Swindle1984 wrote:In this case, you have the UE suddenly having an entire civilization from another universe magically appearing in their backyard, complete with a massive military. All they know about Zeon's history is what the Zeons tell them, and considering the sob story they can spin up about having been fighting a war of self-defense against an evil, despotic regime that sought to enslave them (even better if they casually mention that the EF had allied with aliens to do it. Now they've got everyone with a poor opinion of aliens after the Xindi attack sympathetic to them.), so OF COURSE they have a big military.
Suppose my Army buddies & I drive a dozen
M1117 Armored Security Vehicles onto your front lawn, and we step out in all our
SAPI plated, gunslinging glory. You shout out, "What the hell are you doing on my front lawn, with all those nasty guns?!" (You don't come out- what sensible person will in the face of all that firepower?) We reply, "We just got back from 'If I tell you, I'll have to kill you' Land. We're bringing all those nasty guns with us because we were fighting terrorists over there." Are you going to simply accept our explanation, & let us park our MRAPs on your front lawn, having a cigarette break while shotguns, rifles, & machine guns hang from our shoulders?
They don't need to know the physics behind all that shit (do you need to know how an internal combustion engine works or how to program a computer in order to drive your car?), they just need to know how to install it, maintain it, and use it.
Zeon needs to do considerably
more than just installing & using FTL tech, & performing field-level maintenance; they must
also mass-produce it, continue research & development of improvements to FTL tech, & perform
depot-level maintenance, all while trying to catch up w/ someone who's been doing this for
decades. Unless they magically convince
someone else to wage war as their proxies- Romulans, Klingons, Ferengi, Cardassians, etc.- they
must know the physics behind all that shit. Or do you think you can design & then
mass-produce better cars than Ford Motor Company, when you do
not know how an internal combustion engine works?
Destructionator XIII wrote:After repeated failed attempts by Federation colonial forces to suppress the riots, the Titans are dispatched to put it to an end. Shutting off the colony's air supply,
This is
impossible - there is over 3 billion tons of air inside a colony. That's not something you can just "shut off". The only reasonable explanation for this sentence is AEUG exaggeration.
You're as delusional as the Trekkies who claim the USS Enterprise will beat the Death Star because "Lasers won't even penetrate [the Enterprise's] navigational deflectors!" while ignoring the fact a Borg cutting beam- a
laser- easily cut through the Enterprise's hull in
Q Who.
For reference, the
International Space Station's life support system "provides or controls elements such as atmospheric pressure, fire detection and suppression, oxygen levels, and water supply. The highest priority for the ECLSS is the ISS atmosphere, but the system also collects, processes, and stores waste and water produced and used by the crew. This process includes recycling fluid from the sink, shower, toilet, and condensation from the air. The Elektron system aboard Zvezda and a similar oxygen generation system in Destiny generate oxygen aboard the station. <snip> Carbon dioxide is removed from the air by the Vozdukh system in Zvezda. Other by-products of human metabolism, such as methane from the intestines and ammonia from sweat, are removed by activated charcoal filters." Fuck up any one of those systems, & the crew will
eventually die. Take control of the life support system so it'll introduce nerve gas into the space station's atmosphere, & you can dramatically shorten the time you must wait for the crew to die.
Destructionator XIII wrote:Finally, guess what, chemical weapons kill lots of people when used on Earth too; this isn't something special about the habitats. There's a reason nerve gasses are called weapons of mass destruction.
It's considerably more difficult & time-consuming to poison one million people
on a planet- where wind, rain, & other weather conditions may dilute or dissipate the chemicals before they can kill that many people- than it is to kill one million people in a space station or colony, i.e., an
enclosed space.