PREDATOR490 wrote:As with almost ALL scenarios involving infections from Zombies, Vampires, Contagions etc. the inital spread is no doubt going to be viciously effective and especially in this case because the infection is intelligent. That said, it seems kind of stupid and unreasonable for the Star Wars galaxy to have NEVER encountered infections, diseases and the like before. Perhaps not on this scale - Although Isard tried a viral weapon on the capital and failed and Planet of Twilight had a race of space spiders or something that wanted to spread some sort of virus thing.
Here's the problem: What are the symptoms of a Thing infection? With the flu you get horrible feelings, a stuffed runny nose and a sore throat. With zombies you get rotting and people stumbling around trying to bite you. With rage you get angry, screamy running people. With vampires you get clammy goths with dental problems and an aversion to mirrors. Long story short: With everything you listed, it's pretty damn easy to tell the infected from the uninfected.
With The Thing you get nothing. It is, barring possibly sub-cellular scanning, a perfect replica of its host in looks, smell, thought and action. The only time you can identify a Thing at random is either when it severely fucks up and misjudges a situation, or just sheer dumb luck. Otherwise you have no idea that the people around you aren't the same people, aren't even the same species they were a day or two ago. In the movie, the only times the Thing showed itself without being provoked was with the dogs... possibly because it thought it could get them before they made too much noise... and taking over the red-bearded guy in the storage room, most likely because the not-quite-dead Thing corpse realized this was likely the only time it would be alone with someone before they either fully burned it or froze it again. With the other infected members of the team, they stayed under the radar for well over a week with very paranoid people around them at all times.
And it will be even worse in the SW universe. The Thing originally took place in a universe that's otherwise identical to ours. The Antarctic team was immediately on high alert after seeing it because a huge deformed tentacled thing was way the fuck out of the ordinary in their experience. In the SW universe, there are all sorts of intelligent and unintelligent things that are pretty damn far from the baseline human shape and demeanor. If someone's wandering a Coruscant back-alley and, by sheer dumb luck, manages to witness a Thing taking over someone else, what's their first thought going to be? My bet is something more along the lines of, "Oh shit it's one of those sewer monsters I keep hearing about, I better back away slowly and stick to walking in better lit areas from here on out" than, "This tentacled beast must be unlike all the other tentacled beasts on this planet and in this galaxy and represents a huge threat of infection and a danger to everyone, I better call every authority I can!"
Basically with all the weird, alien shit that goes on as an everyday occurrence on Coruscant and in the SW galaxy in general, the occasionally witnessed Thing attacks, even if sloppily done, can fly under the radar for a very long time before someone starts to pay real attention to the common threads between sporadic reports of a specific type of monster attack in the Coruscant sub-levels. And by that time, of course, The Thing will have likely spread to hundreds, if not thousands of other worlds. Which is why I said earlier: If non-Things win, it will be at the cost of a majority of their population and a majority of planets.
I will note that this is even without assuming The Thing can just infect food and water supplies. While the idea is scary, I don't think it's one of The Thing's capabilities. While they did make a big deal of avoiding any possible indirect contact in the movie, there is never any hard evidence presented that infection could start at a microscopic level. IIRC correctly, it even says in the book that The Thing needs to take over a good chunk of the host's body at once (hence the tentacles, teeth and clothes ripping) or its cells won't get a firm enough grip inside their new body.
I will also point out that in the movie, several infected team members worked side by side for at least a week without viewing each other as threats. While it's possible that they simply didn't know the other was also infected, and never had a moment alone with them to settle the issue, I'm leaning with the assumption that The Thing knows its own, and so long as there are other hosts out there to infect, they'll refrain from attacking each other if the urge is there in the first place.