Warp 10 + Cardassian Dreadnaught Missile = Pwnage?

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Post by Batman »

18-Till-I-Die wrote:
Praxis wrote:Gah, I want an edit button!
Infinite speed > Imperial Hyperdrive Speed, so getting them into Imperial space under cloak will be much easier than Imperial ships getting into Federation space.
This is also funny. Okay, so your ship has magic infinite speed!
So you press the warp button and warp for 1 billionth of a second.
You've just moved an infinite distance, and now your ship has overshot where it intended to go...by infinity. Ship instantly explodes from having outrun the universe.
Heh...dont put it past the Feds :lol:
No but i THINK he's trying to describe an instant-anywhere drive, like a space-fold, when he says 'infinite'.
I don't care what the guy is trying to describe.
Either het hets the (almost purely theoretical, I might add) Warp 10=infinite speed drive, in which case events unfold exactly as Praxis described, or he gets the Warp 10= faster than Warp 9.9x drive, which, as TRANSWARP is pitifully slow compared to hyperdrive...
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Post by Dark Hellion »

Multi-wankaphasic missle isn't copywritted is it Nick? I may wanna use that in my Fan-fic if I ever get it down on paper.
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Post by Stark »

Unless RSO (heh) is going to address the IMPORTANT points, this is futile.

1) Where does the Fed get all this AM? Even at 5 tons (which would likely be pretty useless), that's at least 3300 torpedoes (if you buy the TM) and more likely (from the 50kt visual rating) many, many more.

2) Can they even make it work? This is not a trivial question. The weapon is a synthesis of disparate and potentially self-defeating technology (high speed + cloak, for instance).

3) Can they hit anything? Inside SW galaxy, they've got bucklies of hitting anything deliberately. In the ST galaxy, the Imperial fleets have countermeasures. Not that the missiles need guidance :roll:

The early idea of the hundreds-of-meters-in-size-multi-wankaphasic projectile was bad enough, but chopping it down (to the scale yield of perhaps 250MT) makes its stupid AND useless. However he's picked and chosen the critisisms to respond to: he obviously can't defend his position.
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Post by Darth Servo »

Dark Hellion wrote:Multi-wankaphasic missle isn't copywritted is it Nick? I may wanna use that in my Fan-fic if I ever get it down on paper.
I believe the full technical term is "uber-multi-wankaphasic missle" :lol:
Stark wrote:Unless RSO (heh) is going to address the IMPORTANT points, this is futile.
Are you implying this trekkie reminds you of a certain Rabid Stuipd Asshole?[/quote]
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Wankaphasic

Post by Nick Lancaster »

Dark Hellion wrote:Multi-wankaphasic missle isn't copywritted is it Nick? I may wanna use that in my Fan-fic if I ever get it down on paper.
Nope, just fired that one from the hip. Enjoy.
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Re: Warp 10 + Cardassian Dreadnaught Missile = Pwnage?

Post by Junghalli »

Nick Lancaster wrote:Because Rihannsu established the terms by noting even the Klingons didn't have that level of callous disregard for humanoid life, and also specified that his location is 'hell'.
I believe that statement was originally in response to a jibe about how knowing the legendary incompetence of the Federation they'd probably test the missile on one of their own colonies. Rihannsu then said that not even Klingons would be so callous as to test a new weapon by using it on a planet full of their own citizens for no particular reason. This is worlds different from blowing up enemy planets.
Stack that on top of his incredible invention, his simplification of interstellar politics ("Can't we all just get along?") ... and my question about 'hell being where they send stupid people' is more than justified.
Faced with an enemy that's going to conquer and enslave them all it doesn't strike me as horribly unlikely that you could get the Romulans, Federation, and Cardassians to cooperate temporarily (i.e. until the threat has passed when they all go back to slitting each others throats with joyous abandon-or long hypocritical speaches in the Federation's case). You are generally right though that his missile idea has more holes than a Salvation Army shirt, just so we're clear on that I'm not defending it.
Furthermore, I have addressed his points relying on canon Star Trek sources. How does that make me guilty of "F3d $uxxors"?
You were saying that the Federation are such stupidly idealistic uber-moralists that they'll never fight dirty even if their entire existence is at stake. Frankly that does sound like Trek-bashing to me.
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Re: Warp 10 + Cardassian Dreadnaught Missile = Pwnage?

Post by Nick Lancaster »

Junghalli wrote:
Nick Lancaster wrote:Because Rihannsu established the terms by noting even the Klingons didn't have that level of callous disregard for humanoid life, and also specified that his location is 'hell'.
I believe that statement was originally in response to a jibe about how knowing the legendary incompetence of the Federation they'd probably test the missile on one of their own colonies. Rihannsu then said that not even Klingons would be so callous as to test a new weapon by using it on a planet full of their own citizens for no particular reason. This is worlds different from blowing up enemy planets.
How so? Rihannsu's statement places a value on humanoid life, but we're somehow supposed to accept that the Federation will discard said values to blow up a planet (i.e. civilian population) in order to win a war? If such were the case, moralists like Eric Pressman would be the rule, not the exception.
Faced with an enemy that's going to conquer and enslave them all it doesn't strike me as horribly unlikely that you could get the Romulans, Federation, and Cardassians to cooperate temporarily (i.e. until the threat has passed when they all go back to slitting each others throats with joyous abandon-or long hypocritical speaches in the Federation's case).
All the speeches about truth and nobility and the unquenchable human spirit distill down to, 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend'?

And Rihannsu wasn't talking about cooperation. He postulated both a Romulan command and open access to Federation/Starfleet data. You know, even when we sign treaties in the real world, we don't give the keys to NORAD and a free all-access pass to CIA Headquarters with them.
You are generally right though that his missile idea has more holes than a Salvation Army shirt, just so we're clear on that I'm not defending it.
Understood.
Furthermore, I have addressed his points relying on canon Star Trek sources. How does that make me guilty of "F3d $uxxors"?
You were saying that the Federation are such stupidly idealistic uber-moralists that they'll never fight dirty even if their entire existence is at stake. Frankly that does sound like Trek-bashing to me.[/quote]

So you're agreeing that the characters in Star Trek have the moral fiber of soggy corn flakes? A good character, a strong character, would wrestle with this kind of decision and be weighing it carefully. You don't cross that line easily, and once you have, you may find it's impossible to go back.

Can an idealist find himself in the uncomfortable position of having to kill millions and justify it to himself so he can sleep at night? Certainly, but
there has to be a cost. I believe the Federation would look for every possible alternative before coming up with something like Rihannsu's proposal. Note that Jean-Luc Picard was faced with this kind of dilemma in 'I, Borg,' - he was reluctant to expose Hugh to the visual paradox, unwilling to commit genocide; Admiral Necheyev took him to task for it. Yet, when we reach 'Descent,' we learn that Picard's decision also had other repercussions.

Yet, suddenly, our heroes are supposed to have the disposable, conditional morality that characterizes the villains? That the merest spectre of defeat will turn them into reprehensible lowlifes who develop and deploy planet-busting weapons?

So, no, it's not as simple as saying, 'F3d$ $uxxors,' - but understanding why a character makes a decision, and Rihannsu's proposition on that score simply isn't realistic for the Trek paradigm.
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Re: Warp 10 + Cardassian Dreadnaught Missile = Pwnage?

Post by Junghalli »

Nick Lancaster wrote:How so? Rihannsu's statement places a value on humanoid life, but we're somehow supposed to accept that the Federation will discard said values to blow up a planet (i.e. civilian population) in order to win a war? If such were the case, moralists like Eric Pressman would be the rule, not the exception.
How so? You're kidding, right? Testing that weapon on one of your own planets would be like testing a prototype nuclear bomb by detonating it in the middle of one of your own cities. Anybody who does that is more than simply callous; they're flaming insane! Yes, the Federation places value on human life, that doesn't mean they'd rather be conquered than bomb civilian targets.
All the speeches about truth and nobility and the unquenchable human spirit distill down to, 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend'?
Why not? It's got to be one of the fastest ways to get people to set aside their differences. A common enemy often does more good for international cooperation than ten years of peace negotiations. :P
And Rihannsu wasn't talking about cooperation. He postulated both a Romulan command and open access to Federation/Starfleet data.
LOLMAO! That would be like us handing China all our classified data! :lol:
So you're agreeing that the characters in Star Trek have the moral fiber of soggy corn flakes? A good character, a strong character, would wrestle with this kind of decision and be weighing it carefully. You don't cross that line easily, and once you have, you may find it's impossible to go back.
Sure, a strong character wouldn't rush into something like that, but in the end he'd also do what was neccessary. Remember why the AFD lost in the Drakaverse? They sat on their hands and refused to do what was neccessary, and the result was they got turned into the Draka's bitches (knowing the Snakes probably literally in many cases :lol: ). There's respect for life and then there's cowardice and suicidal idealism.
Can an idealist find himself in the uncomfortable position of having to kill millions and justify it to himself so he can sleep at night?
If it's what takes to prevent the destruction of his own country then yes, he should, or he's being a goody two-shoes to the point of stupidity. When your survival is at stake and you're facing a massively superior opponent you can't afford not to use every dirty trick you have.
Certainly, but
there has to be a cost. I believe the Federation would look for every possible alternative before coming up with something like Rihannsu's proposal.
Quite likely they would, but an enemy like the Empire doesn't leave very many alternatives, do they...
Yet, suddenly, our heroes are supposed to have the disposable, conditional morality that characterizes the villains? That the merest spectre of defeat will turn them into reprehensible lowlifes who develop and deploy planet-busting weapons?
No, they're supposed to do what is neccessary to save their country and their way of life. It's ridiculous to think their aversion to getting blood on their hands is so great they'd rather be destroyed than deploy WMDs. That's not principle, that's being an idiot.
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Post by Rihannsu Science Officer »

1. Warstard: I call your literacy skills into question, I did concede that Warp 10 is unreliable for missiles that are aimed on a specific target, and maybe you don't know, but the Federation HAS developed transwarp technology, it's just not advanced to the point where it's safe and reliable for use on ships, hence my suggestion for use on missiles, which only have to last long enough to hit a ship.

2. If I performed the calcs right (this time I went straight to the Science Page that Mr. Wong so graciously provided), a 5 ton (5,000 kg) M/AM warhead carries a payload of 4.5E20 J = 1.07E14 KG = 10,700 MT, or 10.7 GT, equivalent to the firepower of hundreds of quantum torpedoes. I'm not an engineer and I don't claim to be. I originally posited the 1,000,000 ton warhead as an example, before I did any math or bothered to find out how powerful the original Dreadnaught missile is.

3. Does anyone know what "relatively" means? I never said the ISD was weak anywhere, just that it must have a spot that's weaker compared to the rest of the ISD.

4. Of course the Federation will fight dirty in order to survive. It is claimed on many DS9 episodes that the Bajorans were very peaceful until they had to expel their brutal Cardassian oppressors ("spoonheads"), and they were willing to dirty their hands for their freedom. The Federation is peaceful too, it will fight, and fight dirty. It's dirty enough to have Section 31 (no, I won't launch into any wankery about them like that guy on the Hate Mail page, I'm just citing them as evidence that the Federation can be quite dirty at times.)

5. I do not appreciate being compared to Darkstar. I'm beginning to think that what his enemies call "WoI" might be a simple case of not reading carefully through dozens of counter-posts to refute each and every rebuttal. However, he is so hated on these forums that I can't help but perceive any comparison to him as offensive.
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Post by Techno_Union »

Rihannsu Science Officer wrote: 2. If I performed the calcs right (this time I went straight to the Science Page that Mr. Wong so graciously provided), a 5 ton (5,000 kg) M/AM warhead carries a payload of 4.5E20 J = 1.07E14 KG = 10,700 MT, or 10.7 GT, equivalent to the firepower of hundreds of quantum torpedoes. I'm not an engineer and I don't claim to be. I originally posited the 1,000,000 ton warhead as an example, before I did any math or bothered to find out how powerful the original Dreadnaught missile is.
Only 10GT? Really what are you actually planning to destroy with that?
3. Does anyone know what "relatively" means? I never said the ISD was weak anywhere, just that it must have a spot that's weaker compared to the rest of the ISD.
Well, I can tell ya that 10GT ain't gonna do much of anything to an ISD. IIRC, their shields at at least 16TT+/sec.
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Post by SirNitram »

Rihannsu Science Officer wrote:1. Warstard: I call your literacy skills into question, I did concede that Warp 10 is unreliable for missiles that are aimed on a specific target, and maybe you don't know, but the Federation HAS developed transwarp technology, it's just not advanced to the point where it's safe and reliable for use on ships, hence my suggestion for use on missiles, which only have to last long enough to hit a ship.
You call other people's reading ability into question then start using Warp 10 and Transwarp interchangably? This one speaks for itself.
2. If I performed the calcs right (this time I went straight to the Science Page that Mr. Wong so graciously provided), a 5 ton (5,000 kg) M/AM warhead carries a payload of 4.5E20 J = 1.07E14 KG = 10,700 MT, or 10.7 GT, equivalent to the firepower of hundreds of quantum torpedoes. I'm not an engineer and I don't claim to be. I originally posited the 1,000,000 ton warhead as an example, before I did any math or bothered to find out how powerful the original Dreadnaught missile is.
Wow. 10GT. Should only take one thousand of those impacting in one second to disable an Acclamator's shields, with their canonical shielding(AOTC ICS)...
3. Does anyone know what "relatively" means? I never said the ISD was weak anywhere, just that it must have a spot that's weaker compared to the rest of the ISD.
Shields do not have this requirement.
4. Of course the Federation will fight dirty in order to survive. It is claimed on many DS9 episodes that the Bajorans were very peaceful until they had to expel their brutal Cardassian oppressors ("spoonheads"), and they were willing to dirty their hands for their freedom. The Federation is peaceful too, it will fight, and fight dirty. It's dirty enough to have Section 31 (no, I won't launch into any wankery about them like that guy on the Hate Mail page, I'm just citing them as evidence that the Federation can be quite dirty at times.)
Yes, the Federation has rebels. The Maquis are a good example. These folks, however, do not have massive facilities building missiles the size of starships and equipped with bleeding-edge tech.
5. I do not appreciate being compared to Darkstar. I'm beginning to think that what his enemies call "WoI" might be a simple case of not reading carefully through dozens of counter-posts to refute each and every rebuttal. However, he is so hated on these forums that I can't help but perceive any comparison to him as offensive.
As you should. Maybe if you get offended regularly enough, you'll realize that you're acting like an asstard.
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Post by Spacebeard »

Rihannsu Science Officer wrote:1. Warstard: I call your literacy skills into question, I did concede that Warp 10 is unreliable for missiles that are aimed on a specific target, and maybe you don't know, but the Federation HAS developed transwarp technology, it's just not advanced to the point where it's safe and reliable for use on ships, hence my suggestion for use on missiles, which only have to last long enough to hit a ship.
I told you that Starfleet cannot build even simple unmanned probes using transwarp drives, as shown in "Pathfinder" (VOY). Considering that they've been experimenting with this since ST III and still can't produce a working vehicle, it seems unlikely that they will anytime soon.

You've also been told repeatedly that TRANSWARP IS NOT WARP 10. Warp 10 is an asymptotic limit on a graph, not an attainable speed, no matter what Tom Paris said on Voyager. Transwarp is much faster than normal warp, but not by any means in the same league as hyperdrive.

So if we very generously assume that they manage to cobble together a working missile out of a couple of technobabble one-episode wonders, it will:
  • - Be much slower than a standard Star Wars hyperdrive, so it can be outrun by any hyper-capable ship.

    - Light up like a Christmas tree on long-range sensors with or without a cloak, due to its high warp speed, so the Empire (or even Federation) could see it coming quite soon enough to take action.

    - Be so fragile, due to tenuous antimatter containment and the stresses on its hull imposed by high warp factors, that it will easily be shot down before reaching its target.

    - Detonate with a minute fraction of the power of a single shot from the guns on a Clone Wars-era troop transport. It wouldn't scratch any warship from the Star Wars galaxy, let alone shielded planets.
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Post by Nick Lancaster »

Rihannsu Science Officer wrote:1. Warstard: I call your literacy skills into question, I did concede that Warp 10 is unreliable for missiles that are aimed on a specific target, and maybe you don't know, but the Federation HAS developed transwarp technology, it's just not advanced to the point where it's safe and reliable for use on ships, hence my suggestion for use on missiles, which only have to last long enough to hit a ship.
Would you be speaking to me, perhaps?

Clearly, for me to have posted several times over WHY Warp 10 is not a valid solution, I'm not the only one with a severe literacy deficit. And you've still not got it straight - Warp 10 is not 'unreliable' as a means of propulsion, Warp 10 does not work.

Why is transwarp, which is unstable for a ship, going to be more stable for a missile at interstellar distances? Unsafe, unreliable ... and you're going to bet the bank on equipping a missile with it?
2. If I performed the calcs right (this time I went straight to the Science Page that Mr. Wong so graciously provided), a 5 ton (5,000 kg) M/AM warhead carries a payload of 4.5E20 J = 1.07E14 KG = 10,700 MT, or 10.7 GT, equivalent to the firepower of hundreds of quantum torpedoes. I'm not an engineer and I don't claim to be. I originally posited the 1,000,000 ton warhead as an example, before I did any math or bothered to find out how powerful the original Dreadnaught missile is.
Yield is still irrelevant when the delivery system is nothing but an ill-conceived wish. At first, you didn't even have a propulsion system, then you pinned all your hopes an unsafe, unreliable system, justifying it with, "It has to blow up anyway."
3. Does anyone know what "relatively" means? I never said the ISD was weak anywhere, just that it must have a spot that's weaker compared to the rest of the ISD.
Unfortunately, when you downgraded the missile from its original wankophasic statistics, you also reduced it to the point of being ineffective against an ISD.
4. Of course the Federation will fight dirty in order to survive. It is claimed on many DS9 episodes that the Bajorans were very peaceful until they had to expel their brutal Cardassian oppressors ("spoonheads"), and they were willing to dirty their hands for their freedom. The Federation is peaceful too, it will fight, and fight dirty. It's dirty enough to have Section 31 (no, I won't launch into any wankery about them like that guy on the Hate Mail page, I'm just citing them as evidence that the Federation can be quite dirty at times.)
At no point did the Bajorans launch into wishful thinking about planet-busting devices and uber-torpedos. And despite the Bajoran Resistance, there were people who knuckled under and even cooperated freely with the Cardassian rule, because they weren't willing to die.

Yet somehow, you've come to the conclusion that there will be this wonderfully unifying moment of truth where the Federation, the Romulan Empire, the Klingon Empire, the Cardassian Empire, even the Borg are all going to hold hands and sing Kumbaya?

I'll ask the question again: what are you willing to do, how far are you willing to go? You've made a decision for millions of people that simply doesn't wash. You're going to have the people who believe in non-violence, you're going to have the people who don't care as long as they're left alone.
5. I do not appreciate being compared to Darkstar. I'm beginning to think that what his enemies call "WoI" might be a simple case of not reading carefully through dozens of counter-posts to refute each and every rebuttal. However, he is so hated on these forums that I can't help but perceive any comparison to him as offensive.
The odd thing is, most of the rebuttals addressed the same points, yet you continued to insist on 'Warp 10' (and now 'Transwarp') as a valid application.

From my understanding, Darkstar did this ad infinitum on a variety of topics. You'd think after a couple of rounds, he'd learn something?

So you repeat some of the same methodology and take umbrage when you're classified in the same group? Sorry, it really does say something when Trek fan after Trek fan comes up with nothing but uber-weapon wankery to try and out-do the Empire. Torpedos. Transporters. Transwarp.

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Re: Warp 10 + Cardassian Dreadnaught Missile = Pwnage?

Post by Nick Lancaster »

Junghalli wrote:
Nick Lancaster wrote:How so? Rihannsu's statement places a value on humanoid life, but we're somehow supposed to accept that the Federation will discard said values to blow up a planet (i.e. civilian population) in order to win a war? If such were the case, moralists like Eric Pressman would be the rule, not the exception.
How so? You're kidding, right? Testing that weapon on one of your own planets would be like testing a prototype nuclear bomb by detonating it in the middle of one of your own cities. Anybody who does that is more than simply callous; they're flaming insane! Yes, the Federation places value on human life, that doesn't mean they'd rather be conquered than bomb civilian targets.
Yet we see no application of strategy here, just a proclamation that bombing civilian targets or Imperial worlds will somehow make it a fair fight.

It's morally reprehensible (in the Trek universe) *and* tactically unsound.

All the speeches about truth and nobility and the unquenchable human spirit distill down to, 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend'?
Why not? It's got to be one of the fastest ways to get people to set aside their differences. A common enemy often does more good for international cooperation than ten years of peace negotiations. :P
This assumes some commonality among the populace to begin with. A unified threat on a global scale might bring Earth together, but not necessarily result in automatic harmony with the Romulans or the Cardassians.

You also have to sell the threat as being the same to the Romulans, et al as it is to the Federation.
And Rihannsu wasn't talking about cooperation. He postulated both a Romulan command and open access to Federation/Starfleet data.
LOLMAO! That would be like us handing China all our classified data! :lol:
Exactly.
So you're agreeing that the characters in Star Trek have the moral fiber of soggy corn flakes? A good character, a strong character, would wrestle with this kind of decision and be weighing it carefully. You don't cross that line easily, and once you have, you may find it's impossible to go back.
Sure, a strong character wouldn't rush into something like that, but in the end he'd also do what was neccessary. Remember why the AFD lost in the Drakaverse? They sat on their hands and refused to do what was neccessary, and the result was they got turned into the Draka's bitches (knowing the Snakes probably literally in many cases :lol: ). There's respect for life and then there's cowardice and suicidal idealism.
Drakaverse? Whatchu talkin' 'bout, Willis?

Since when has it been a rule that people MUST accept brutality when their ideals would otherwise result in their extermination? Why is it cowardice to NOT choose a brutal path?

Rihannsu (and yourself, to some extent) have been treating this as switch-flip kind of proposition. Has it occurred to you that the limited supply of super-torpedos would do little, if anything, to slow the Imperial fleet OR significantly impact its military capability? Attack the planets, and the fleet pounds you. Attack the fleet, and they produce more ships.

This isn't a throwaway decision, not on moral terms or on strategic terms.
Can an idealist find himself in the uncomfortable position of having to kill millions and justify it to himself so he can sleep at night?
If it's what takes to prevent the destruction of his own country then yes, he should, or he's being a goody two-shoes to the point of stupidity. When your survival is at stake and you're facing a massively superior opponent you can't afford not to use every dirty trick you have.
Go pick up a history book and read about Winston Churchill and Coventry.

I actually know someone who can't process that choice, she'd choose to save the city regardless of its impact on World War II.

Yet, suddenly, our heroes are supposed to have the disposable, conditional morality that characterizes the villains? That the merest spectre of defeat will turn them into reprehensible lowlifes who develop and deploy planet-busting weapons?
No, they're supposed to do what is neccessary to save their country and their way of life. It's ridiculous to think their aversion to getting blood on their hands is so great they'd rather be destroyed than deploy WMDs. That's not principle, that's being an idiot.
[/quote]

You're still viewing this as an all-or-nothing choice between pacfism and WMDs, when I have not proposed this in any way. That you can ONLY see this in terms of KILL THE BASTARDS! RAAAAAAAA! means the Empire has won. They've made you accept their terms, a military confrontation, which you cannot hope to win. So you'll sell your souls for a one-shot (and a badly designed one-shot, at that), when its use won't even slow the military juggernaut of the Empire.

You compromised your morals for nothing. That's being an idiot.
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Post by Stark »

I'd just like to pop in and point out that RSO hasn't addressed any of the IMPORTANT points. Many posters have raised important issues with his uber missile - and he's made no effort to support his claims. He has so far described a weapon which is a) unlikely b) uses far larger amounts of AM than ST would usually produce and b) won't do jack shit anyway. And NOW he's arguing politics, and not the original point. I don't really have anything to add.

Oh, and he's resorted to insults. It's OUR fault that his idea was stupid. :roll:

I am kind of hurt that he hasn't directly addressed me once in this whole debate, though. I know I'm a junior member, but still! Hrrumph.
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Post by 18-Till-I-Die »

So to sum it up for those of us who arent willing to wade through a billion reply/rebuttals...what is the crux, the jist, of this scenario or argument or whatever?

That, hypothetically, if every major Star Trek power including the Borg joined forces and pooled resources and openly traded technology they could build a fleet of starbase-sized antimatter freighters with instant-anywhere drives that can destroy Imperial planets in retaliation for Base Delta Zeroes?

Excuse me if i missed something, but that seems to be the basic idea.
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Post by Stark »

Three pages and you complain. Kids these days :)

That *was* the gist of it. He since changed 'starbase-sized missiles' to 'starship sized missiles' and 'destroy Imperial planets' to 'do shit all to Imperial warships'. He's quite mad.
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Post by 18-Till-I-Die »

Stark wrote:Three pages and you complain. Kids these days :)

That *was* the gist of it. He since changed 'starbase-sized missiles' to 'starship sized missiles' and 'destroy Imperial planets' to 'do shit all to Imperial warships'. He's quite mad.
I aint got time to read!

Plus if i'm getting this right, these are like 10gt missiles. Which truely will do dick to any Imperial shields. And also, it says something about piss poor firepower when a starship sized missile is required to meet a fraction of the firepower of your enemy's main guns.

But yeah lets shake the pillars of heaven! Ten gigatons! Yeah...that'll...maybe take out the Millennium Falcon's shields. That shifty Han Solo will be so pwned by the Feds!
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Post by Darth Servo »

Rihannsu Science Officer wrote:1. Warstard: I call your literacy skills into question,
Just as we call your scientific and engineering knowledge into question.
I did concede that Warp 10 is unreliable for missiles that are aimed on a specific target, and maybe you don't know, but the Federation HAS developed transwarp technology, it's just not advanced to the point where it's safe and reliable for use on ships, hence my suggestion for use on missiles, which only have to last long enough to hit a ship.
AND be able to target accurately enough. Considering that ISDs are NOT stationary targets, this will be a bit tricky. The original cardi dreadnaught was headed straight for a planet that couldn't get out of the way. And WHEN did the Federation have Transwarp besides ST3? We've heard NOTHING about it since inspite of 80 years since then to work on it.
2. If I performed the calcs right (this time I went straight to the Science Page that Mr. Wong so graciously provided), a 5 ton (5,000 kg) M/AM warhead carries a payload of 4.5E20 J = 1.07E14 KG = 10,700 MT, or 10.7 GT, equivalent to the firepower of hundreds of quantum torpedoes.
And the big turbolasers on the Acclamator from AOTC are rated at almost 20 times that per shot. 10 GT won't even scratch an IDS's shields.
I'm not an engineer and I don't claim to be. I originally posited the 1,000,000 ton warhead as an example, before I did any math or bothered to find out how powerful the original Dreadnaught missile is.
OK.

3. Does anyone know what "relatively" means?
Yes we do but clearly you do not.
I never said the ISD was weak anywhere, just that it must have a spot that's weaker compared to the rest of the ISD.
But you STILL have no numbers on how much it would take. If (for example) an ISD's standard shields require 10 TT to take down, and a particular "weak spot" was 1/10 that, it would still require 1000 of your hypothetical weapons to breach that "relative" weakspot.
4. Of course the Federation will fight dirty in order to survive. It is claimed on many DS9 episodes that the Bajorans were very peaceful until they had to expel their brutal Cardassian oppressors ("spoonheads"), and they were willing to dirty their hands for their freedom.
Bajorans don't wax poetic about the importance of morals either the way the Federation does. IICR, Kira and Sisco were constantly arguing about how to fight.
The Federation is peaceful too, it will fight, and fight dirty.
Right. Thats why Picard when given a change to wipe out the borg collective out-right refused to use the invasive program on Hugh.
It's dirty enough to have Section 31 (no, I won't launch into any wankery about them like that guy on the Hate Mail page, I'm just citing them as evidence that the Federation can be quite dirty at times.)
Correction--a small handful of humans can fight dirty at times.
5. I do not appreciate being compared to Darkstar. I'm beginning to think that what his enemies call "WoI" might be a simple case of not reading carefully through dozens of counter-posts to refute each and every rebuttal. However, he is so hated on these forums that I can't help but perceive any comparison to him as offensive.
Its not that you don'carefully read through dozens of rebuttals. Its that you don't address the MAJOR POINTS brought against your idea.
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Post by Praxis »

18-Till-I-Die wrote:So to sum it up for those of us who arent willing to wade through a billion reply/rebuttals...what is the crux, the jist, of this scenario or argument or whatever?

That, hypothetically, if every major Star Trek power including the Borg joined forces and pooled resources and openly traded technology they could build a fleet of starbase-sized antimatter freighters with instant-anywhere drives that can destroy Imperial planets in retaliation for Base Delta Zeroes?

Excuse me if i missed something, but that seems to be the basic idea.
His arguement is that you can take the Dreadnaught missle, scale it up (despite the fact that scaling size 1x increases mass 10x) a couple times and fill it with antimatter, stick some magical warp 10 drive that makes it warp anywhere instantly, not worry about shields and navigation to save money, and build so many of these that you can send them out and use these gigantic missles to take out ISD's and Imperial planets all over the place.
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Post by Darth Servo »

Praxis wrote:His arguement is that you can take the Dreadnaught missle, scale it up (despite the fact that scaling size 1x increases mass 10x) a couple times and fill it with antimatter, stick some magical warp 10 drive that makes it warp anywhere instantly, not worry about shields and navigation to save money, and build so many of these that you can send them out and use these gigantic missles to take out ISD's and Imperial planets all over the place.
IOW, like Nick said, the "uber-multi-wankaphasic missle". :lol:
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Re: Warp 10 + Cardassian Dreadnaught Missile = Pwnage?

Post by Junghalli »

Nick Lancaster wrote:Yet we see no application of strategy here, just a proclamation that bombing civilian targets or Imperial worlds will somehow make it a fair fight.
When answering your question I was operating under the assumption that the missiles actually could be the uberwank weapon RSO proposes (i.e. an intergalactic gun capable of hitting planets in the Empire). This would be good in that, unlike virtually every other weapons the Trek side has, with this they could theoretically actually hurt the Empire. On the other hand, considering the massive advantages the Empire would still have, they'd better be able to produce truly vast numbers of missiles or else all it would likely do is make the Imps mad. And of course for now we won't get into the fact that this weapon is about as likely to work as a combat blimp.
This assumes some commonality among the populace to begin with. A unified threat on a global scale might bring Earth together, but not necessarily result in automatic harmony with the Romulans or the Cardassians.
Yeah, it all depends on how the Empire is acting in this scenario. If they're blatantly on a war of conquest against the entire Trekverse the Cardassians and Romulans would probably cooperate with the Federation. If they were sneakier about it quite probably the opposite would be the case, as nobody wants to piss of the new juggernaut stomping around the neighborhood.
Drakaverse? Whatchu talkin' 'bout, Willis?
I was referring to a series of alternate history books by SM Sterling. It was the first example I could think of of a society that refused to do the nasty stuff necessary to take down a dangerous enemy and paid dearly for it. If you want a real life example just look at Nazi appeasers in Europe before WWII. Oh no, give Hitler the Sudetenland, we can't risk war with him no matter what he does!
Since when has it been a rule that people MUST accept brutality when their ideals would otherwise result in their extermination? Why is it cowardice to NOT choose a brutal path?
If you're in a kill or be killed situation it is IMO generally smart to do what is neccessary to defend oneself. Of course one should avoid inflicting needless death and suffering. Of course killing should be avoided when possible. Hell, I sort of agree with Picard for not wanting to commit genocide against the Borg! But when your back's to the wall and the only way to escape complete destruction is to do some nasty shit then you do what's necessary. Do you really think that if the Federation had many thousands of these wanktastic missiles they should go "well, we could really hurt the Empire with these things, and if we don't use them they'll crush us like bugs, but oh noes it would mean killing lots of people so we'll just sit here and die rather than use them!"? Does that honestly strike you as a sensible position?
Rihannsu (and yourself, to some extent) have been treating this as switch-flip kind of proposition. Has it occurred to you that the limited supply of super-torpedos would do little, if anything, to slow the Imperial fleet OR significantly impact its military capability?
I was here working of the assumption that RSO's wet dream came true. With a realistic set of assumptions these missiles are going to about as useful as a wet beanbag in a punching match.
Attack the planets, and the fleet pounds you. Attack the fleet, and they produce more ships.
This isn't a throwaway decision, not on moral terms or on strategic terms.
<Cough> sorry, I have a terrible allergy to straw... Did I ever say it would be a throwaway decision?
Realistically, even if these things work their value is dubious, because to actually hurt the Empire bad enough to make them pull back you'd either have to destroy thousands of ships or thousands of worlds, and these missiles don't sound like you could exactly turn them out like cheap cars. Perhaps the best thing to do would be to target it at Coruscant and hope Palpatine's at home. If he dies the Empire will collapse into civil war and hopefully that would keep the heat off the Trekverse galaxy for a while. For this to work it would be best if you don't reveal that you have the weapon, so that the destruction of Coruscant is a mysterious accident that can't be traced back to you (if the Empire's surviving Moffs find out it was you that killed their Emperor and destroyed their capitol they might decide to take a little payback... and that would be very ugly).
Of course, all this assumes that RSO's insane missile design would actually work as advertised, which I doubt.
You're still viewing this as an all-or-nothing choice between pacfism and WMDs, when I have not proposed this in any way. That you can ONLY see this in terms of KILL THE BASTARDS! RAAAAAAAA! means the Empire has won. They've made you accept their terms, a military confrontation, which you cannot hope to win.
Well then, what would you do in their position? Give up and hope your new Emperor isn't as bad as he's cracked up to be?
So you'll sell your souls for a one-shot (and a badly designed one-shot, at that), when its use won't even slow the military juggernaut of the Empire.
You compromised your morals for nothing. That's being an idiot.
Whereas you would take it off the table completely because "oh no, we're the good guys, we can't kill civilians!"? If you have a potentially useful weapon then it only makes sense to start thinking about ways that it can be used. I'm real interested to hear your strategy, as at this point it seems to me to amount to roll over and die.
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Post by buzz_knox »

The problem is that even if the technology worked exactly as you planned, you'd end up with a weapon with a yield (assuming 100% efficiency and all energies focused on the target) of 3 gigatons. That means this very expensive and difficult to produce weapon has a yield superior to SW fighter weapons. It would be devastating against ST targets and ships, but paltry against SW targets.

The appropriate comparison is this. We can build an ICBM or cruise missile capable of extreme accuracy, but it's meaningless if the payload is just a 250 lb general purpose bomb. There are far more efficient ways of achieving a far better result.
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Re: Warp 10 + Cardassian Dreadnaught Missile = Pwnage?

Post by Nick Lancaster »

Junghalli wrote:
Drakaverse? Whatchu talkin' 'bout, Willis?
I was referring to a series of alternate history books by SM Sterling. It was the first example I could think of of a society that refused to do the nasty stuff necessary to take down a dangerous enemy and paid dearly for it. If you want a real life example just look at Nazi appeasers in Europe before WWII. Oh no, give Hitler the Sudetenland, we can't risk war with him no matter what he does!
Is that the 'Marching Through Georgia' series? Glanced at it, but did not read it.
Since when has it been a rule that people MUST accept brutality when their ideals would otherwise result in their extermination? Why is it cowardice to NOT choose a brutal path?
If you're in a kill or be killed situation it is IMO generally smart to do what is neccessary to defend oneself. Of course one should avoid inflicting needless death and suffering. Of course killing should be avoided when possible. Hell, I sort of agree with Picard for not wanting to commit genocide against the Borg! But when your back's to the wall and the only way to escape complete destruction is to do some nasty shit then you do what's necessary.
Yet the Federation has never demonstrated this, partly because of the trend to develop technological deus-ex solutions. Whether faced with the Borg or the Dominion, time and again, the Federation chooses military conflict and holding actions over going all-in.

Perhaps deploying a superweapon is sensible for you or I, just as the decision to drop the bomb on Hiroshima was sensible for Truman ... but the Federation (more than the military commanders who would see the necessity) simply won't buy into this suicide-or-survival pact.
Do you really think that if the Federation had many thousands of these wanktastic missiles they should go "well, we could really hurt the Empire with these things, and if we don't use them they'll crush us like bugs, but oh noes it would mean killing lots of people so we'll just sit here and die rather than use them!"? Does that honestly strike you as a sensible position?
We're not talking about me. We're talking about the Federation, which has been depicted as packed with reluctant warriors. In-your-face commanders like Jellico and Pressman are shown to be the exception, with the latter being painted as a criminal of the worst sort.

Section 31 came up with the mutagenic plague. What did someone else in the Federation do? He developed a cure and gave it to Odo, who gave it to the Great Link. Oooooh, the Prime Founder gets all warm and fuzzy and repents her evil ways. Where is this 'swallow your objections and do what must be done'?

It ain't there.
Rihannsu (and yourself, to some extent) have been treating this as switch-flip kind of proposition. Has it occurred to you that the limited supply of super-torpedos would do little, if anything, to slow the Imperial fleet OR significantly impact its military capability?
I was here working of the assumption that RSO's wet dream came true. With a realistic set of assumptions these missiles are going to about as useful as a wet beanbag in a punching match.
Understood.
Attack the planets, and the fleet pounds you. Attack the fleet, and they produce more ships.
This isn't a throwaway decision, not on moral terms or on strategic terms.
<Cough> sorry, I have a terrible allergy to straw... Did I ever say it would be a throwaway decision?
No, and I never said you did. I classified it as such because it discards established Federation history and what we've seen in the series/films. It even contradicts our own real-world history, which parallels the Federation's up through the 1960's.

I'm not arguing absence of capability because there has never been a situation where it can be tested, I'm arguing the absence of capability because we have seen such situations, and there's none of this band-of-brothers/good-day-to-die heroics that Rihannsu suggested.
Realistically, even if these things work their value is dubious, because to actually hurt the Empire bad enough to make them pull back you'd either have to destroy thousands of ships or thousands of worlds, and these missiles don't sound like you could exactly turn them out like cheap cars.
Neither of which would necessarily make a significant impact.

And here's another dimension to the problem - knowledge of the Empire presumes there has already been contact/conflict with the Empire. Even if the Empire came in and executed a first strike, the Federation would still be scratching its head as it did with the Borg. (Note that the Romulans DID offer to exchange information, but dropped out of the storyline shortly thereafter.)

So either the Federation has been building these monster torpedos as a just-in-case device, or they're desperately racing to save their bacon. In the meantime, the Empire is gobbling up worlds - not just destroying them outright, but establishing garrisons and military rule, draining further resources and issuing propaganda. The folks on the ground aren't going to buck up and say, "That's all right, the Federation is gonna come and kick your Imperial Arse!"
Perhaps the best thing to do would be to target it at Coruscant and hope Palpatine's at home. If he dies the Empire will collapse into civil war and hopefully that would keep the heat off the Trekverse galaxy for a while.
Coruscant? Where's that? Where did this information come from?

If the Empire takes one Federation world, they have access to the Federation database. (Of course, such data would have to be confirmed through interrogations.) That is, they're on site, conducting intelligence-gathering missions.

The Federation hasn't done anything similar. Probes won't go that far; even if there's a convenient wormhole and we grant that it exits a suitable distance away from each galaxy's core worlds, the Federation probe is hopelessly lost at sea - it may not even be able to process holonet transmissions.

Your estimation of civil war in the wake of the Emperor's demise is metaknowledge - this is what happened in fiction after said event. To make this determination otherwise would require a far more extensive assessment of the Empire and its capabilities.
For this to work it would be best if you don't reveal that you have the weapon, so that the destruction of Coruscant is a mysterious accident that can't be traced back to you (if the Empire's surviving Moffs find out it was you that killed their Emperor and destroyed their capitol they might decide to take a little payback... and that would be very ugly).
Of course, all this assumes that RSO's insane missile design would actually work as advertised, which I doubt.
You might be able to conceal the smaller version, but we've already determined the smaller-yield model is useless against the Empire.

Hiding the jumbo-sized model (1000% more antimatter, free!) would be
like keeping an elephant in your backyard. Someone's going to notice, cloak or no cloak.
You're still viewing this as an all-or-nothing choice between pacfism and WMDs, when I have not proposed this in any way. That you can ONLY see this in terms of KILL THE BASTARDS! RAAAAAAAA! means the Empire has won. They've made you accept their terms, a military confrontation, which you cannot hope to win.
Well then, what would you do in their position? Give up and hope your new Emperor isn't as bad as he's cracked up to be?
I never proposed surrender, only that the Federation isn't going to discard their values at the drop of a hat to become as bad as their pending new landlords. Listen to what you're saying, and show me how it is supported in the Trek paradigm.
So you'll sell your souls for a one-shot (and a badly designed one-shot, at that), when its use won't even slow the military juggernaut of the Empire.
You compromised your morals for nothing. That's being an idiot.
Whereas you would take it off the table completely because "oh no, we're the good guys, we can't kill civilians!"? If you have a potentially useful weapon then it only makes sense to start thinking about ways that it can be used. I'm real interested to hear your strategy, as at this point it seems to me to amount to roll over and die.
I thought we'd agreed RSO's weapon design was a joke, not 'potentially useful'. Even if you substitute a capable design, you're now having to determine the right target out of thousands (possibly millions) to achieve a significant effect on the Imperial infrastructure or Imperial military.

You'd be much better off amping up your ship designs - steal Borg magic-repair capabilities, changing tactics (which include forming a guerilla resistance). If you have to lose a world through occupation, isn't that better than chanelling the shade of Atilla the Hun?

No weapon comes without a cost. This is like the neocons insisting on their burrowing-bunker-busting-bombs to hunt rodents like Saddam. But there are other things underground other than cowering dictators - like oil supplies and the water table, which never get mentioned (they may be far deeper than any bunker, but radiation doesn't say, "I will only go into the bunker." But, gosh, we gotta get Saddam, so let's flush all sensibility down the toilet and go RARRRRRRR! TERRORISTS! WMD! and get the bastard. Whereas we still haven't improved security in our ports or necessarily in our airports or other transit hubs.

We dropped a MOAB (supposedly) on Osama bin Laden, and he's STILL out there.

Charging out of the trench and taking it right into the enemy's face only works if you have surprise or superior numbers.
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Re: Warp 10 + Cardassian Dreadnaught Missile = Pwnage?

Post by Junghalli »

Nick Lancaster wrote:Is that the 'Marching Through Georgia' series?
Yes, it is.
Yet the Federation has never demonstrated this, partly because of the trend to develop technological deus-ex solutions. Whether faced with the Borg or the Dominion, time and again, the Federation chooses military conflict and holding actions over going all-in.
I don't think we've ever seen them with their backs to the wall in quite the same way they would be in case of an Imperial invasion, with the exception of the Borg invasion in Best of Both Worlds, in then of course they didn't have any weapons that would stop the Borg, even in theory.
Perhaps deploying a superweapon is sensible for you or I, just as the decision to drop the bomb on Hiroshima was sensible for Truman ... but the Federation (more than the military commanders who would see the necessity) simply won't buy into this suicide-or-survival pact.
Why not? If it comes down to using a superweapon against the Empire or having stormtroopers marching through the streets of Paris you actually think they're going to be so inflexible in their principles they'll never even consider using the weapon? My prediction is they'll go down the Sisko road: a ten hour debate followed by firing the damn weapon already followed by another ten hours of them bemoaning the horrors of war.
We're not talking about me. We're talking about the Federation, which has been depicted as packed with reluctant warriors.
Reluctant is one thing, suicidal is another.
Section 31 came up with the mutagenic plague. What did someone else in the Federation do? He developed a cure and gave it to Odo, who gave it to the Great Link. Oooooh, the Prime Founder gets all warm and fuzzy and repents her evil ways. Where is this 'swallow your objections and do what must be done'?
I never saw that episode. Was this during the actual Dominion War or after? Just how desperate was the war situation at the time? Also, I would point out that IIRC Section 31 was planning genocide of an entire sapient species, which could at least be argued to be more morally objectionable than destroying critical Imperial shipbuilding worlds.
No, and I never said you did. I classified it as such because it discards established Federation history and what we've seen in the series/films.
See my above point about how aside from BOBW the Federation has never been in such a desperate position as an Imperial invasion. And remember when Sisko used a virus bomb on the Maqui colony (fellow humans, albeit rebels!)? Remember genocide against the Borg had the official support of the Federation government? The Federation is not incapable of being nasty.
It even contradicts our own real-world history, which parallels the Federation's up through the 1960's.
Which one, the part about not being willing to use WMDs or the part about the Romulans, Cardassians, and Federation cooperating to build this shining work of wanktech?
I'm arguing the absence of capability because we have seen such situations, and there's none of this band-of-brothers/good-day-to-die heroics that Rihannsu suggested.
When? The only example of the Federation being in a situation as desperate as it would be in our scenario was BOBW. The Dominion War doesn't count. The Dominion could be resisted by conventional Federation military doctrine, even if they were a dramatically superior opponent.
Neither of which would necessarily make a significant impact.
I'd think destroying Coruscant, Kuat, and Correlia should at least put a dent in the Empire's naval production capability, not to mention possibly throwing it into civil war by killing Palpatine.
And here's another dimension to the problem - knowledge of the Empire presumes there has already been contact/conflict with the Empire.
True, trying to kill Palpatine presumed the Federation known enough about the Empire to know that the way its government is designed it'll crumble without him. Of course, a basic knowledge of what the Empire is like wouldn't be too difficult to glean, all they'd have to do is capture a couple of stray TIE fighter pilots or stormtroopers. But strategically valuable information would be more difficult.
In the meantime, the Empire is gobbling up worlds - not just destroying them outright, but establishing garrisons and military rule, draining further resources and issuing propaganda. The folks on the ground aren't going to buck up and say, "That's all right, the Federation is gonna come and kick your Imperial Arse!"
I don't get what you're saying, that the populations of captured worlds will start to like the Empire? I more tend to think they're going to be resentful of being conquered and probably there are going to be a lot of partisans, geurillas, and terrorists springing up (funny how this aspect of the war never seems to enter vs. debates).
Coruscant? Where's that? Where did this information come from?
The existence of Coruscant could be learned from the first stormie they capture. Of course, getting their hands on coordinates they'd need to have a warp 10 firing solution on Coruscant... that would be quite a bit harder.
The Federation hasn't done anything similar. Probes won't go that far; even if there's a convenient wormhole and we grant that it exits a suitable distance away from each galaxy's core worlds, the Federation probe is hopelessly lost at sea - it may not even be able to process holonet transmissions.
True. My guess would be the best bet would probably be resistance sleeper cells left behind on Federation planets occupied by the Empire. They'd have the easiest time getting their hands on Imperial star charts and such (if naught else they could try to sneak into the local Impie HQ and make off with some maps). And depending on how common subspace radio is it might not be too difficult to get a transmission out to what's left of the free Federation.
Your estimation of civil war in the wake of the Emperor's demise is metaknowledge - this is what happened in fiction after said event.
It wouldn't take a very in depth look at the Empire's government to tell Palps designed it to be unstable without him. But of course it's a gamble whether killing him would stop the invasion.
Hiding the jumbo-sized model (1000% more antimatter, free!) would be
like keeping an elephant in your backyard. Someone's going to notice, cloak or no cloak.
If you think that you've got no clue just how big space actually is. Just stash the thing in some random uninhabitable red dwarf system. Or if you're really paranoid leave it orbiting some rogue planet in deep interstellar space. The odds of anyone finding it accidentally would be astronomically tiny. Hell, in a galaxy of two hundred billion stars, most of them undoubtedly uninhabited, it wouldn't be much of a challenge to hide the Death Star MKII. Making sure nobody knows about it while it's being built, however, would be somewhat more difficult.
I never proposed surrender, only that the Federation isn't going to discard their values at the drop of a hat to become as bad as their pending new landlords. Listen to what you're saying, and show me how it is supported in the Trek paradigm.
I didn't say they were going to do that. I have no doubt Picard and his ilk would spent many hours with their heads in their hands thinking about the morality of using a superweapon. I think they'll delay doing so as long as they can. But in the end, when truly with their backs against the wall facing a pack of wolves, they'll do what is necessary to ensure their survival.
I thought we'd agreed RSO's weapon design was a joke, not 'potentially useful'.
Since we were debating the morality of using it I was going from the assumption that it would work. Realistically discussing the morality of using the warp 10 missile is mute, because it will almost certainly not work.
You'd be much better off amping up your ship designs - steal Borg magic-repair capabilities, changing tactics (which include forming a guerilla resistance).
Amping up your ships to Imperial power levels would be impossible for the Federation. Realistically guerilla tactics are the only thing that would be much good against the Empire. Most of the trouble the Empire will have wouldn't be occupying Federation planets, it would be dealing with the partisans and resistance cells that would undoubtedly spring up on those worlds.
If you have to lose a world through occupation, isn't that better than chanelling the shade of Atilla the Hun?
The Federation isn't face with loosing a world, they're faced with loosing all their worlds and becoming subjects of the Empire.
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