Patrick Degan wrote:
I went by the number of Grey Counsellors remaining in the chamber when they walked out. I'll have to view the episode again to confirm the number who departed with Delenn.
The fifth season episode "Meditations From The Abyss" indicates that some Warrior Caste joined the Anlya'Shok during the Shadow War. Findell, the Warrior Caste cadet who decides to kill himself, confessed to Lennier that he felt guilty that he did not join the war along with his brother, who died in battle and could not live down his shame and dishonour as he perceived it.
Yes, but that's during the Shadow War, not before it. Prior to the Shadow War, it doesn't seem that the Anla'shok were held in particularly high esteem, especially by the warrior caste.
It also seemed that the Minbari weren't as dedicated to preparing for the Shadow War, since "In the Beginning" indicates that many no longer believed the Shadows would return anyway.
Patrick Degan wrote:
And, in point of fact, it is the Religious Caste who train the Warrior Caste in combat. Delenn makes a point of reminding the Shai Alyt Shakiri of that in "Moments Of Transition".
That's twisting her words and you know it. Come on. That doesn't even make sense when you think about it. The religious caste specifically teaching the warrior caste in a field that they really don't have business specializing in?
Patrick Degan wrote:
Don't be obtuse. We're talking about combat manoeuvering, not stunt-flying, and the Skindance is referred to as a combat manoeuver. Even ordinary pilots are drilled in Immelman Turns and other aerobatics as a matter of course.
Actually they refer to seeing it at performances, so it isn't necessarily a combat maneuver.
Patrick Degan wrote:
In a word, bullshit. Sun-Tzu teaches specifically of having the knowledge of Heaven —weather and seasons and knowing how to read the skies to know the conditions for battle. Everything else you list is tactical ability in which the officers would have been schooled. They certainly didn't click abacus beads together until the solutions came to them in a vision.
You're ignoring the fact that it took the successful completion of *several* very unlikely objectives, the failure of any of which would've meant defeat. The sheer amount of court intrigue and mind fucks that went on in that one is ridiculous.
First was the "battered body ruse" to send a false defector over which Cao Cao almost didn't fall for. Second was the even knowing that Cao Cao had a spy within their midst to witness that event in the first place. Third was knowing when fog would come in order to employ the ruse now known as "Kong Ming Borrows Arrows", in order to acquire enough arrows for the coming fight. Fourth was tricking the enemy into chaining his ships together for stability. Fifth was actually executing all of this and engaging the enemy and setting fire to Cao Cao's ships.
Patrick Degan wrote:
You can "feed parameters" into a database, but it won't do you any good if the computer doesn't have the software for the Skindance already within the matrix.
Unfortunately, a battlefield situation is always going to be considerably more dynamic and unpredictable.
See Enlightenment's post and my reference to Centauri pilots willingly passing out from high-g maneuvers and letting the computer fly and fight for them after they pass out.
Patrick Degan wrote:
It is exactly technobabble and quite implausible. There should already be trained combat pilots on board and some with field experience from the Shadow War.
Yes, trained combat pilots from the *religious* and *worker* caste, not the warrior caste. The castes were on the verge of civil war at that point anyway.
Patrick Degan wrote:
Then where did the Whitestar fleet come from? Who trained the crews? How were they able to hold their own against the Shadows and Vorlons?
The Whitestar fleet was built by the worker caste, obviously. Then again, it wasn't a very big fleet, it only numbered 150 ships total, compared to the several thousand that the Minbari have.
The warrior caste probably trained the crews, but really in the time they had, which was just a few years, it'd be a crash course.
They *weren't* able to hold their own against the Shadows and Vorlons. They got stepped all over the moment the Shadows and Vorlons quit messing around. The Army of Light fleet at Coriana 6 numbered 8,000 ships. The Shadow and Vorlon fleets each numbered 10,000 ships, and that wasn't their entire fleet.
Patrick Degan wrote:
And your evidence for the contention that Skindancing is not a combat manoeuver is...? Because from what I observe, the manoeuver is a close-level strafing of the target. The trainees from the Maria (a.k.a. Whitestar 27) perform a similar manoeuver during the easter-egg hunt in "Meditations From The Abyss".
From what we were told, all we know for sure is that it's used in performances. Sure, Delenn employed it in combat, but that doesn't mean it's a typical tactic.
Observe the turn rate of Omegas in "Severed Dreams"... strafing that close to a target isn't very safe. All it needs to do is make a quick turn and your fighter is splattered against it. The Drakh mothership was unusually large and unmaneuverable.
The trainees didn't strafe a target, they flew through an asteroid field at high speed shooting at targets.
Patrick Degan wrote:
Their act also includes a demonstration of standard combat manoeuvers as well as the specialised stuntflying which is the heart of their performance. At least it did at the Belle Chasse Air Show I attended four years ago. And all of the Blue Angels pilots are drawn from the naval air arm —combat pilots.
Yeah, but some of the stuff they do there, you wouldn't actually want to do in a combat situation.