation. Fox ordered them in, because the Federation needed a port in that area.The whole “Armageddon” premise is preposterous. The Eminians could just radio every incoming ship with the warning “we are at war and any ships that enter our territory are subject to being targeted and those aboard killed. Put up marker buoys or whatever you want to prevent unneeded casualties, but stay the fuck out.”
Aw. I always liked that, because it depicted the sudden thrusting together of two species with evolutionary adaptations to different environments.
Aw. I always liked that, because it depicted the sudden thrusting together of two species with evolutionary adaptations to different environments.
Aw. I always liked that, because it depicted the sudden thrusting together of two species with evolutionary adaptations to different environments.
That's the "Poor communication kills" trope in action. If the Eminians explained WHY ships should stay away (y'all will get killed), WTH would any ever approach?That's basically what happened. The Eminians broadcast code seven ten in the teaser, which meant to approach the planet under no circumstances whatsoever. Kirk said that disregarding the code could provoke interplanetary war, so they knew full well going in that they were in a potentially dangerous situation. Fox ordered them in, because the Federation needed a port in that area.
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Code_710
Yeah, except the Gorn is moving so slowly his "hits" would be like pushes. Force of impact is mass and velocity derived. For this "attack" to be believable he has to be grabbing, not trying to hit Kirk.Aw. I always liked that, because it depicted the sudden thrusting together of two species with evolutionary adaptations to different environments.
In TOS terms, the question is, why wouldn't they go in to fix things, given that the area is a hazard?That's the "Poor communication kills" trope in action. If the Eminians explained WHY ships should stay away (y'all will get killed), WTH would any ever approach?
The Gorn isn't making a fist, and he's leading with the palm. It could easily be a grab attempt.Yeah, except the Gorn is moving so slowly his "hits" would be like pushes. Force of impact is mass and velocity derived. For this "attack" to be believable he has to be grabbing, not trying to hit Kirk.
Oh, absolutely, there are a great many scale issues in TOS. Noteworthy examples include "Where No Man..." and "Balance of Terror," when interstellar travel is posited to occur in a timely fashion at sublight.I don't think the Gorn costume could make a fist.
Back to Eminiar, if it and Vendikar are in the same system there's no reason any ship should need to go through it except to force contact on civilizations that don't want want it. Why? Here's a fun factoid about how big space is. If you have a 4K monitor and put a single pixel on the far left and imagine that pixel is the size of Pluto's orbit (about 80 AU, or 1 V'ger cloud), the nearest star, Proxima, would be ~3,278 pixels away. Alpha Centauri A & B would be ~3,316 pixels away, both fitting inside the same pixel with room to spare (being only about 11AU apart). Barnard's Star would not even appear because it's in a different direction at a distance of ~4,596 pixels. Assuming each star had a system of planet and objects roughly the size of ours out to the Kuiper belt, that's a whopping 3 pixels out of 8,294,400. Make that a cubical volume and the number of cubical pixels is 68,797,071,360,000 (68.8 trillion).
Now fly starships through that at random trajectories and see how likely it would be you'd get anywhere near any of those. Not only is the chance or need to go through any single pixel beyond unlikely, the threat within such a pixel is even more astromomically tiny, given Eminiar VI can't even hit the Enterprise when it orbits "out to maximum phaser range". Even assuming this is like 30 light seconds (which would be no orbit at all, being 23x as far as the Moon) the Eminian weapons can't even reach 1/1,364th of a pixel.
In short, they are no threat to anyone except people stupid enough to deliberately park right on top of them and say "shoot me".
As I said, it's a preposterous scenario as written.
^^^MCCOY: And from my observations, it seems they're bisexual, reproducing at will. And, brother, have they got a lot of will. "
It was certainly the incorrect term, but perhaps it was intended to mean that each tribble has both sets of sexual organs, allowing it to reproduce without mating?"Bisexual" would imply TWO sexes - He (well the script Writer David Gerrold) should have said: "Asexual"...(Unless DeForest Kelly mis-spoke the line and no one caught it.)
IIRC Gerrold himself addressed this error in his book on the subject of his Flat Cats episode.It was certainly the incorrect term, but perhaps it was intended to mean that each tribble has both sets of sexual organs, allowing it to reproduce without mating?
My last post of this subject (yeah, unless someone posts something too juicy to resist).There weren't a huge number of deaths in the star cluster over the years compared to the Federation's population, just thousands of deaths as Kirk [ed - sorry, actually Fox, in the teaser] said, but perhaps, for example with war in the offing with the Klingons, planners foresaw that many more ships might need to pass through the general area really soon, increasing the chances that mission critical ships might need to make emergency repairs in the cluster because they can't make any other base in time. Or maybe the Federation wanted things in the area settled, lest it become contested.
That's the general idea, anyway, without reference to any particulars, such as a specific hard sci-fi star chart.
Spock saying "My legs, they are broken" with no emotion.
At the end of "Turnabout Intruder" where Kirk asked Coleman to look after Lester.
Coleman was as guilty as Lester.
Does that mean prisons are mixed gender in the future?
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