That's great, but his last name was Sheridan.Adrian Laguna wrote: "Captain John 'Starkiller' Sinclair" does have a certain ring to it.

Moderator: NecronLord
And had it been Sinclair his first name would have been Jeffrey anyway.CaptJodan wrote:That's great, but his last name was Sheridan.Adrian Laguna wrote: "Captain John 'Starkiller' Sinclair" does have a certain ring to it.
Horseradish. Modern militaries definitely don't have ROEs that say 'don't shoot unless fired upon'. Oh wait.Gustav32Vasa wrote:Yes, since this is a first contact situation.What would you have assumed and done? Would you have waited until AFTER the unknown alien ship started shooting to open fire?
She was.Actually I think she was kicked out of the Grey Council when she refused to quit playing ambassador to Babylon 5.Why not? She later gives up membership of the Grey Council to become the head of the Rangers after all, so they've got an "only way out is in a coffin" rule.Is it even possible to resign as Satai?
Wrong, the Minbari started the war by attacking their base and start slaughtering every EA ship they could find. The EA was defending themselves against an apparant attack. The situation between the Sharlin and the EA ship was definitely the Minbari's fault.Gustav32Vasa wrote:The EA started the war by shooting first.
Let me make you an analogy. You see a large furry four legged animal stalking straight at you. It's baring it's teeth and, oh yeah, and acting unfriendly. You've never seen it before, but you know that there is exactly one creature in nature that bares their teeth to show they are friendly and every single other one bares them as a sign of aggression. In fact, you just got done dealing with an animal that most definitely bared its teeth against you, which you managed to fight off. You've got a means to defend yourself. Do you wait to see if that it another singular exception to the rule and it's really smiling at you or do you not give it a chance to bite?Yes, since this is a first contact situation.
Yes, she quit the Council because she wouldn't give up ambassadorship when she was given those options.Actually I think she was kicked out of the Grey Council when she refused to quit playing ambassador to Babylon 5.
She did it to save Sheridan's hash when the Clark was going to stomp Babylon 5, which was admittedly related to the Shadow situation.She broke the council because they refused to do anything about the Shadow situation.
Yes, I do. Human beings are the only people who show their teeth to show pleasure, and even that is nominal, since we also do it for the same reason every other animal in nature does. It's an naturalist analogy to describe just how stupid the Minbari were being.Regarding the open gunports: Did you know that dogs consider showing ones teeth a agressive move.
Which changes the fact that it was the EA fleet that opened fire how, exactly?Gil Hamilton wrote:Wrong, the Minbari started the war by attacking their base and start slaughtering every EA ship they could find. The EA was defending themselves against an apparant attack. The situation between the Sharlin and the EA ship was definitely the Minbari's fault.Gustav32Vasa wrote:The EA started the war by shooting first.
Except that you don't know that, this being a first contact situation. You have no idea what baring their teeth means for that creature. As per your analogy you DO know there's at least one creature that bares its teeth to show it's friendly. So the PRUDENT approach, as long as the creature makes no unmistakeably agressive moves, is try to communicate with it.Let me make you an analogy. You see a large furry four legged animal stalking straight at you. It's baring it's teeth and, oh yeah, and acting unfriendly. You've never seen it before, but you know that there is exactly one creature in nature that bares their teeth to show they are friendly and every single other one bares them as a sign of aggression.Yes, since this is a first contact situation.
Which animal would that be? If you're referring to the Dilgar war, if memory serves while Earth was one of the primary involved parties the Dilgar attack was NOT directed against the EA. Mind you, that's from memory.In fact, you just got done dealing with an animal that most definitely bared its teeth against you, which you managed to fight off.
Given that you are NOT dealing with an animal, KNOW FOR A FACT thanks to your anology that there is at least one animal that will bare their teeth to show they're friendly, and the opposite number isn't doing anything overtly agressive, NO.You've got a means to defend yourself. Do you wait to see if that it another singular exception to the rule and it's really smiling at you or do you not give it a chance to bite?
No they were not. Nobody fired a shot at them.The universe is a dangerous place in Babylon 5 and by all appearances, they were under attack by an unknown alien hostile.
It is most certainly not.In fact, they had gotten a warning from someone with experience with them that the Minbari weren't friendly (Londo told them straight up to leave the Minbari alone and to "not wake the dragon"). Shooting first and not waiting for them to shoot and kill them is entirely reasonable.
It's stupid if you analyze it logically. How many traditions that are stupid if you analyze them logically from the real world would you like?In the real world. In the B5 universe at least for the humanoid species that seems to be universal.Yes, I do. Human beings are the only people who show their teeth to show pleasure,Regarding the open gunports: Did you know that dogs consider showing ones teeth a agressive move.and even that is nominal, since we also do it for the same reason every other animal in nature does. It's an naturalist analogy to describe just how stupid the Minbari were being.
Because you are neglecting an important facet of this. The EA ships didn't think they were about to be attacked, they thought they were already under attack. Or did you miss the part about the Minbari frying their jump drives and half their electrical system?Batman wrote:Which changes the fact that it was the EA fleet that opened fire how, exactly?
Analogies are, of course, suspect, but you are missing the point. The point is that if you no nothing else about an unknown, if the unknown is doing something that is 99.999% of the time an act of aggression, then it is probably hostile.Except that you don't know that, this being a first contact situation. You have no idea what baring their teeth means for that creature. As per your analogy you DO know there's at least one creature that bares its teeth to show it's friendly. So the PRUDENT approach, as long as the creature makes no unmistakeably agressive moves, is try to communicate with it.
I am talking about the Dilgar War and it very much qualifies as a fight the EA had just gotten out of. Hell, the EA commanders hadn't stopped patting themselves on the back yet when the incident with the Prometheus happened.Which animal would that be? If you're referring to the Dilgar war, if memory serves while Earth was one of the primary involved parties the Dilgar attack was NOT directed against the EA. Mind you, that's from memory.
Way to miss the point. See above, when I responded to this the first time.Given that you are NOT dealing with an animal, KNOW FOR A FACT thanks to your anology that there is at least one animal that will bare their teeth to show they're friendly, and the opposite number isn't doing anything overtly agressive, NO.
You do NOT shoot a dog for just baring its teeth at you.
Except for the fact that they DID know some things about the Minbari (that they were really inclusive and dangerous, as per Londo's descriptions of them) and that from their perspective, the Minbari had already begun. If you were in their shoes, would you interpret the Minbari's actions as anything BUT an attack? Be honest now.It was a first contact situation. They didn't know dick about the Minbari. The open gunports might have been anything from a 'we're watching you' gesture to tell the earthers better not to try anything through 'this is our territory. This far and no further'-you know, like animals which get agressive when you get close to their turf but don't actually attack when you back off-to the admittedly rather stupid 'we respect you as warriors' gig it actually was.
In a first contact situation you do NOT assume hostile intent unless the enemy opens fire. Again, plenty of modern militaries have ROEs along those lines. 'Don't fire unless fired upon'.
What would you call frying their ships systems and capacity to run with some sort of beam, if you didn't have an outside perspective on what had actually transpired?No they were not. Nobody fired a shot at them.
Bullshit. The humans were completely justified in opening fire. What would you have done if you couldn't communicate and you couldn't run away and by all appearances were about to be shot at?It is most certainly not.
Analyzing them logically is the only way you can. The Minbari were incredibly stupid and at fault in that situation, the the worst of the blood is on Delenn's hands, given she didn't even wait for Dukhat's body to cool before deciding to hunt down and slaughter humans.It's stupid if you analyze it logically. How many traditions that are stupid if you analyze them logically from the real world would you like?
No, she didn't wait for Dukhat's body to cool before emotionally giving the order to destroy a single military base. She used bad judgment due to extreme emotional duress and lack of knowledge about the situation, and hours later (ref. episode "Atonement") admitted that she made a mistake, and was angrily rebuffed by another Grey Council guy who was already prattling on about "our rage can only exhaust itself in blood."The Minbari were incredibly stupid and at fault in that situation, the the worst of the blood is on Delenn's hands, given she didn't even wait for Dukhat's body to cool before deciding to hunt down and slaughter humans.
I don't remember the Minbari scanners affecting anything other than the jump drives and it's YOU who is neglecting an important point. That being the Minbari not shooting at the EA forces. I don't care what the EA thought was happening, what WAS happening was that they weren't under attack. Even if disabling their jump drive had been intentional, which the EA force had no way of knowing, is not automatically an aggressive move.Gil Hamilton wrote:Because you are neglecting an important facet of this. The EA ships didn't think they were about to be attacked, they thought they were already under attack. Or did you miss the part about the Minbari frying their jump drives and half their electrical system?Batman wrote:Which changes the fact that it was the EA fleet that opened fire how, exactly?
It's a pity then that the EA HADN'T met 50,000 different sentient alien species by then. Or ever. The Minbari opened their gunports AND THEN DID NOT FIRE. While that's certainly reason to be cautious in a first contact situation where you haven't the foggiest about how your opposite's mind works it is NOT reason to open fire. Again, real world militaries have 'don't fire unless fired upon' rules and that's dealing with nations they've know all about for DECADES.Analogies are, of course, suspect, but you are missing the point. The point is that if you no nothing else about an unknown, if the unknown is doing something that is 99.999% of the time an act of aggression, then it is probably hostile.Except that you don't know that, this being a first contact situation. You have no idea what baring their teeth means for that creature. As per your analogy you DO know there's at least one creature that bares its teeth to show it's friendly. So the PRUDENT approach, as long as the creature makes no unmistakeably agressive moves, is try to communicate with it.
I'd come to the conclusion that it had opened its gunports, was beelining for me (something I incidentally can't recall from neither the episode nor the TV movie) and somehow jammed my jump drive.Now look at it from the perspective of the Prometheus. They are out beyond support and they encounter an alien ship of a species they've never talked to before but were warned right from the starting gate not to even go looking for by someone who has experience with them. The first thing this alien ship does is blasts them with a SOMETHING that has knocked their systems to hell and is preventing them from running away and has come about and is beelining right for them, while opening their gun ports.
What the fuck conclusion would you come to about the alien ship, Batman? That it was still friendly and not attacking them?
And were just as wrong.Way to miss the point. See above, when I responded to this the first time.Given that you are NOT dealing with an animal, KNOW FOR A FACT thanks to your anology that there is at least one animal that will bare their teeth to show they're friendly, and the opposite number isn't doing anything overtly agressive, NO.
You do NOT shoot a dog for just baring its teeth at you.
Yes. Londo's descriptions are HEARSAY and vague like hell to boot and the Minbari had already begun to do what exactly?Except for the fact that they DID know some things about the Minbari (that they were really inclusive and dangerous, as per Londo's descriptions of them) and that from their perspective, the Minbari had already begun. If you were in their shoes, would you interpret the Minbari's actions as anything BUT an attack? Be honest now.It was a first contact situation. They didn't know dick about the Minbari. The open gunports might have been anything from a 'we're watching you' gesture to tell the earthers better not to try anything through 'this is our territory. This far and no further'-you know, like animals which get agressive when you get close to their turf but don't actually attack when you back off-to the admittedly rather stupid 'we respect you as warriors' gig it actually was.
In a first contact situation you do NOT assume hostile intent unless the enemy opens fire. Again, plenty of modern militaries have ROEs along those lines. 'Don't fire unless fired upon'.
Their capacity to run had been reduced, not fried. They still could have run in realspace. And the incapacitation to run was followed up by none of the enemies bothering to fire on them at all.What would you call frying their ships systems and capacity to run with some sort of beam, if you didn't have an outside perspective on what had actually transpired?No they were not. Nobody fired a shot at them.
Let's see-I COULD still run away, if not quite as fast, I didn't even TRY to run away within the means left to me, there's NO INDICATION I'm actually going to be shot at, none of my ships or crew have come to any harm nor is there any indication they inevitably will will be[/i...Bullshit. The humans were completely justified in opening fire.It is most certainly not.
What would you have done if you couldn't communicate and you couldn't run away and by all appearances were about to be shot at?
Agreed.Analyzing them logically is the only way you can. The Minbari were incredibly stupidIt's stupid if you analyze it logically. How many traditions that are stupid if you analyze them logically from the real world would you like?
Wrong. Both the Minbari and the EA force share the guilt for that situation.and at fault in that situation,
Yeah. It's not like anybody mentioned it was a very emotional reaction she regretted later on and tried to rectify.the the worst of the blood is on Delenn's hands, given she didn't even wait for Dukhat's body to cool before deciding to hunt down and slaughter humans.