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Star Trek discusion

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    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    A Drone is a Dead person

    removal of all implants is almost invariably Fatal
    And even if you do the mental damage remains

    wiping out the entire Borg collective would save more lives than it would take
    AND would make me feel safer in my bunk
    Live long and Prosper
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    psycoticvulcanpsycoticvulcan Member Posts: 4,160 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    A Drone is a Dead person

    removal of all implants is almost invariably Fatal
    And even if you do the mental damage remains

    wiping out the entire Borg collective would save more lives than it would take
    AND would make me feel safer in my bunk

    I still disagree that drones are not alive, but I do know that I'd rather die than become one. I imagine the same would be true of most of the Collective's population. And if you think about it, there's really only one sentient entity at work in the Collective.

    So if I had the chance to wipe out the Borg Collective, I'd probably take it. For our sakes, and for theirs as well.
    NJ9oXSO.png
    "Critics who say that the optimistic utopia Star Trek depicted is now outmoded forget the cultural context that gave birth to it: Star Trek was not a manifestation of optimism when optimism was easy. Star Trek declared a hope for a future that nobody stuck in the present could believe in. For all our struggles today, we haven’t outgrown the need for stories like Star Trek. We need tales of optimism, of heroes, of courage and goodness now as much as we’ve ever needed them."
    -Thomas Marrone
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    centersolacecentersolace Member Posts: 11,178 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    lordfuzun wrote: »
    You are missing the bigger moral dilemma that Picard eventually saw regard Hugh which he himself (and Seven of Nine) embodies. Yes the Borg are a menace. But each drone disconnected from the Collective is an individual. Condemning the entirity of the Collective into oblivion means the destruction of trillion of innocent individuals as well.

    And letting them exist, dooms trillions more.
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    connectamabobconnectamabob Member Posts: 140 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    As long as they're still part of the collective, they are enemy combatants and have to be fought as such. That doesn't mean they're dead or un-people (regardless of what the CIA thinks), it's just a kind of unpleasant truth.

    Break the local vinculum net though, and they become refugees to be rescued. The Fed has the medical tech to physically roll back assimilation, so once a drone population is disconnected from the collective, there is a moral obligation to treat them as people and refugees in need of care. A connected drone is to be treated as an enemy by default, a disconnected drone is to be treated as a wounded friendly by default, simple as.

    That also means that the strategic objective should always be to disconnect rather than kill if at all possible. It will probably be necessary to kill to accomplish that, but that should always be the end goal in mind.

    Lingering physical or mental trauma is not a factor. That's just daft. Try telling a wounded vet in a wheelchair that he should've been left to die where he fell because he's clearly no good for anyone now. Try telling a r4p3* victim that she shouldn't even bother trying to put her ordeal behind her and getting her life back, because even the faintest lingering twinge makes her as good as catatonic rubble in your eyes. Trauma happens, sometimes people recover fully, sometimes they don't, but a functional recovery (like Picard) is anything but a lost cause simply because they can't get absolutely totally 100% back to the way they were before.

    *Sorry for the 1337-speak BS, but that is NOT a word that should be censored.
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    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    Once Borg NEVER human again

    Picard could read borg minds and borg can read his
    bimbo of nine was sent into voyager specifically BY the queen as a step to becoming a better weapon

    and theres a difference between a veteran and a unisol
    Live long and Prosper
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    marcusdkanemarcusdkane Member Posts: 7,439 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    As long as they're still part of the collective, they are enemy combatants and have to be fought as such. That doesn't mean they're dead or un-people (regardless of what the CIA thinks), it's just a kind of unpleasant truth.

    Break the local vinculum net though, and they become refugees to be rescued. The Fed has the medical tech to physically roll back assimilation, so once a drone population is disconnected from the collective, there is a moral obligation to treat them as people and refugees in need of care. A connected drone is to be treated as an enemy by default, a disconnected drone is to be treated as a wounded friendly by default, simple as.

    That also means that the strategic objective should always be to disconnect rather than kill if at all possible. It will probably be necessary to kill to accomplish that, but that should always be the end goal in mind.

    Lingering physical or mental trauma is not a factor. That's just daft. Try telling a wounded vet in a wheelchair that he should've been left to die where he fell because he's clearly no good for anyone now. Try telling a r4p3* victim that she shouldn't even bother trying to put her ordeal behind her and getting her life back, because even the faintest lingering twinge makes her as good as catatonic rubble in your eyes. Trauma happens, sometimes people recover fully, sometimes they don't, but a functional recovery (like Picard) is anything but a lost cause simply because they can't get absolutely totally 100% back to the way they were before.

    *Sorry for the 1337-speak BS, but that is NOT a word that should be censored.
    Agreed on all points :)
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    psycoticvulcanpsycoticvulcan Member Posts: 4,160 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    bimbo of nine was sent into voyager specifically BY the queen as a step to becoming a better weapon

    And the Queen's plan failed, because Seven refused to help her. She rejected the Collective. She rejected her past and tried to focus on her future instead. That's human enough for me.
    NJ9oXSO.png
    "Critics who say that the optimistic utopia Star Trek depicted is now outmoded forget the cultural context that gave birth to it: Star Trek was not a manifestation of optimism when optimism was easy. Star Trek declared a hope for a future that nobody stuck in the present could believe in. For all our struggles today, we haven’t outgrown the need for stories like Star Trek. We need tales of optimism, of heroes, of courage and goodness now as much as we’ve ever needed them."
    -Thomas Marrone
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    centersolacecentersolace Member Posts: 11,178 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    And the Queen's plan failed, because Seven refused to help her. She rejected the Collective. She rejected her past and tried to focus on her future instead. That's human enough for me.

    Selfishness is the most human trait of them all. :)
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    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    And the Queen's plan failed, because Seven refused to help her. She rejected the Collective. She rejected her past and tried to focus on her future instead. That's human enough for me.

    She succeeded

    look at the map today

    Borg as far as the eye can see
    Borg in starfleet
    Borg in the KDF
    Borg Everywhere

    and they would be extinct had it not been for the "infiltration units" like seven , hugh , picard , neelix etc
    Live long and Prosper
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    psycoticvulcanpsycoticvulcan Member Posts: 4,160 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    She succeeded

    look at the map today

    Borg as far as the eye can see
    Borg in starfleet
    Borg in the KDF
    Borg Everywhere

    and they would be extinct had it not been for the "infiltration units" like seven , hugh , picard , neelix etc

    The Queen's plan was to infect Earth with a nanite charge. Since that apparently hasn't happened yet, that plan was either cancelled or put on hold thanks to Seven's revolt.

    What on Earth, Vulcan, or Tellar makes you think Picard is an "infiltration unit"? His implants were removed, he hates the Collective... remember when he went Captain Ahab on them in First Contact? Why would he do that if he was working for them?
    NJ9oXSO.png
    "Critics who say that the optimistic utopia Star Trek depicted is now outmoded forget the cultural context that gave birth to it: Star Trek was not a manifestation of optimism when optimism was easy. Star Trek declared a hope for a future that nobody stuck in the present could believe in. For all our struggles today, we haven’t outgrown the need for stories like Star Trek. We need tales of optimism, of heroes, of courage and goodness now as much as we’ve ever needed them."
    -Thomas Marrone
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    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    The Queen's plan was to infect Earth with a nanite charge. Since that apparently hasn't happened yet, that plan was either cancelled or put on hold thanks to Seven's revolt.

    one of her plans

    however find ships today without borg infestation ???
    its very hard

    Every ship in the fleet seems to have borg tech , borg crew members
    even borg captains
    What on Earth, Vulcan, or Tellar makes you think Picard is an "infiltration unit"? His implants were removed, he hates the Collective...

    programed to think he does maybe

    Remember he constantly Acts to prevent pesticide against the borg
    remember when he went Captain Ahab on them in First Contact? Why would he do that if he was working for them?

    took down a couple
    could have finished them all
    didn't

    Remember the manchurian candidate ?

    the best assassin does not know he is an assassin
    the best infiltrator still thinks its human
    Live long and Prosper
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    psycoticvulcanpsycoticvulcan Member Posts: 4,160 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    one of her plans

    however find ships today without borg infestation ???
    its very hard

    Every ship in the fleet seems to have borg tech , borg crew members
    even borg captains

    That would actually be an awesome mission: the Borg attempting to activate all the Borg tech used by Starfleet and the KDF.
    sollvax wrote: »
    Remember he constantly Acts to prevent pesticide against the borg

    Like when?

    In "I, Borg" he only decided against it because he didn't feel right using Hugh in that way.
    sollvax wrote: »
    took down a couple
    could have finished them all
    didn't

    He tried. Remember that self-destruct sequence he initiated?
    sollvax wrote: »
    Remember the manchurian candidate ?

    the best assassin does not know he is an assassin
    the best infiltrator still thinks its human

    You have little (if any) empirical evidence to prove that liberated Borg will always remain loyal to the Collective.
    NJ9oXSO.png
    "Critics who say that the optimistic utopia Star Trek depicted is now outmoded forget the cultural context that gave birth to it: Star Trek was not a manifestation of optimism when optimism was easy. Star Trek declared a hope for a future that nobody stuck in the present could believe in. For all our struggles today, we haven’t outgrown the need for stories like Star Trek. We need tales of optimism, of heroes, of courage and goodness now as much as we’ve ever needed them."
    -Thomas Marrone
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    artan42artan42 Member Posts: 10,450 Bug Hunter
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    ve finished them all
    didn't

    Remember the manchurian candidate ?

    the best assassin does not know he is an assassin
    the best infiltrator still thinks its human

    There is zero evidence for Borg sleeper agents in Starfleet.
    Picard and 7 where freed form the Collective.
    22762792376_ac7c992b7c_o.png
    Norway and Yeager dammit... I still want my Typhoon and Jupiter though.
    JJ Trek The Kelvin Timeline is just Trek and it's fully canon... get over it. But I still prefer TAR.

    #TASforSTO


    '...I can tell you that we're not in the military and that we intend no harm to the whales.' Kirk: The Voyage Home
    'Starfleet is not a military organisation. Its purpose is exploration.' Picard: Peak Performance
    'This is clearly a military operation. Is that what we are now? Because I thought we were explorers!' Scotty: Into Darkness
    '...The Federation. Starfleet. We're not a military agency.' Scotty: Beyond
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    '...Starfleet could use you... It's a peacekeeping and humanitarian armada...' Admiral Pike: Star Trek

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    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    one of her plans

    however find ships today without borg infestation ???
    its very hard

    Every ship in the fleet seems to have borg tech , borg crew members
    even borg captains

    That would actually be an awesome mission: the Borg attempting to activate all the Borg tech used by Starfleet and the KDF.

    a swine to write in foundry however
    Id be ok we don't have ANY Borg tech on any of our ships
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Remember he constantly Acts to prevent pesticide against the borg

    Like when?

    In "I, Borg" he only decided against it because he didn't feel right using Hugh in that way.

    his programming would not allow it

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    took down a couple
    could have finished them all
    didn't

    He tried. Remember that self-destruct sequence he initiated?

    insufficient
    capture the queen
    Force de-assimilate her
    use her neural processor rigged to a simple interface to enslave ALL the Borg

    Or use a temporal revision to erase the the borg entirely
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Remember the manchurian candidate ?

    the best assassin does not know he is an assassin
    the best infiltrator still thinks its human

    You have little (if any) empirical evidence to prove that liberated Borg will always remain loyal to the Collective.

    Not seen even one yet who was prepared to genocide them
    Ergo loyalty to the collective overides loyalty to organic life
    Live long and Prosper
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    psycoticvulcanpsycoticvulcan Member Posts: 4,160 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    insufficient
    capture the queen
    Force de-assimilate her
    use her neural processor rigged to a simple interface to enslave ALL the Borg

    He probably wanted to do some something like that, until Lily Sloan convinced him that wouldn't stop them in time to save Earth or the Enterprise.
    sollvax wrote: »
    Or use a temporal revision to erase the the borg entirely

    Starfleet doesn't like to cheat. That's why they made the Temporal Prime Directive.
    sollvax wrote: »
    Not seen even one yet who was prepared to genocide them
    Ergo loyalty to the collective overides loyalty to organic life

    Picard wanted to. He just didn't want to use Hugh like that. You yourself said in another thread it's unethical to use people.

    Janeway hated them too - her words to the Queen were "I don't compromise with Borg." And she blew up the Collective's transwarp network (and Unicomplex) a year later.
    NJ9oXSO.png
    "Critics who say that the optimistic utopia Star Trek depicted is now outmoded forget the cultural context that gave birth to it: Star Trek was not a manifestation of optimism when optimism was easy. Star Trek declared a hope for a future that nobody stuck in the present could believe in. For all our struggles today, we haven’t outgrown the need for stories like Star Trek. We need tales of optimism, of heroes, of courage and goodness now as much as we’ve ever needed them."
    -Thomas Marrone
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    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    insufficient
    capture the queen
    Force de-assimilate her
    use her neural processor rigged to a simple interface to enslave ALL the Borg

    He probably wanted to do some something like that, until Lily Sloan convinced him that wouldn't stop them in time to save Earth or the Enterprise.

    Replicate some simple rifles and go in and kill them all
    Easy
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Or use a temporal revision to erase the the borg entirely

    Starfleet doesn't like to cheat. That's why they made the Temporal Prime Directive.

    or did they?
    theres no evidence starfleet introduced that it could have been almost anyone

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Not seen even one yet who was prepared to genocide them
    Ergo loyalty to the collective overides loyalty to organic life

    Picard wanted to. He just didn't want to use Hugh like that. You yourself said in another thread it's unethical to use people.

    hugh wasn't people he was drone
    Janeway hated them too - her words to the Queen were "I don't compromise with Borg." And she blew up the Collective's transwarp network (and Unicomplex) a year later.
    yet she never de-assimilated seven neelix or chakotay

    all of them were allowed to remain borg infected
    Live long and Prosper
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    psycoticvulcanpsycoticvulcan Member Posts: 4,160 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    Replicate some simple rifles and go in and kill them all
    Easy

    If it were that easy, they probably would have. Perhaps the Borg have some defense against them that we didn't see on-screen.
    sollvax wrote: »
    or did they?
    theres no evidence starfleet introduced that it could have been almost anyone

    It was someone in the Federation.
    sollvax wrote: »
    hugh wasn't people he was drone

    He was drone. Then he became people.
    sollvax wrote: »
    yet she never de-assimilated seven neelix or chakotay

    all of them were allowed to remain borg infected

    Neelix and Chakotay weren't assimilated.

    Seven only retained those implants because she'd been a drone for so long. They couldn't remove all of them without killing her.
    NJ9oXSO.png
    "Critics who say that the optimistic utopia Star Trek depicted is now outmoded forget the cultural context that gave birth to it: Star Trek was not a manifestation of optimism when optimism was easy. Star Trek declared a hope for a future that nobody stuck in the present could believe in. For all our struggles today, we haven’t outgrown the need for stories like Star Trek. We need tales of optimism, of heroes, of courage and goodness now as much as we’ve ever needed them."
    -Thomas Marrone
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    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Replicate some simple rifles and go in and kill them all
    Easy

    If it were that easy, they probably would have. Perhaps the Borg have some defense against them that we didn't see on-screen.

    They don't
    Borg can be killed with a punch
    a knife
    a bullet

    the 23rd+ century people simply think the wrong way
    The borg are amazingly vulnerable to brute force

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    or did they?
    theres no evidence starfleet introduced that it could have been almost anyone

    It was someone in the Federation.

    Probably the Federation science council
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    hugh wasn't people he was drone

    He was drone. Then he became people.

    a drone is a drone is a drone


    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    yet she never de-assimilated seven neelix or chakotay

    all of them were allowed to remain borg infected

    Neelix and Chakotay weren't assimilated.

    ONE nanite and you are contaminated
    Chakotay was partly assimilated
    Neelix was brought back from the dead by nanites
    neither was free after that
    Seven only retained those implants because she'd been a drone for so long. They couldn't remove all of them without killing her.

    Better dead than Drone Always
    Live long and Prosper
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    psycoticvulcanpsycoticvulcan Member Posts: 4,160 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    They don't
    Borg can be killed with a punch
    a knife
    a bullet

    the 23rd+ century people simply think the wrong way
    The borg are amazingly vulnerable to brute force

    Can't think of a good rebuttal, so I'll let it go. Though I still think they must have some kind of defense against brute force like that, otherwise Starfleet would have adapted their tactics.
    sollvax wrote: »
    a drone is a drone is a drone

    Until, of course, it is no longer a drone. ;)
    sollvax wrote: »
    Chakotay was partly assimilated

    You're talking about "Unity", I presume? I would argue that those people weren't serving the Collective anymore, but I suspect it would be futile.
    sollvax wrote: »
    Neelix was brought back from the dead by nanites

    All the nanites did was reactivate his vital functions. There wasn't any assimilation going on.
    sollvax wrote: »
    Better dead than Drone Always

    Yes, but she wasn't a drone anymore.

    When people are joined to the Collective, they become slaves to its will (and therefore drones). Once they're liberated from the Collective, they are no longer bound to it (though full recovery can take a while, as in Seven's case) and can function as individuals with their own free will. They are, by definition, no longer drones.
    NJ9oXSO.png
    "Critics who say that the optimistic utopia Star Trek depicted is now outmoded forget the cultural context that gave birth to it: Star Trek was not a manifestation of optimism when optimism was easy. Star Trek declared a hope for a future that nobody stuck in the present could believe in. For all our struggles today, we haven’t outgrown the need for stories like Star Trek. We need tales of optimism, of heroes, of courage and goodness now as much as we’ve ever needed them."
    -Thomas Marrone
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    marcusdkanemarcusdkane Member Posts: 7,439 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    They don't
    Borg can be killed with a punch
    a knife
    a bullet

    the 23rd+ century people simply think the wrong way
    The borg are amazingly vulnerable to brute force

    I was thinking about this earlier, and wondering if it is definitely so... When the Borg have had a weapon used against them in the past, the first drone is dead. Sometimes the second too, and usually the third adapts. When Picard shot the Borg on the holodeck, there were only two of them, so impossible to know if the other drones on the Enterprise would have been able to adapt against bullets... Given how the forcefields of a brig and starship can block physical impacts, I'm wondering if drones might have the ability to change their shields from 'passive' where they only activate upon incoming energy weapons, to 'active', where they would constantly be on, and deflecting not just energy-based, but physical impacts as well... Sure, in a situation like Picard had, I doubt it would do much good. But in an extended conflict against projectiles, I wonder if they might still have adapted... Afterall, in First Contact, the Borg were able to assimilate the Earth at a time prior to energy-based weapons. If bullets were all that was required to take down a drone, I would have thought that eventually, people would have realized that any projectile weapon would be effective, and contained the assimilation force. But, as they Earth was assimilated, people either didn't work it out, or, the Borg were indeed able to adapt against projectiles...
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    centersolacecentersolace Member Posts: 11,178 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    I was thinking about this earlier, and wondering if it is definitely so... When the Borg have had a weapon used against them in the past, the first drone is dead. Sometimes the second too, and usually the third adapts. When Picard shot the Borg on the holodeck, there were only two of them, so impossible to know if the other drones on the Enterprise would have been able to adapt against bullets... Given how the forcefields of a brig and starship can block physical impacts, I'm wondering if drones might have the ability to change their shields from 'passive' where they only activate upon incoming energy weapons, to 'active', where they would constantly be on, and deflecting not just energy-based, but physical impacts as well... Sure, in a situation like Picard had, I doubt it would do much good. But in an extended conflict against projectiles, I wonder if they might still have adapted... Afterall, in First Contact, the Borg were able to assimilate the Earth at a time prior to energy-based weapons. If bullets were all that was required to take down a drone, I would have thought that eventually, people would have realized that any projectile weapon would be effective, and contained the assimilation force. But, as they Earth was assimilated, people either didn't work it out, or, the Borg were indeed able to adapt against projectiles...

    There are many ways they could do it too. Better shields, more efficient regeneration cycles, armor plating, mini transporter inhibitors to counter the TR-116, Borg tanks....
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    marcusdkanemarcusdkane Member Posts: 7,439 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    There are many ways they could do it too. Better shields, more efficient regeneration cycles, armor plating, mini transporter inhibitors to counter the TR-116, Borg tanks....
    Oh for sure, plenty of ways they could do it, I was just wondering if they already could do so if the situation arose, but we simply haven't seen it onscreen due to the Federation's reliance on particle rather than projectile weapons :)
  • Options
    centersolacecentersolace Member Posts: 11,178 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    Oh for sure, plenty of ways they could do it, I was just wondering if they already could do so if the situation arose, but we simply haven't seen it onscreen due to the Federation's reliance on particle rather than projectile weapons :)

    Oddly, now that you mentioned it, I actually think that everyones reliance on particle weapons actually might be helping us rather than hindering us.

    The Borg are ruled by efficiency, and thus tend to counter things rather than innovating ahead of time. That's actually the biggest weakness of the Borg, as when people are at their most creative, that's also when they're the most dangerous.

    Take for example Operation Chastise. The objective was to take out three german controlled dams. They couldn't be bombed as they had to many guns, and they couldn't be torpedoed due to the anti-torpedo nets. The solution?

    Build a bomb that can skip like a stone across water.

    The Borg aren't capable of that kind of unorthodox thinking unless something provokes it. So in other words, by keeping the Borg bored, we have more options to surprise them.
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    markhawkmanmarkhawkman Member Posts: 35,231 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    I'm still expecting the Borg to start using Neutronium some day. :D
    -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
    My character Tsin'xing
    Costume_marhawkman_Tsin%27xing_CC_Comic_Page_Blue_488916968.jpg
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    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    They don't
    Borg can be killed with a punch
    a knife
    a bullet

    the 23rd+ century people simply think the wrong way
    The borg are amazingly vulnerable to brute force

    Can't think of a good rebuttal, so I'll let it go. Though I still think they must have some kind of defense against brute force like that, otherwise Starfleet would have adapted their tactics.

    They don't

    The first enemy the borg assimilated punched them in the face and tried a chair as a weapon
    the last enemy did the same it worked both times
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    a drone is a drone is a drone

    Until, of course, it is no longer a drone.

    When de-assimilated (converted to free floating molecules)
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Chakotay was partly assimilated

    You're talking about "Unity", I presume? I would argue that those people weren't serving the Collective anymore, but I suspect it would be futile.

    they WERE Borg
    the planet should have been tri-cobalted
    thats proceedure
    Eradicate
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Neelix was brought back from the dead by nanites

    All the nanites did was reactivate his vital functions. There wasn't any assimilation going on.

    Borg component = Borg
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Better dead than Drone Always

    Yes, but she wasn't a drone anymore.

    yes im afraid she was and will always be
    When people are joined to the Collective, they become slaves to its will (and therefore drones). Once they're liberated from the Collective, they are no longer bound to it (though full recovery can take a while, as in Seven's case) and can function as individuals with their own free will. They are, by definition, no longer drones.

    Separate a radio controlled car from the transmitter and its not radio controlled
    re-introduce the transmitter and they are radio controlled again
    markhawkman I'm still expecting the Borg to start using Neutronium some day.

    they probably do (to make spoons)
    Yesterday 07:14 PM
    centersolace Quote:
    Originally Posted by marcusdkane
    Oh for sure, plenty of ways they could do it, I was just wondering if they already could do so if the situation arose, but we simply haven't seen it onscreen due to the Federation's reliance on particle rather than projectile weapons

    As Borg today can still be jacked in the face
    No they can not
    Oddly, now that you mentioned it, I actually think that everyones reliance on particle weapons actually might be helping us rather than hindering us.

    its based on borg stupidity
    the limited mind of the Borg does not allow it to reason a defence to physical force

    The Borg are ruled by efficiency, and thus tend to counter things rather than innovating ahead of time. That's actually the biggest weakness of the Borg, as when people are at their most creative, that's also when they're the most dangerous.

    Borg are ruled by stupidity
    they replace efficient flesh with metal
    they replace intelligence with compliance
    and they remove their reproductive organs to make room for a stereo
    The Borg aren't capable of that kind of unorthodox thinking unless something provokes it. So in other words, by keeping the Borg bored, we have more options to surprise them.

    the Borg (individual or collective) are less intelligent than humans
    Yesterday 06:12 PM
    marcusdkane Quote:
    Originally Posted by centersolace
    There are many ways they could do it too. Better shields, more efficient regeneration cycles, armor plating, mini transporter inhibitors to counter the TR-116, Borg tanks....

    starfleet body armour
    or simply NOT attacking
    Oh for sure, plenty of ways they could do it, I was just wondering if they already could do so if the situation arose, but we simply haven't seen it onscreen due to the Federation's reliance on particle rather than projectile weapons
    Yesterday 05:52 PM

    we know that they have been assimilating for centuries and STILL have no resistance to a punch in the face
    centersolace Quote:
    Originally Posted by marcusdkane
    I was thinking about this earlier, and wondering if it is definitely so... When the Borg have had a weapon used against them in the past, the first drone is dead. Sometimes the second too, and usually the third adapts. When Picard shot the Borg on the holodeck, there were only two of them, so impossible to know if the other drones on the Enterprise would have been able to adapt against bullets... Given how the forcefields of a brig and starship can block physical impacts, I'm wondering if drones might have the ability to change their shields from 'passive' where they only activate upon incoming energy weapons, to 'active', where they would constantly be on, and deflecting not just energy-based, but physical impacts as well...

    holodeck gun was an energy attack anyway
    Sure, in a situation like Picard had, I doubt it would do much good. But in an extended conflict against projectiles, I wonder if they might still have adapted... Afterall, in First Contact, the Borg were able to assimilate the Earth at a time prior to energy-based weapons.

    incorrect (check the opening of the enterprise mirror episodes lasers are the norm)
    If bullets were all that was required to take down a drone, I would have thought that eventually
    ,

    if the Borg Arrived TODAY
    they would be exterminated
    people would have realized that any projectile weapon would be effective, and contained the assimilation force. But, as they Earth was assimilated, people either didn't work it out, or, the Borg were indeed able to adapt against projectiles...

    more likely
    they beamed a few people up (naked)
    assimilated them
    beamed a few more up (naked)
    Assimilated them

    no reason to ground engage and be massacred

    as I say todays humans would make mince of the borg Even unarmed and nude
    we are smarter ,stronger , faster and better than they are
    Live long and Prosper
  • Options
    psycoticvulcanpsycoticvulcan Member Posts: 4,160 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    The first enemy the borg assimilated punched them in the face and tried a chair as a weapon
    the last enemy did the same it worked both times

    What episode was that in?
    sollvax wrote: »
    yes im afraid she was and will always be

    Evidence, please.
    sollvax wrote: »
    Separate a radio controlled car from the transmitter and its not radio controlled
    re-introduce the transmitter and they are radio controlled again

    So as long as the liberated drones remain seperated from the Collective, they're no longer drones. Exactly my point.
    sollvax wrote: »
    the Borg (individual or collective) are less intelligent than humans

    Less adaptable, maybe.
    sollvax wrote: »
    incorrect (check the opening of the enterprise mirror episodes lasers are the norm)

    I'm pretty sure those are bullets. Machine gun fire.
    sollvax wrote: »
    if the Borg Arrived TODAY
    they would be exterminated

    Depends on how many there are.
    sollvax wrote: »
    more likely
    they beamed a few people up (naked)
    assimilated them
    beamed a few more up (naked)
    Assimilated them

    no reason to ground engage and be massacred

    That is how they did it in "Dark Frontier". Except for the naked part.
    NJ9oXSO.png
    "Critics who say that the optimistic utopia Star Trek depicted is now outmoded forget the cultural context that gave birth to it: Star Trek was not a manifestation of optimism when optimism was easy. Star Trek declared a hope for a future that nobody stuck in the present could believe in. For all our struggles today, we haven’t outgrown the need for stories like Star Trek. We need tales of optimism, of heroes, of courage and goodness now as much as we’ve ever needed them."
    -Thomas Marrone
  • Options
    marcusdkanemarcusdkane Member Posts: 7,439 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    sollvax wrote: »
    they WERE Borg
    the planet should have been tri-cobalted
    thats proceedure
    Eradicate
    If you keep up this kind of GO 24 nonsense, you're going to wind up getting Section 8'd... I'll come visit every Tuesday and bring a kal-toh puzzle :)
    sollvax wrote: »
    Separate a radio controlled car from the transmitter and its not radio controlled
    re-introduce the transmitter and they are radio controlled again
    Snap off the car's aerial, and waggle the joystick all you like, the car goes nowhere unless someone's pushing it. Was Seven ever physically taken over by the collective once separated and made to move against her will, or was she simply coerced and emotionally blackmailed into compliance?
    sollvax wrote: »
    starfleet body armour
    Assimilation tubules can penetrate all known armor and energy fields... Even an immortal Human would be unable to stand up to a drone in a physical confrontation... The Quickening might delay the assimilation process, but, it would eventually be adapted to, and then hijacked to enhance the internal replication process... The only way I'd consider taking on a drone hand to hand, would be with a weapon like a naginata. I wouldn't want them anywhere near reaching distance, even a bat'leth would be closer than I would be happy with (especially with a group of drones) Worf's taking on the drone with the mek'leth was only viable as a one on one situation, and even then, still not well thought out (as proven when his EVA suit got ripped...)
    sollvax wrote: »
    holodeck gun was an energy attack anyway
    Yes, kinetic energy. With the safety protocols disengaged, items within the holodeck behave as replicated objects, not mere 'projections' and controlled forcefields. The bullets were as real as any manufactured. Picard was simply simplifying the events for Lily's benefit.
    sollvax wrote: »
    incorrect (check the opening of the enterprise mirror episodes lasers are the norm)
    Haven't seen them, but I'll take your word for it.
    sollvax wrote: »
    if the Borg Arrived TODAY
    they would be exterminated
    Agreed.
    sollvax wrote: »
    more likely
    they beamed a few people up (naked)
    assimilated them
    beamed a few more up (naked)
    Assimilated them
    Why naked? No other shown assimilations have involved the victims being naked...
    sollvax wrote: »
    no reason to ground engage and be massacred
    I agree, no need to do so, but, as mentioned, I do wonder if the Borg could simply switch their forcefields on permanently (like the Holtzman shields in the Duneverse) if they knew that a particular confrontation was to involve projectile weapons...
    sollvax wrote: »
    as I say todays humans would make mince of the borg Even unarmed and nude
    we are smarter ,stronger , faster and better than they are
    Not so. Even partially de-assimilated, Seven was smarter, stronger and faster than Tuvok, and as Vulcans are smarter, stronger and faster than Humans, by definition, that would make her considerably more so. Consider the capabilities of the disconnected drones in Descent... I do concede that Human versatility has been shown to trump the Collective, but to assume that that will always be the case, is a dangerously over-confident mindset.
  • Options
    marcusdkanemarcusdkane Member Posts: 7,439 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    Oddly, now that you mentioned it, I actually think that everyones reliance on particle weapons actually might be helping us rather than hindering us.

    The Borg are ruled by efficiency, and thus tend to counter things rather than innovating ahead of time. That's actually the biggest weakness of the Borg, as when people are at their most creative, that's also when they're the most dangerous.

    Take for example Operation Chastise. The objective was to take out three german controlled dams. They couldn't be bombed as they had to many guns, and they couldn't be torpedoed due to the anti-torpedo nets. The solution?

    Build a bomb that can skip like a stone across water.

    The Borg aren't capable of that kind of unorthodox thinking unless something provokes it. So in other words, by keeping the Borg bored, we have more options to surprise them.
    I do see what you mean, the Borg are thinking: If everyone's using the same weapons, why adjust tactics... I'm just wondering if their forcefields have that 'permanent option'.
    I know that if I saw a cube on the viewscreen, I would order every crew member to immediately replicate a pistol and a sub-machine gun. The first few drones who beam over, they eat lead. But would subsequent waves of boarding drones be caught in the same way, or would that branch of the collective adapt and go 'shields up' in response to the repeated attacks...
  • Options
    sollvaxsollvax Member Posts: 4 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    The first enemy the borg assimilated punched them in the face and tried a chair as a weapon
    the last enemy did the same it worked both times

    What episode was that in?

    all and none
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    yes im afraid she was and will always be

    Evidence, please.

    look at the borg drone baby
    BORN with implants
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Separate a radio controlled car from the transmitter and its not radio controlled
    re-introduce the transmitter and they are radio controlled again

    So as long as the liberated drones remain seperated from the Collective, they're no longer drones. Exactly my point.

    but they are never entirely seperate especially in STO

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    the Borg (individual or collective) are less intelligent than humans

    Less adaptable, maybe.

    less intelligent
    theres a heap of radio shack spares in their skull so less room for a start
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    incorrect (check the opening of the enterprise mirror episodes lasers are the norm)

    I'm pretty sure those are bullets. Machine gun fire.

    Cochrane shoots a vulcan with an energy weapon
    others are used in the storming
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    if the Borg Arrived TODAY
    they would be exterminated

    Depends on how many there are.

    no it doesn't
    Against modern blood thirsty humans the borg would not stand a chance
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    more likely
    they beamed a few people up (naked)
    assimilated them
    beamed a few more up (naked)
    Assimilated them

    no reason to ground engage and be massacred

    That is how they did it in "Dark Frontier". Except for the naked part.

    the naked part is important

    marcusdkane
    Commander
    Join Date: Jul 2012
    Posts: 368# 88
    Today, 07:44 AM
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    they WERE Borg
    the planet should have been tri-cobalted
    thats proceedure
    Eradicate

    If you keep up this kind of GO 24 nonsense, you're going to wind up getting Section 8'd... I'll come visit every Tuesday and bring a kal-toh puzzle

    nothing to do with General order 24
    you Cleanse and sterlise infection sites (infection control)
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    Separate a radio controlled car from the transmitter and its not radio controlled
    re-introduce the transmitter and they are radio controlled again

    Snap off the car's aerial, and waggle the joystick all you like, the car goes nowhere unless someone's pushing it. Was Seven ever physically taken over by the collective once separated and made to move against her will, or was she simply coerced and emotionally blackmailed into compliance?

    impossible to tell
    but she acted to increase the borg collective on voyager
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    starfleet body armour

    Assimilation tubules can penetrate all known armor and energy fields...

    yeah bit of a cop out
    But I mean Drones WEARING it to protect them from us
    Even an immortal Human would be unable to stand up to a drone in a physical confrontation...

    actually ANY human can

    the golden rule is on assimilation repeat the phrase "I am the Borg We ARE Human"
    The Quickening might delay the assimilation process, but, it would eventually be adapted to, and then hijacked to enhance the internal replication process... The only way I'd consider taking on a drone hand to hand, would be with a weapon like a naginata.

    i can not be assimilated (im diabetic)
    many species also can't be for various reasons
    I wouldn't want them anywhere near reaching distance, even a bat'leth would be closer than I would be happy with (especially with a group of drones) Worf's taking on the drone with the mek'leth was only viable as a one on one situation, and even then, still not well thought out (as proven when his EVA suit got ripped...)
    fire arrows , throw grenades , unleash Ebola , send in a gardening robot


    Qu
    ote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    holodeck gun was an energy attack anyway

    Yes, kinetic energy. With the safety protocols disengaged, items within the holodeck behave as replicated objects, not mere 'projections' and controlled forcefields. The bullets were as real as any manufactured. Picard was simply simplifying the events for Lily's benefit.

    and it still killed them
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    incorrect (check the opening of the enterprise mirror episodes lasers are the norm)

    Haven't seen them, but I'll take your word for it.

    its actually the best story in enterprise
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    if the Borg Arrived TODAY
    they would be exterminated

    Agreed.

    Good thats another one sorted
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    more likely
    they beamed a few people up (naked)
    assimilated them
    beamed a few more up (naked)
    Assimilated them

    Why naked? No other shown assimilations have involved the victims being naked...

    Weapons
    the average modern human is Armed
    the average modern american owns a gun for example
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    no reason to ground engage and be massacred

    I agree, no need to do so, but, as mentioned, I do wonder if the Borg could simply switch their forcefields on permanently (like the Holtzman shields in the Duneverse) if they knew that a particular confrontation was to involve projectile weapons...

    their shields do not work that way (and if they did we have people who could still kill them)
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sollvax
    as I say todays humans would make mince of the borg Even unarmed and nude
    we are smarter ,stronger , faster and better than they are

    Not so. Even partially de-assimilated, Seven was smarter, stronger and faster than Tuvok
    ,

    Tuvok is not relevant
    I said a Modern human
    (stronger and faster than a trek human)
    and as Vulcans are smarter, stronger and faster than Humans, by definition, that would make her considerably more so

    Seven had "bimbo power"
    A drone is slow
    A drone can be dismantled before it can turn round
    and of course a Drone is physically incapable of walking with a wiggle
    #
    .
    Consider the capabilities of the disconnected drones in Descent... I do concede that Human versatility has been shown to trump the Collective, but to assume that that will always be the case, is a dangerously over-confident mindset.

    remember humanity has degenerated in the last few centuries
    TOS humans were stronger than TNG humans and Enterprise humans stronger still
    We in the 21st century could beat the hell out of a drone

    our environment is much tougher
    we have stronger immune systems
    we are infact Physically superior in most respects
    Live long and Prosper
  • Options
    markhawkmanmarkhawkman Member Posts: 35,231 Arc User
    edited January 2013
    I do see what you mean, the Borg are thinking: If everyone's using the same weapons, why adjust tactics... I'm just wondering if their forcefields have that 'permanent option'.
    I know that if I saw a cube on the viewscreen, I would order every crew member to immediately replicate a pistol and a sub-machine gun. The first few drones who beam over, they eat lead. But would subsequent waves of boarding drones be caught in the same way, or would that branch of the collective adapt and go 'shields up' in response to the repeated attacks...
    Or maybe better body armor. Cardassian and Hirogen body armor was very good for this sort of thing.
    -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
    My character Tsin'xing
    Costume_marhawkman_Tsin%27xing_CC_Comic_Page_Blue_488916968.jpg
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