WHAT??? Could you please rephrase that?StarWarsStarTrek wrote:Mr. Oragahn wrote:The war was phony, staged. The building of ships and creation of clones had been going on for ages, while Sidious and Dooku knew that the confederation ships were parked at Geonosis for quite some time as well.
So if the war was "phony, staged", how is it indicitive of the standard numerical values and levels of the Star Wars galaxy?
I proved that there was preparation. Period.
Why do you talk about that? I was pointing out, contrary to your point, that there was preparation prior to the deployment of Republic forces.How would this be relevant to the imperial starfleet, whose war with the Rebel alliance was certainly not "staged"?
Don't try those silly slimy fish tactics on me.
Besides, although irrelevant here, you may want to take a look at The Force Unleashed. Lucas actually worked on those games. You'll learn a thing or two from the plot about staged wars.
Is is not your point, dipshit. It has never been. Your point was that Republic forces weren't prepared, that it all was a surprise, and it happened on a whim (remember that?).Hardly a whim, hardly a surprise either, save for the Jedi, but they were totally out of the loop regarding the preparation. They were like admirals suddenly dropped at the head of fleets, not the politicians and corporatists who orchestrated the whole business.
Exactly my point. Your justification for the Republic's greater readiness compared to the Federation is that the former was far better prepared for war, which obviously is not true. The Kaminoians and the contractors hired to build Acclamators had absolutely no clue that they would be used at the time and place that they would be. Most likely weren't even certain that a war would occur at all.
Don't try to backpedal.
1. Where did I admit that Starfleet's prep was crap? I merely gave you an idea of how the war on that scale was genuinely new to them, and that the crews they'd put in those plenty of extra ships wouldn't have much experience at all.1. Although they certainly had a better empirical background, the UFP had not gone through such a war, and the fresh fish they needed to populate all those new ships with -which they had started building recently- hardly had any real experience either.
2. I don't know anything about the neutral zone. However, the Jedi's knowledge doesn't matter. It so doesn't matter that they accepted taking the reigns over a fleet and entire legions that pop'd out of nowhere as far as they were concerned. For all intents and purposes, it's almost like if they jumped into a war with no prior knowledge of what to do, while the people they sided with knew what they were doing.
3. Rally what? The fleet of 55 ships obviously was already there. If Kenobi hadn't found Geonosis, the info would have been leaked sooner or later anyway, because such was the plan.
4. Irrelevant, unless you explain why this matters.
5. Cold War is not active war. Was the production of US and Soviet ships, fighters, vehicles, ammunition and other weapons as intensive as in the middle of WWII for example?
1. So you're admitting that starfleet's preparation and readiness is crap, even right after a Cold War with a dangerous foe. Thank you? Do you think that the clones were ready for war either? When none of them had ever seen the rest of the galaxy before, none had ever served in real combat before, and were suddenly called up on a whim to battle a foe they'd never encountered before?
2. Nice attempt at diverting the subject. We can discuss the questionable intelligence of the Jedi Order in another debate. For now, the fact is that the Republic fleet responded to within hours to a random incident in the Outer Rim with more ships than the Federation could in a hotly contested territory. They sent more ships a farther, more obscure distance in less time.
3. The Acclamators existed, by whoever said that they were "prepared"? They were likely docked at a port. Which leads us to our next point...
4. ...that the clones were likely in the middle of training excercises, eating and sleeping. Within hours they had to scramble to their ships and run off to a random point in the galaxy.
5. Except that the Republic during Geonosis wasn't WW2 America, it was America the day before Pearl Harbor. Readied, but not as readied as Cold War America (nor WW2 America). Remember that the war had yet to actually begin.
That is what happens when you must form lots of crews and bataillons in a heart beat.
2. All Republic clones were produced in the far reaches of the outer rim, wild space. Acclamators obviously had to be somewhere as well, and I don't know enough EU to know where they were parked.
Check your star maps.
And all of this was already planned, since Sidious and co knew where Geonosis and Kamino were. Despite a plan prepared for that long, only 55 ships were available.
The Jedi probably hated what they had to do without knowing a bolt about what was really going on.
3. Even at full speed, it takes KDY like 5 months to thousands of Acclamators, cutting ALL other production lines. Under normal speed and conditions, it's something that would take much much longer.
4. The novelization and the movie has Lama Su say the clones were ready.
5. Fail. The very fact that Acclamators were already being built and more than a million clones grown and mature prior to even official war being declared clearly shows that the Republic was more ready than the US. So now, please answer my question and show me that the production of the US in WWII was similar to the Cold War era. Remember, you made the claim about the cold war, not me. Don't try to erase your tracks here.
No, there's no reason to take all sources with exterme caution. Exterme caution is for shit that is extremely suspicious, like all Saxtonite drek. Get the difference?I'm taking any information from any source which Saxton approached in a way or another with extreme caution. That is all. Like it or not, I don't care. I made my case clear here.
You should approach all sources with extreme caution, not just the ones that you do not like.
I'm not going to be extremely cautious with facts established by Lucas for example.
The DSII can't be more than 200 km wide, tops.I don't know, but it seems that after four seasons of TCWS, Lucas seems to think his universe is quite small.
Few clone squads, small engagements, etc. Even Christophsis didn't feature any impressive deployment of forces. Same for Umbara and probably just as much for the second attack on Geonosis.
Right. That's why George Lucas imagined up a 320-900 kilometer in diameter Death Star being built in under a year. That's why his depiction of Coruscant involves an entire planet's surface being covered by 2 kilometer tall skyscrapers and billions of airspeeders. That's why he licensed Saxton's works.
Coruscant's been built over thousands of generations.
Lucas doesn't Saxton and never hired him personally.
As for the rest, I don't care. He presented us an universe the way it is, that's all. If you don't like it, stop watching Star Wars and focus on Teletubbies or that gay arse shit My Little Pony.
Tell you what? You don't listen. We've been telling you all you need to know since you registered. This board is choke full of material that is against Saxton's ideas.That appeal to authority doesn't move me.
Saxton's PhD didn't save him from making impressive mistakes and massively cherry picking his evidence. Don't be fooled by his white blouse.
"making impresive mistakes"? Tell me where Saxton makes a mistake equivalent to equating the tensile strength of durasteel to rubber using a non-existant measurement.
Are you going to pretend you didn't know that?
Good lord. Could you at least try not to destroy my post in order to make my replies still correspond to the right pieces I quoted from you?Relevance?1. The Republic mobilized thousands of ships, far more than any Federation fleet ever assembled for a battle.
2. They did this in response to a surprise attack from a tactical standpoint.
The Republic has been around for a thousand generations. See, you lose, even at stupid games.
A better analogy would be that the Republic navy had been around for a thou-...oops, I forgot. For around a few thousand days, wasn't it? In secret?
Geez.
I don't care if Yoda acted illegally or if the Senate prefers chocolate ice cream.The senate was out of the loop as well. They had no say on the building of ships and growing of clones.
Try again.
Which is more evidence against your assertion that the Republic army at Geonosis was a well prepared army just waiting to launch to Geonosis at any given moment. Quite frankly Yoda acted illegally, assaulting Geonosis within hours without knowledge from the Senate and without knowing that Palpatine knew.
Republic forces were being prepared without them knowing.
That is the point.
How you can read my point as "more evidence against your assertion that the Republic army at Geonosis was a well prepared army just waiting to launch to Geonosis at any given moment" is really fucking mind boggling.
And as I said, the Jedi's lack of knowledge of the production of ships and troops of both sides is completely irrelevant.Aside from the massive warships and the large droid factories producing churning out countless battle droids of course.
I gotta wonder if you even watched AOTC, really.
I did, and I quite remember the fact that Kenobi was fucking surprised when he discovered the massive droid armies on Geonosis.
Jedi, Kaminoans, Senate, galactic population as a whole, they don't matter when it comes to gauging preparedness.
Really, how is that hard to understand?
And?Kaminoans aren't important. They had a contract, they produced clones. Period. When, where and how their clones would be used wasn't much of their problem, besides growing and training them in time.
And presumably, they contracted others to produce Acclamators. And presumably, those contractors may not have even known what they were for.
Who gives? What are you trying to do, aside from desperately flaying around in order to mask the fact that you just can't concede the fact that the Republic forces were being prepared since a long time. Damn, MILLIONS of viewers got it when watching the movie, you cumpot.
There's no intelligent debate here. It's just talking to a wall of dried feces.
Ooowwww now it's "tactical" grouuunnds. The magic word that's gonna save you from being a total fool in this debate.See the evidence I provided. Both fleets were prepared. The CIS prepared its fleet, and Palpatine piled up clones and warships, hidden in the budget of domestic security (like, you know, for defense of nearby grounds, like Coruscant *wink wink*).
No lack of preparedness on either side.
I was speaking on tactical grounds, Mr. O. Or are you claiming that a nation at war cannot possibly be taken off guard? The Battle of Coruscant was a surprise attack, the Republic was caught off guard and still mobilized thousands of warships. Meanwhile, the Federation has to spend weeks to prepare to gather a few hundred warships.
How precious.
Both sides were well prepared. Suck it up, SWSNSFSDST.
Aside from the fact that the characters say that they made a shit ton of research to back up their thoughts.See, I actually accepted the number of ships supposedly coming from the ICS.
I'll now see, with following quotes, if you actually did the same regarding the fact coming from Traviss' book.
So am I! Traviss's book doesn't state that the droid army numbers are hoaxes, it states that certain characters thought that the droid army numbers are hoaxes. There is a very crucial difference in fallibility.
It's better than some mere speculation. In universe, it is what you could call solid journalism.
And it fits with the ratio given by Dooku in the very first episode of TCWS anyway.
Quadrillions of battle droids just doesn't work.
And? It'a decimal point error. We don't know how far that error went. But it has to be pretty significant to make a difference between nothing and suddenly allowing for the budget of thousands of Acclamators!
What the hell are you talking about? The phrase "decimal point" was quite clearly singular.
What is there in that head of yours? Cheese? Porridge? Hellooo??There's no basis to calculate that many clones. For one, Acclamators-I crews are 700 individuals per ship (The Official Star Wars Fact File). Nothing is said about the amount of clones who'd be used there. Considering that the ships would be used for a space battle, there's no reason to include numbers for troop deployment.
We don't know if Besany was thinking about the class-I or class-II Acclamator. The later variant was far less empty and lost 80% of its space it could dedicate to troops (Starships of the Galaxy, 2007).
In general, the first type was the most produced. Besany couldn't know that Palpatine planned to use them in a large space battle. Actually, she couldn't even know that Palpatine was building Venators. Which means we go from few thousand Acclamators, likely type-I (the usual model), to the equivalent in Venators. Obviously, less, since Venators are bigger and closer to warships, in comparison to the type-I Acclamators, and would contain more hardware inside than the relatively very empty Acclamators.
They have a crew of 700 clones per ship. Each ship contains 16,000 clones for deployment. Since Acclamators are transport ships, albeit ones that can second as battle-ships, it would be wasteful to not be able to hold at least near 16,000 clones per ship.
I didn't consider troops because that's not what you needed for your own calculation. For thousands of ships, you need the necessary crews. There's no idea that those ships would or could even be filled with enough clones.
When you look at how Venators were rather densely populated in TCWS, it's rather clear that no reason to go for the cramped cargo figures.
He was strictly speaking of clones, not ships.Even going by your numbers, we get 48 M deemed enough to occupy thousands of worlds.
Presuming that this quote is in the same context as your other quote, and presuming that the text is not figurative (which I garuntee that you would use should this quote have supported Wars or have been one from Trek), this doesn't mean much, given that an Acclamator being above the occupied planet is a very good way to deter resistance, even if your ground forces are heavily outnumbered.
Nice try though.
Then it is in the Core Worlds, not Outer Rim. Thank you.Rothana does the LAATs mainly. KDY does the large ships. Kuat is not your average "single planet" you know. It's not even skirting the outer rim. Did you miss the piece when I went to the length of remembering you, a few hours before your last post, that Kuat as in the Core Worlds?
It is in the core worlds, but it is near the Outer Rim.
And Kuat is fucking huge, and yet, even after refocusing all their might of warship building, they can only get few thousands Acclamators under half a year.But no matter, the fact is that Kuat alone matches a decent percentage of Starfleet's entire industrial might.
Acclamators are cargo ships which are extremely empty. The rarer and bombardment capable variant uses much more room for combat hardware, which ends with removing 80% of the room devoting to troop carriage.Acclamators are at least five times the average size of the Federation ships at Worf 359, and a single planet, however important, churns one out once every 5 months, whereas the entire Federation takes a year to churn out 38 ones smaller by at least a margin of 5. So Kuat matches at least 5.4% of the entire Federation's military industrial input?
As I said, that makes a shit lot of difference in taking in consideration volumetrics.
In comparison, Trek ships are quite cramped, although very skinny.
Still, yes, in overall mass, the Republic is on top, and so is the Empire since it relied on Kuat.
However, bring down Kuat and you gain a shit lot. And hurting one single planet I think is something the Federation could easily do.
It's not like KDY is a big secret.
That's not what I was talking about. She rationalized the quintillion droids.Feel free to show me where she rationalizes the logic of fighting a galactic war with 4 million clone troopers.Traviss has provided a good enough rationalization,
The novelization gives +1 M clones ready and some more hundred thousand units down the nursery line.
Multiplied with Dooku's ratio, Traviss is certainly closer to the truth than Saxton.
Sorry, that's how Lucas went.
Yet right in the middle of the war, when we got glimpses of Coruscant in TCWS, there wasn't much of that omniscience.There is in something called math and other C canon sources. For example, the idea that there is an omniscient presence of clone troopers on Coruscant. If by "omniscient" the text means "a one to one hundred ratio", there would have to be several hundred billion clones policing the capital alone.and there's nothing in TCWS that goes against that.
And maths are fine. They work with the low numbers because they support each other rather well.
Your desperate and pathetic fighting would be worth something if you had like racks of evidence, but even Lucas disagrees with you.
I can't say I'm exactly happy with the way he portrays his universe (I even think he's a lardarse cunt), but that's the way it goes.
Because I can actually explain why molten slag needs not be taken literally, while I don't see anything to dispute Dooku's ratio.I find it hilarious that you can postulate non-existent hyperbole out of "molten slag", but fail to recognize the figurative speech here.In fact, the numbers seen in the movie and the show agree with that. Like the clones outnumbered 200 to 1,
Anywhere the clones land and fight the Confederation of Independent Systems, you don't see gazillion clones and millions more battle droids.
In fact, numbers often are pretty even.
When you can have, what? Billions (omniscient presence on Coruscant and all that), 60,000 wounded when you can produce more clones faster, that's not much of a relevant loss.I was not aware that saving 60,000 lives wasn't important regardless of the practical costs.or the importance of saving 60,000 wounded clones from a medical station in a strategical area in the outer rim.
Now, when you have only a few thousands, there's quite a difference.
60,000 is what? The cargo of a handful Acclamators, tops?
It was a major medical station, so important that a Kaminoan was there to supervise the clones' recovery.
Anything beyond what is given would be speculation, and with the sources you list, we only get a million clones on the start, with hundreds of thousands more coming.Let me ask you this question:Well, I don't want to restart the whole clone count debate anyway, we have enough threads and posts about that here. I just provided the line for the sake of completism.
If you had, hypothetically, only the movies and film-novels to base your judgment, what would your estimation as to the size of the Grand Army of the Republic be? Do you think that, if you could only deduce it logically, 4 million would be around your ballpark estimate?
I wouldn't give the CIS much more droids either, considering the density of their battalions on Geonosis or PauCity.
Good thing.Furthermore, even if the 4 million clone army figure is canon (despite being ridiculous), it merely establishes that the Republic army is not made up of mainly clones:
The New Essential Chronology
"Conscription, however, was a necessary reality. Countless beings of every species became draftees into the Grand Army of the Republic."
Not very supported by higher canon but good thing nonetheless. However, it's bound to be minimal since we only see clones and it wouldn't be Clone Wars if conscripts were very relevant.
Your math is wrong, dickhead.The Essential Atlas and Dark Empire tell us that there are 100 quadrillion sapient beings in the Galactic Republic. If the conscription accounted for 1% of the populace (ridiculously low compared to peacetime volunteer rates), the Republic would have an army of 1 quadrillion soldiers backing them up.
We already gave you numbers for the Republic's population. Also, the GAR is uniquely made of humans thus far. So you can shave off all those alien species. Considering the thousands of species present on Coruscant alone, that doesn't leave much.
There's no such evidence. It's small and it's small. Small like small. Smallishly small. S.M.A.L.L. S-M-A-L-L.Not at all, given that this implies that actual SW militaries that aren't fighting proxy wars like you claim that the clones were are much larger.Small and yet that's all there was.
See how it actually hurts you.
And yet easily busted. Federation ships have better ranges, better weapons, more weapon types and MUCH more firepower pound for pound.But still decently sized compared to Federation ships.Mostly small ships in comparison to Republic warships,
Boo.
Not if the ships can't do shit before they get axed. The firepower, range and versatility in Federation weaponry would even allow one single Galaxy-class to own several Venators.In case if this was not made clear to you, I was attempting to avoid the issue of firepower. But even if you use Darkstar's weapon yields, Star Wars would still win through sheer rate of numbers and a faster transportation and communications system.and easily dispatched if they were to be brought up against Federation ships.
That's what you got with silly big far ships that move slowly, have weak sauce guns and crappy accuracy.
In theory, range is good that two Galaxy-class ships, fully armed (like +230 or 250 torps), staying out of range of SW ships, could have singlehandedly owned both CIS and GAR ships at the battle of Coruscant.
That's the beauty of the advantage of range and firepower.
To fit with ratios, there'd be trillions or quadrillions of clones.Circular reasoning. If the droid army does really have quintillions or quadrillions of battle droids, then the Grand Army of the Republic is clearly larger than a few million clone troopers.
True.
You think?
For example, you think that an army capable of deploying thousands of soldiers wouldn't be steamrolled by an army capable of deploying 10^9 more troops?
Are you daft or something?
Whatever.
Ha. Here we go again with your support from higher canon.Quadrillions of battle droids makes more sense than millions of battle droids, and is supported by equal, if not higher, canon.
Then point me out where you get the impression that the CIS really has access to that many battle droids in the movie, novelization or TCWS.
Tell me, Grand Lord Neuron, how the fuck could the GAR hope win at Geonosis with only 55 Acclamators and their respective clones if the CIS could churn out droids as fast as we saw in the movies so as to already have quadrillions at the beginning of a war that only last two short years, and also, therefore, have all the necessary ships to carry them?
Why the fuck those super speeds you speak of didn't allow the CIS to swarm the GAR in return with like 1% of those quadrillion/quintillion droids? Why the fuck the second battle of Geonosis, a very important world, of course, involved so few ships and troops on both sides?
Is that your best evidence? Bullshit?
It's fact, putrescent shitbag.You continue to support a theory (1oo million battle droids) that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever solely for the purpose of stacking the odds against Wars as much as humanely possible.
Oh yeah, what a marvelous rationalization.Why not accept Saxton's rationalization that there are more than one "Grand Army"? Does this not make more sense than a galactic war being fought with less troops than the United States raised during World War 2?
Absolutely ALL sources of ALL canon speak of one Grand Army of the Republic, but for the sake of Saxton's bruised ego and thirst for penis enlargement material, we'd have to take his (certainly non continuity-breaking) theory at face value?
You're a sad clown, really.
Mmm lemme see.... presently available economical and industrial might maybe?Since you claim that Traviss successfully "rationalized" an OOU omniscient narrator, please feel free to explain why this could happen within the bounds of all common sense.
Conclusion: you don't get it. There's like an entire galaxy that could be mined, but obviously it isn't.
Don't you realize that your impossibly retarded argument can be applied to ANY SF universe? Hey, why the fuck the Federation doesn't mine its entire sector down to the last particle?
(I'm obviously limiting myself to Trek and Wars here but feel free to take any other fictional universe in example!)
The ICS2 is pure Saxton bullshit. Of course, he wrote it all!The ICS2 states that billions of planets are mined by individual mining corporations. There is neither canon evidence to bluntly contradict this nor any illogic behind the statement.The statement is contextual: it cannot be done with the actual industry and economy of the galaxy. You can't arbitrarily pull the resources, fuel and organization needed to build, move and maintain quadrillions of droids out of nowhere at the present state of affairs.
Course of action: absolute denial.
(and yes, you can whine all you want, it doesn't matter)
And here ends this silly discussion with our favorite troll fag.