Simon_Jester wrote:All he has to do is prove that the commissioning of the Enterprise-B in Generations and the fight against Chang in Undiscovered Country took place within the same year of the Gregorian calendar. Because that is the argument he's making to actually justify his claim.
Exactly.
Simon_Jester wrote:Google search any timeline of Star Trek events and you will get confirmation that The Undiscovered Country and the prologue events of Generations featuring the Enterprise-B's shakedown cruise both took place in 2293.
Google isn't Star Trek canon.
Only because someone claimed it somewhere along the way and this claim was repeated again and again doesn't make it true.
Even if the producers thought that "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country" is supposed to have happened in the year 2293 and have mentioned it somewhere and that this was repeated again and again - it is not canon.
I want to see canonical evidence.
Simon_Jester wrote:There is no reason for us to bother providing links for you at this point, because you are being lazy and repetitive and obtuse, not actually looking for information in good faith. This isn't even hard information to find, if you are willing to look for it and if you don't happen to be functionally illiterate in English.
I wouldn't accept any links - as they could merely repeat what someone has made up a long time ago.
I want to see canonical evidence.
Did they say anywhere in the movies or in the episodes that the battle of Khitomer or the commissioning of the Enterprise B happened in 2293?
Is there anything said in the movies or the episodes that let us conclude this?
Simon_Jester wrote:Yes. Google any reasonably complete timeline of events in the Star Trek universe. Say, the one on Memory Alpha or Wikipedia.
I do not accept Google, Memory Alpha or Wikipedia.
I want to see canonical evidence.
Google, Memory Alpha or Wikipedia are useful as a place-to-go to find informations about Star Trek. But they are no evidence in them-self. If Google, Memory Alpha or Wikipedia references to a movie or an episode and in this movie or episode it was said what Google, Memory Alpha or Wikipedia claims, than the movie or the episode is evidence. That's why there are usually footnotes. They are there that everyone can check if what they claim is correct. Only an idiot would repeat a claim made on Memory Alpha or Wikipedia without checking the references.
Simon_Jester wrote:Are you a chatbot? That's the third time you've used almost exactly the same phrasing. It's not like your request wasn't clear the first time. The problem is that you are too stupid to recognize when others are making factual claims like "three plus four is seven" and mindlessly spam demands for 'evidence' as a way of dragging out the discussion unnecessarily.
Ah - that the Battle of Khitomer happened in the year 2293 is now a factual claim like "three plus four is seven".
Simon_Jester wrote:Alternatively, the reporter was just plain incorrect, which happens quite easily and quite often.
I believe that too.
The difference between you and me is that I do not simply claim such things - maybe only because I do not like certain evidences.
I try to explain why it is plausible that the reporter was just plain
incorrect by showing the consequences, if he were correct. The consequences would have been that Kirk was round about 90 years old when the Enterprise-B was commissioned.
(Although in this case I think that the consequences would be possible in a time in which people can get 137 years old and still be an Admiral in Starfleet, checking over medical layout on the Enterprise-D (McCoy in the TNG episode "Encounter at Farpoint"). If that is possible, it is possible for Kirk to have been 90 years old when the Enterprise-B was commissioned. And it gets implausible to assume that he would retire when he is only sixty years old when he still has an expectancy of life of more than sixty years.)
Simon_Jester wrote:Use Occam's Razor for a change!
After you start to use your brain. I know: It is difficult. But you should try it.
Simon_Jester wrote:Which is more likely, a random thirty year time-skip between movies where the cast only ages three or four years between films?
I haven't claimed neither the one nor the other.
My opinion simply is that there is an indetermined time between the Battle of Khitomer and the commissioning of the Enterprise-B.
I do not know if it is one year, three years, five years or ten years.
What I know is that Kirk was retired already when the Enterprise-B was commissioned and that enough time has passed since then for a reporter to ask him what he has been doing since he retired and that his retirment lasted long enough for Scotty to presume that he finds it a little lonely.