The general dampening field in The Doomsday Machine. How the hell do you "deactivate" antimatter?
Yes, I've often wondered the same myself...

The general dampening field in The Doomsday Machine. How the hell do you "deactivate" antimatter?
You throw the switch to OFF.The general dampening field in The Doomsday Machine. How the hell do you "deactivate" antimatter?
Still their planet. No reason for a bunch of colonists to start staking claims and pushing out the "kids".The natives might have something to say about that.Yeah & since they found a cure (in 4 days) for the disease it would be perfect for colinization.
"THe natives"
You mean the few ramaining children who were about to die of starvation or the disease that the crew saved them from by coming along.
And the fact that that they clearly wanted/needed adult supervision.
Still their planet. No reason for a bunch of colonists to start staking claims and pushing out the "kids".
Nah squatters are people who move in to other people property and take it as their own. (Like oh... I dunno, colonists?)Still their planet. No reason for a bunch of colonists to start staking claims and pushing out the "kids".
It's not their planet if they can't organize and run it in an orderly fashion. As it stands, they're basically just squatters.
The general dampening field in The Doomsday Machine. How the hell do you "deactivate" antimatter?
^And that's what they would've done if they'd had more money. This was a low-budget show. The networks were reluctant to go for it at all, fearing the expense of creating alien worlds. Roddenberry's "parallel development" conceit may have been an absurd bit of science fiction, but it was a brilliant piece of marketing, because it gave him a clear, high-concept "hook" for selling TV executives on the idea that the show could be affordable. If he'd said "We'll use existing backlots but dress them up just enough to look alien," it would've sounded more complicated and expensive and wouldn't have been as straightforward a sales pitch. It would've raised questions about just how much redressing would be necessary, and overcomplicated the sale. But by saying, "We'll have exact parallel worlds so we can build a story around leftovers from any period piece or contemporary drama," that's going to sound good to the penny-pinching executives.
(You know, come to think of it, it's amazing it took them until the third season to do a space Western.)
It wasn't designed to be used ship to ship FYI.![]()
They told you that? You must have spies aboard the Romulan ship.
Which is, umm, not ship-to-ship.They used it against the 'outposts' which DID have phasers---but they got knocked out in the sneak attack.![]()
We're on a starship in which the captain's hand movements are being monitored at all times but it can't be determined whether or not a crewman exited the ion pod before it was jettisoned and in which the best way to determine whether or not there is an extra person on board is to evacuate the entire crew, shut off the engines (while in orbit with admirals on board), and listen for his heartbeat.
Oh, and the best way to test the computer for tampering is to challenge it to a few games of chess.
And what the hell is an ion pod, anyway? Just why did that thing have to be manned in order to study an ion storm and then subsequently jettisoned to save the ship?
I love Court Martial, but it didn't make a damn bit of sense.
And some folks would have been at least in the general area of the ship as the 'ion pod', right?
And when the pod is jettisoned' there must be some noise of sound or vibration right. They must use some kind of explosive system to blast the pod clear of the ship, right.
Didn't, the second the pod was jettisoned, rescuers rush to the scene to see if Finney had got out in time?
"Yeah the minute the pod was jettisoned we rushed to the scene"
No more cracks about THE BOOK!!Even if the Horizon left a book behind and the apparently mostly human inhabitants took many ideas from it I seriously doubt their entire culture would have been restructured to imitate one book.
Nah squatters are people who move in to other people property and take it as their own. (Like oh... I dunno, colonists?)Still their planet. No reason for a bunch of colonists to start staking claims and pushing out the "kids".
It's not their planet if they can't organize and run it in an orderly fashion. As it stands, they're basically just squatters.
I doubt the Federation will open the planet to colonization anytime soon. More than likely the planet will be held in trust until the kids can run the place themselves. Thats how the UFPs rolls.Nah squatters are people who move in to other people property and take it as their own. (Like oh... I dunno, colonists?)It's not their planet if they can't organize and run it in an orderly fashion. As it stands, they're basically just squatters.
Still, though, the kids may have lived alone on that planet, but they obviously cannot effectively govern it - and they don't even have a legal claim to it.
If, for example, robbers break into a family home and kill the parents, but leave the kids alive, does that mean the kids now own the house? No.
Same story here. If a colonization party arrives on Miri's planet, it will be *theirs*, not the kids'. Because a planet with no government, no apparatus of state, is effectively abandoned. It doesn't matter if there's a bunch of kids there.
But...if it's antimatter, don't you have to throw the switch to ON?You throw the switch to OFF.The general dampening field in The Doomsday Machine. How the hell do you "deactivate" antimatter?![]()
But were they still kids? That's one of the things that always got me about the episode. if you had someone who was physically a fifteen years old, but had been alive over a hundred years, wouldn't that girl be intellectually an adult? Children on earth in adult situations for long enough can start to act like adults.Still, though, the kids may have lived alone on that planet, but they obviously cannot effectively govern it - and they don't even have a legal claim to it.
If, for example, robbers break into a family home and kill the parents, but leave the kids alive, does that mean the kids now own the house? No.
Same story here. If a colonization party arrives on Miri's planet, it will be *theirs*, not the kids'. Because a planet with no government, no apparatus of state, is effectively abandoned. It doesn't matter if there's a bunch of kids there.
But were they still kids? That's one of the things that always got me about the episode. if you had someone who was physically a fifteen years old, but had been alive over a hundred years, wouldn't that girl be intellectually an adult? Children on earth in adult situations for long enough can start to act like adults.Still, though, the kids may have lived alone on that planet, but they obviously cannot effectively govern it - and they don't even have a legal claim to it.
If, for example, robbers break into a family home and kill the parents, but leave the kids alive, does that mean the kids now own the house? No.
Same story here. If a colonization party arrives on Miri's planet, it will be *theirs*, not the kids'. Because a planet with no government, no apparatus of state, is effectively abandoned. It doesn't matter if there's a bunch of kids there.
I missed it, but a friend of mine said one of the girls in the background was pregnant?
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