I will ignore your replies to other people since, well, they're not replying to my points.
You responded to the following:
PeZook wrote:The guy isn't even consistent with the movie. He invents numbers, capabilities the RDA didn't have (like FTL), criticizes them for not doing impossible things ("LOL build orbital stations! Just in case we need to bomb the planet from orbit!"). Mentioning his invention of Quaritch being a "civilian relations puke" for most of his career is just pure cruelty
And, of course, he needs to extensively justify how starting an economic recession is somehow less moral than genocide. Not that he ever justifies that lack of unobtainium will cause an economic collapse: in the beginning of the movie, the US economy is already shit, even with unobtainium flowing freely.
With:
Everything you wrote here is wrong: Pandora is in the Alpha Centauri system, which is 4,36 light years from Earth. Transit time is circa six years, which means a speed of about 0.7c. Still ridiculously high by our standards, but nowhere near 0.9c in terms of relativistic effects and the like.arun2110 wrote:Well, you got my sex right. Kudos.
That said, I was told by a fan that the distance between pandora and Earth is between 4 and 5 light years. To get a transit time of around seven years, you need a peak velocity of something like 70-90 percent the speed of light ( considering the time having to do with acceleration and deceleration times involved.) At 90% the speed of light, you are going to get some really awesome blueshift. Awesome as in hard X-rays and all that. You better have very thick lead shields or you’re fucking toast inside your ship. So are all your instruments unless they’re shielded against EMP.
So, what's your point? That they have awesome materials and high-yield power generation is a given, nobody's disputing that. It's quite explicit that they did not have any sort of FTL whatsoever, because they took more than 4.36 years to get to Pandora.arun2110 wrote:But wait, that’s not all. At that velocity, a micrometeorite impact is going to be worse than a 1000 pound bomb against your hull. So, thick, powerful armor with the shield.
So, absent FTL, what miraculous material did mankind come up with to beat these two problems? Or as I think if most likely the case, they did not consider this in the story at all, did they?
You wrote about building space stations for observation, not jury-rigging (useless) ones with shuttles they need to do other things.arun2110 wrote:Also, a shuttle in geostationary orbit is an impromptu orbital station. Just so you know.
That's all well and good, but you did not provide evidence that unobtainium is in any way crucial to Earth's economy. We know from the fluff they can make really fast trains with it, and from the movie that Earth is already in a shitty state despite having free access to unobtainium.arun2110 wrote:And moving on, the choice is, a tribe of at most a thousand kicked out of their homes so that a world of many billions does not sink further into depression. Now, phrased this way, do you favor the tribe or the world? To put this in better perspective, you’re driving a bus carrying sixty passengers on a narrow bridge over a raging river. You see a kid in the middle of the road, blocking your way. The kid is too close and you can’t avoid him/her even if you slam the emergency breaks. If you try to avoid the kid, your bus will fall into the bridge and a lot of your passengers are going to drown to death, which is not a pleasant way to die. What do you do? Note that the sane answer is break and hit the kid, hoping the kid will pull through. The insane one is, “the kid is helpless. I must not hurt him/her and so will swerve the bus.” So, to emphasize, what will you do?
The other thing you have not properly justified is that while a depression results in lowering the standard of life, it doesn't automatically mean death or starvation. Your sad attempt at an utilitarian argument fails horribly, because economic woes are not equal to death. A more apt analogy would be a decision between "run over the child", and "be eight hours late to your destination".
To my point:
You responded:PeZook wrote:Yeah, after fifteen years of abuse at the hands of the RDA while the company fought a legal battle on Earth, the natives would've been totally fine with a diplomatic solution. Sure.
EDIT: Oh, yeah, the funniest part was the one about doing a kamikadze run with a ridiculously expensive SSTO spacecraft to blow up a fucking tree. Not to mention the humans need the shuttles to refuel their interstellar starships
Don't act like a nitpicking asshole. You know perfectly well what I meant.arun2110 wrote:A kamikaze is when one goes on a suicide mission. I was talking about remote piloting the shuttle. Kind of a basic thing when we have UAVs today, you know.
Yes, we all know that rationally they had no chance of victory and it would've been better in the long run not fighting but moving. We also know that intelligent beings can get pissed off when you forcibly evict them out of their homes and slaughter them en masse because they refused to bow to your demands, which means it's completely unrealistic to expect Jake to somehow magically convince them to take the abuse while the RDA fights a legal battle on Earth.arun2110 wrote:As for native tribes being happy with diplomatic solution, I’d say yes. They would have built new houses (or in their case, found a new tree), had kids, buried parents, you know get on with life instead of going on a holy quest to rid the world of the humans.
Except, of course, that's exactly what they did, and fluff explicitly states they need the shuttles to refuel their starships with reaction mass. So you throw a giant wrench in the entire operation by sacrificing the shuttle, creating a logistical bottleneck that will not be solved for several decades.arun2110 wrote:I was under the impression that there were two shuttles. But beyond that, are you telling me the ship used reaction drives to propel itself to relativistic speeds? *chuckles* good one that. For a minute there, I thought you were being serious about this.
To my point:
PeZook wrote:But Stas! The RDA paid for their transportation! This means the company owns their souls! Didn't you see how Grace was compelled to do anything Selfridge said? It was totally in the movie, dude! Totally!Stas Bush wrote:"Traitor scientists" Like they (scientists) should have had loyalty to some greedy corporation perfectly willing to graze the Na'Vi or even mass slaughter them to get the unobtanium. Why?
Personally, I think by "traitor" he means something more like "race traitor". But I'm sure he has many black friends and so cannot, by definition, be a racist fuck!
(Witness his accusation that Sully must be a perverted animal fucker if he falls in love with a Na'Vi woman)
You replied:
Holy shit, are you blind? Or just a retard? The Na'Vi are not dogs. They're very humanoid, to the point that their secondary sexual characteristics are practically identical!arun2110 wrote:To quote myself from further up the chain: “Tell me, oh, broadminded sage, would you condone a man loving a dog the way mates love each other if the dog were uplifted to sentience? What about a chimpanzee? A Gorilla? If you do not, I see no reason why I should condone a pervert loving any alien be they blue skinned or hotter than miss universe.
If there was a hypothetical race of aliens who looked just like humans, were smoking hot and sexually compatible, according to your logic, humans who popped boners upon seeing them are complete sexual deviants?
This is rich. Did you perhaps miss the slight detail in Jake's character - that he's a fucking cripple?! Yeah, he could've totally gotten it on with all the chicks on base, man! No matter that he's a former soldier who can't walk, I'm sure his self-esteem issues wouldn't have gotten in the way of forming relationships, right?arun2110 wrote:“Why do I call Jake a pervert? Well, it could be something to do with the fact that he was remote piloting the na'vi body and wasn't actually inhabiting it. If he'd transferred to the Na'vi body permanently and was removed from interacting with humans for a long period of time, I can understand falling for the alien, but when he's operating the body in a shift that follows his body's internal clock and has plenty of chance to interact with females within the colony and - I have no doubt on this - has access to human porn, why does he love an alien? It's the human hormones that matter because he is remotely piloting the body and is not living in it. And I'm supposed to say a human who makes lovey-dovey eyes at an alien is normal? I don't consider humans who fuck dolls or animals normal either. Fuck a human - any-which-way or be called a pervert. It's as simple as that. Or am I supposed to call him a differently aroused person because I don't want to hurt your or his feelings?”
It's not like he only got his sense of self-worth back when he began participating in the tribe's customs? Or that love isn't just about hormones and lust and satisfying urges?
Guess what, I can masturbate. In fact, I whack off a lot, yet it doesn't satisfy many needs that a relationship gives you. It's not just about the fucking hormones, and even if it was, the Na'Vi are close enough to human form that there's nothing strange about finding some of them sexually attractive.
I mean, check this out:
American Indian warrior:
Na'Vi warrior:
Dog: