Some of us even know we're fucked up and bad people.Destructionator XIII wrote:Just to be sure my position is clear, my first post after this chapter was an emotional knee-jerk. I apologize for insinuating some of you were fucked up or bad people.

Moderator: LadyTevar
Some of us even know we're fucked up and bad people.Destructionator XIII wrote:Just to be sure my position is clear, my first post after this chapter was an emotional knee-jerk. I apologize for insinuating some of you were fucked up or bad people.
I'd phrase it differently. It may not be necessary to throw everything we have. But we should always be prepared to.ray245 wrote: So what you are saying is, it is unethical if humanity don't throw everything they have for our own survival?
My apologies if I somewhat misunderstood what you were saying. However I do think you make an excellent point.That's not precisely what I was trying to say; I was trying to say that merciless conduct actually is ethical in this particular context, because the survival of the human race is the prime value in any ethical system.
I'm pretty sure almost all the harpies are gone.Darmalus wrote:Did the gas attack wipe out the majority of the Harpy's, or did it just destroy those who had managed to advance the farthest? The text seems to imply that a massive portion of his 100,000 remain Harpy's died, but it could just be the shock of seeing such a huge group die in such a manner.
I think that the baldrick term for the harpies is simply being translated by Stuart into the already familiar term to make it easier for readers to identify them.Surlethe wrote: Edit: Why does Beelzebub refer to the fliers as harpies? Isn't that a human term for them?
I heard a sort of reverse version of this: a Viper pilot notices his engine's starting to overheat, so he calls the tower and asks for a priority landing. The tower radios back a moment later and says, "Got it, you're number two, right after a B-52 with an engine out."JN1 wrote:There is also the well known story of an F-4 and a B-52 that ends with 'just shut down two engines'.
It was a preplanned attack, so it wasn't all that technically difficult. The bomber crews need to know what to drop, where, and when. They can calculate that from information elicited from the Russians. We would have assigned a team of air controllers to the Russian staff.PainRack wrote:Would someone more knowledgable enlighten us on exactly how difficult it was to organise and prep such aerial support for the Russian army?
Outside of the sieges of Khe Sanh and An Loc the B-52s actually did relatively little to directly support the US Army and Marines in Vietnam. The vast majority of missions flown over South Vietnam simply bombed random areas of jungle we suspected might hold VC, while others bombed random hills in Laos and Cambodia trying to knock out the Ho Chin Mihn trail via landslides. Sometimes B-52 strikes would proceed large air mobile operations, but that wasn’t typical. Often the bombers, which usually took off from Guam in several small groups over the course of the day, simply got launched towards Nam, with only a general area assigned, the specific target would be assigned in the air based on whatever the latest intelligence happened to be. When coverage was available, special ground based radars would then guide the B-52s onto the precise area of empty jungle we had slatted for destruction, the radars even commanded when to drop the bombs. Today we have much better aircraft radars so that isn’t really necessary.PainRack wrote: While B-52s routinely supported US army operations in Vietnam, I presume that such aerial operations was made infinitely more difficult here due to the chokepoint of the HellGate and limited airbases/weather?
That reminds me of the old, tired, and illogical trope (the name of which escapes me at the moment) where the bad guy holds somebody hostage and demands that the heroes hand over the MacGuffins that'll let him destroy/rule the world in exchange for the hostage's life; this is of course often done with no intention of actually releasing the hostage. Just once, I'd like to see a subversion where the bad guy tries this tactic and promply gets killed, with both heroes and hostage escaping with said MacGuffins.JN1 wrote:In war it is sometime necessary to kill lots of people in the short term to save many more in the longer term. Moreover keeping a war as short as possible will save lives.
You mean like this?Eulogy wrote:
That reminds me of the old, tired, and illogical trope (the name of which escapes me at the moment) where the bad guy holds somebody hostage and demands that the heroes hand over the MacGuffins that'll let him destroy/rule the world in exchange for the hostage's life; this is of course often done with no intention of actually releasing the hostage. Just once, I'd like to see a subversion where the bad guy tries this tactic and promply gets killed, with both heroes and hostage escaping with said MacGuffins.
What, no Novichok agents? Though given how dangerous they're supposed to be (designed to defeat protective gear) I expect nobody would want to use them anywhere near where humans will be operating.Stuart wrote:The V-agents are being held back in case of future need. Remember human strategy is to reveal as little as possible of their capability at any one time. We won't even begin to get into T-2 Trichothecene Mycotoxin yet.
I think we've already hit this point; Beelzebub just thought in the last chapter that the sarin bombardment the humans unleashed easily outdid whatever plagues Uriel could possibly manage.Mayabird wrote: So far only the first two parts have come up, but when the Angel of Death gets nuked (that's my prediction and I'm sticking to it until I'm proved totally wrong), we'll be seeing the third. (A really ironic line for killing him would be "Death, thou shalt die!" since it comes from religious poetry. Also, it would be the only semi-useful thing to come out of 12th grade English, pulling that line out.)
That assumes Beelzebub has accurate intel as to Uriel's abilities. It's entirely possible that Yaweh has always kept him in a short leash, as a secret reserve, just in case.Peptuck wrote:I think we've already hit this point; Beelzebub just thought in the last chapter that the sarin bombardment the humans unleashed easily outdid whatever plagues Uriel could possibly manage.