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I for one welcome our new redhead, Catholic skeptic gun-toting pathologist black lace lingerie-wearing overladies.
The big question of course is if they really do need the power of an entire star to FTL. That might get us in a bad spot.
I for one welcome our new redhead, Catholic skeptic gun-toting pathologist black lace lingerie-wearing overladies.
The big question of course is if they really do need the power of an entire star to FTL. That might get us in a bad spot.
It's John's Law: any propulsion system powerful enough to be interesting is also a weapon of mass destruction.
I doubt the logic behind killing anyone you find as soon as you find them. Mass murder certainly isn't something to be taken lightly, even when there is a remote and not definite possibility that the opposing side could do it to you.
If she was an alien, let our Earth be overtaken by her! Nice picture :speakcool:!

As I said a few pages before: the hatches open, and they crawl out of their giant spaceship, thousands of female aliens. Their goal: self-preservation by an "alien" species. I could imagine female alien could become rather popular![]()
Regardless, your society, your views, your civilization are irrevocably altered simply by the act of contact.
Most importantly, anything you might have developed, independent of the visitors is now forever lost.
Their goal: self-preservation by an "alien" species. I could imagine female alien could become rather popular![]()
I think the problem is that our civilization all of them would be destroyed almost instantly simply by their arrival.
Regardless, your society, your views, your civilization are irrevocably altered simply by the act of contact.
Most importantly, anything you might have developed, independent of the visitors is now forever lost.
The movie District 9 was based on a related scenario.
What about the age of enlightenment, human rights, democracy, wealth, technological and scientific progress?
Almost everybody here likes to watch a Shuttle launch at the Cape, be it on site or live in front of TV and computer screens. Each time we enjoy it, we actually do so at the back of American Indians and another groups of humans who have lost something in their history...
That's a good point, and a look at any American Indian reservation is a good example.
Injustices in the process of first contact and colonisation were not nessescary for these things to appear. That is a bit of a pity, I think it would have been far more advantageous if it had been gone about without the racism and patriarchal ideals.
The US influence on Germany in WWII (did the V2 actually go above 100km? I thought it was just high atmospheric) and on the USSR in the cold war. I would expect scientific and technological development to be far behind what it is in reality.
And you do not "get" land. The land belongs to those who call it home; if you've been born somewhere, or your ancestors have lived there for generations, you're "native". Even the indigenous peoples of the Americas or Australia, or New Zealand came there not too long ago. And the same goes for the people that claim I'm a "foreigner" in my own country- many of them too came here only a few hundred years ago.
I am not guilty when I use a computer, or watch a shuttle launch
I don't quite understand those two sentences.
And now guess why I put the quotation marks in place :thumbup:
You profit from history.
The question related to the V2 I'm asking is whether it went higher than 100 km in operation by the Germans.
I kind of disagree with him. I don't believe aliens would actively target earth. Mass murder is not something any sentient species takes lightly and needless when there is massive resources at the outer parts of the solar system.
The biggest threat probably is that a truly advanced civilization I mean like 2+ level on Kardashev scale could wipe us out accidentally like a guy tasked to clear a bush with bulldozer don't care about ant nests he runs over.
I think the problem is that our civilization all of them would be destroyed almost instantly simply by their arrival.
Imagine that you are a member of a small island tribe and you just figured out how to put a sail on a raft and travel to a nearby island. Of course there are plenty who think who cares we have what we need right here and such; while you are arguing with the leader of your tribe for more manpower and materials to build a better raft an aircraft carrier slides in over the horizon and send a hovercraft full of modern men and women to say hi and ask you mind if they build a shipyard on the far side of your little island.
Suddenly your great invention; for that matter any invention your tribe has made seems insignificant. Your creative ideas are all but worthless in the face of vastly superior intelligence.
Depending on the structure of your particular civilization, the result may be anything from utter chaos to a gradual blending with the new arrivals.
Regardless, your society, your views, your civilization are irrevocably altered simply by the act of contact.
Most importantly, anything you might have developed, independent of the visitors is now forever lost.
History always could have happened differently, but it happened like it happened.
First of all, it assumes that Kardashev II technology would make those that possess it more intellegent. This is by no means a given. For all our wonderful technology, we aren't any smarter than we were one or two or ten thousand years ago.
That the Kardashev II civ will have historical records of having been a civilization on our level (we have no historical records of being ants), and will thus have more first-hand experience of how things are for civs on our level than we have for "ant civilization".
Here again is the assumption that superior technology means superior intellect. It does not. It simply means a head start.
Yes, but if you keep calm and collected, and their intentions aren't too malevolent, you can jump-start yourself up to where they are and start trying to outdo them. Japan did a very good job of this, with the battle of Tsushima occuring about 50 years after Admiral Perry showed up in Tokyo Bay, and Pearl Harbor occurring within 90 years of that same event.
Let's say we become a species able to travel the stellar void, and happen upon a technologically inferior society. I don't think the story would end much differently as it ended in america (provided they have something of interest). It is a logical conclusion that the same might be possible if a superior race happens uppon us.
I don't know how far they would have been able to overcome the "we/the others" scheme on a species-to-species basis.