Mike DiCenso wrote:
This is extremely irrational, and it is dishonesty at the very least.
Do you have
any idea what the terms "dishonesty" and "trolling" really mean, or do you love to throw them around to discredit your opponent on a whim?
Yes, people came up with that because the context of the vague flavor text was in reference to the three ISDs conducting a bombardment of the Dankayo base.
Then explain why the same quote also refers to the
planet's topsoil being atomized, the
planet's surface being evenly cratered, indeed, analyze the quote in better detail:
"... to rendezvous at Dankayo and reduce the tiny base to molten slag. Even before the last of its atmosphere drifted away,
before the dense clouds of atomized topsoil could begin to settle, Imperial transports Elusive and Timely, as well as a
complement of TIE fighters, moved in to perform "mop-up" operations and a through search of Dankayo's now evenly-cratered surface."
Exactly what other subject other than "Dankayo" exists in the sentence?
In fact, we don't even know if the whole planet was evenly cratered,
Are you fucking kidding me?
a through search of Dankayo's now evenly-cratered surface
the text is so vague,
Yet you presume to have "proven" that the atmosphere was referring to that of the base, even though it is never stated nor implied. If that were true, you would have to say that the "atomized topsoil" was a part of the base too, which simply could not be.
and not some large area around the base itself, which as has been pointed out to you numerous times, is the only thing described as being turned to molten slag.
No, Mike, the objective was stated to turn the small Rebel base to slag. You are claiming that the Imperials bothered cratering the
entire planet BEFORE they made a micrometer hole in the base's containment system and made its atmosphere drift away, even though their target was the base.
By my interpretation, the last of the atmosphere drifting away
after such high energy events such as the entire planet being cratered and its topsoil being atomized makes perfect sense.
And yet enough of the base's structures survived the attack so that not only were Imperial ships and troopers able to land on the planet's surface, but they retrieved vital intelligence in the form of datapacks from the ruins.
Why are you trying to quantify a high energy, but (relatively) calculable event (the atmosphere being blown away and the soil being
atomized) with a very disputed unknown (Star Wars structural strength)? Why not the other way around? Why are you using an unknown to calculate a known?
An event powerful enough to remove any large terrestrial world's atmosphere is going to not leave anything behind that would be useful.
Baseless conjecture. Obviously the Rebel base was very sturdy, given that it contained a "deep planetary shelter" (and even
that was not a perfect safeguard).
In fact, the whole thing would have sunk into the shattered crust and molten mantle, assuming it could survive not only such an energetic attack, but being left behind in such a hostile environment.
Whoever said that the crust and mantle was "shattered"? The mantle is very large. The planet's atmosphere can be removed without its mantle being noticeably harmed.
The rebel agent ZNT-8 would have been killed even in his deep shelter, if a teraton or petaton-level attack had occured.
How do you know? Do you know how tough planetary shelters are? Or how deep it is? No, you don't. You're trying to deny that the atmosphere drifted away (even though the text clearly stated it did) by comparing it with an unknown quantity.
The topsoil being blown around
before the dense clouds of atomized topsoil could begin to settle
Cannot be performed by the entire modern nuclear arsenal. Was not accomplished by the K-T extinction event.
If you want to see an example of dishonesty (had it not been for the likely fact that you genuinely misunderstood), just look at this. You read the quote, know that it refers to the topsoil being atomized and blown into the sky to the point in which it took longer for it to settle than it did for the entire surface to be cratered, troops to be sent to do mop up operations and the atmosphere to drift away.
and even cratering would not be the result of such a high-energy assault.
Why do you state "even" cratering? Atomizing the topsoil is arguably more imrpessive.
Trying to deny that a certain event clearly stated to have occurred could have occurred because not all of the effects are as energy intensive is simple denial.
There'd be nothing but little shattered pieces of crust floating on a molten lava world and massive amounts of ejecta floating off into space.
Massive amounts of ejecta
were floating out into space, namely the entire atmosphere based on my theory. And there may have been other ejecta not mentioned.
But none of that occurs.
I am still awaiting an explanation as to why the base's atmosphere would take longer to diffuse into the entire planet's empty space than it would for the ISD's to bombard the entire planet, even though their objective was the Rebel base. You see, this is your theory:
That the atmosphere was self contained within a tiny base
Objective of mission: to turn Rebel base into slag
Timeline 1
(0:0:00) Attack base, reduce it to slag
(0:0:01) Atmosphere of base leaks out [happens the instant a microcrack appears in the base's containment system]
(???) The
entire planet is bombarded and much of its topsoil atomized
(0:5:00) The last of the base's atmosphere drifts away
Or (both yours)
Timeline 2
(0:0:00) Evenly crater the planet
(1:0:00) Atomize the planet's topsoil
(5:0:00)
Then decide to start your objective and reduce base to slag
(5:0:01) Base's atmosphere leaks out the instant a microcrack is made
(5:1:01) The base's atmosphere is gone
(5:20:00) The base is reduced to slag
(???) Commander is fired for deciding to bombard the entire planet before they bother to attack the base.
Lesson that you don't understand: a self contained atmosphere in the base would disperse the moment you try slagging it. Therefore, as soon as the slagging begins, the atmosphere is GONE. It's the first thing that happens, before the base gets destroyed. This does not fit with the chronology in the quote in which the last of the atmosphere drifts away
after several other high intensity events that were secondary (since they were not part of the primary objective) transpired.
So why you keep clinging to what you say is beyond me given that scans of the actual freakin' text of the book have been more or less permamently archived here is beyond me, and it it's contents have been pointed out to you and linked to you many times. And you wonder why everyone thinks you're a troll.
This statement makes absolutely no sense.
So why you keep clinging to what you say
given that scans of the freakin' text of the book
When have I ever tried to revise the text of the book? I'm using the same text as you are. The difference is in the interpretation. I am not fabricating evidence. I'm using the exact same evidence and
contents
as you are. The difference is that I disagree with your conclusions derived from it. This is called a disagreement. This is not called "trolling". Your train of thought that "denying X interpretation of text when text has been provided" makes
absolutely no sense whatsoever.
Gain some credibility by start acknowledging these facts. Gain some more by acknowledging high-energy feats for Trek instead of hand-waving them away.
-Mike
Why don't you admit that disagreeing with you over interpretation of evidence is not denying the existence of said evidence?