I dunno about thailand but china is quickly catching up with modern times despite the egregiously cheap laborOriginally Posted by Agent_Dark
labor can be as cheap as you want but in the mid & long run automation turns out cheaper
I dunno about thailand but china is quickly catching up with modern times despite the egregiously cheap laborOriginally Posted by Agent_Dark
labor can be as cheap as you want but in the mid & long run automation turns out cheaper
You also have to think about not only the technology but the fleet itself. It is not really representative of all ships available it is the rag tag fleet after all. Even if they did have the robotics what happens when they break down. I would assume that they would lack the parts and facilities to repair them. I would even think that they may of had robots but after constant usage they wore down and could not be replaced because of the expertise, parts and facilities needed so as time went on more robots broke down leading to more people being used and for longer periods. Also consider that the facilities were down for a year and not in use to suddenly being at full production and you can easily get the types of issues that occurred.
This is a good point. There may well have been more in the way of mechanization onboard the RTF and it may have broken down - or, even worse, the parts may have been cannibalized to help construct the infrastructure for "Baltar's Future" on New Caprica.
For all we know, the Colonies may not have had a large human labour force. The capital city on the "main" planet (Caprica City) had something like seven million people - far from the largest in our society. There's no way to predict planetary occupation from the population of a single city, but I would be surprised if there were enough people on one planet to create a menial labour force.
Words to live by: "When in doubt, shoot at the guy yelling 'Kree!'."
Let's try this again: Spoiler-free 'til Season 4.5.
EJO on the blooper reel: "I hope you like it... or I'll SQUASH YOUR NUTS."
Spoiler:
The colonials are, once again, engaged in a war with a robotic race. Even if there were sophisticated robots aboard the Tillium refinery ship, I expect they would have been dismantled rather than "entrusted" to handle volatile explosive fuel. I expect this kind of activity is one that Colonials expect to "get their hands dirty" doing. After all "Fool me once, shame on,....shame on...we won't get fooled again".
Of course Colonial society is, according to the Scriptures and the limited historical evidence we heard as backstories to the series, no more than 3,000 years old, much younger than the known Earth history. This makes the size of its larger cities and its relative technological advantage most impressive, even given the fact that they started from a sizable (and at least literate) seed from Kobol.
Are we assuming that all machines are robots? What I'm trying to get at here is that I find it silly that the Colonials had the conveyor belt in place, but didn't have a better method of delivery from the pile to the belt than human labour. I'm not thinking of sophisticated robotics, I'm thinking more along the lines of a waterwheel - something to deliver parcels.
Words to live by: "When in doubt, shoot at the guy yelling 'Kree!'."
Let's try this again: Spoiler-free 'til Season 4.5.
EJO on the blooper reel: "I hope you like it... or I'll SQUASH YOUR NUTS."
Spoiler:
I agree, in principle, with most of your analysis of the situation, but have a couple of areas of disagreement.
If history has shown that the mass of people are dumb and only a few individuals are smart, then a democracy is not the best way to organize a society. An aristocracy or meritocracy makes more sense, and will end up accomplishing more. What's shaping up in the Colonial realm is uncertain, it is shifting over time, but took a perilous turn, in my opinion, during the course of this episode.
A lot of people have rightly remarked about the parallels between Baltar's "underground" publication from prison and "Mein Kampf" (My Struggle) published by Hitler during a similar incarceration prior to World War II. The parallel is apt and if the Colonials ever had experienced the equivalent of Hitler, they would have seen it themselves, but they apparently haven't. In fact Colonial political history must have been exceptionally bland and non-instructive. We haven't heard Baltar's administration, for example, being compared with any previous one--good or bad. You might argue that this is simply done in order not to confuse us, the viewers, with too much backstory that doesn't directly contribute to moving the action forward, but, nevertheless, it does make for a poorer context in which to predict how the Colonist jury will ultimately decide the fate of Baltar.
It is also a good use of misdirection, since the real consolidation of power is now taking place for Adama and Roslyn, not Baltar. Adama's threat of executing Cally was not simply a ploy, in my opinion. He was deadly serious.
This represents an absolute grasp of authority that would be seen as unambiguously menacing in the hands of any other figure of authority (like Cain, Tigh, or Baltar) but Adama has a "free pass" by most of the posters on this forum. Why is that?
Like most people, I like Adama. He has everything a great leader needs: gravitas, charisma, experience, and, until this episode, a balanced approach to the exercise of power. These are aspects that have garnered him a lot of loyalty, sometimes uncritical loyalty. All the pilots, even the iconoclasts among them like Starbuck, appear to revere "the old man". To me, exactly this kind of charisma can lead to a "cult of personality" that, in itself, is not exactly dangerous unless the leader himself loses his perspective and sense of humanity. Many leaders are as warmly remembered for their personality and elan as much as there actual accomplishments--Reagan and Kennedy immediately come to mind as prime examples for the right and left. Hitler, of course was charismatic too, and so was Stalin (who was the one the term "cult of personality" was coined).
Signals are mixed from the last few episodes about Adama's path that has led him to his conception of himself in his critical position as military leader of the Colonies. In the long recollection during the anniversary of his ex-wife, he seemed to regret sacrificing the well being of his family for his military career (although, as we saw, the instability in his marriage appears to have been caused by his wife's mental state as much as his neglect). The lesson Adama brings away from these reflections, however, is not what I would have expected. Instead of re-asserting the primacy of personal relationships over military responsibilities, Adama elects instead to avoid them entirely. His obvious affection for Roslyn is dormant and will remain so, while the both of them exercise their self-assigned roles of responsibility. This seems to lead to an increasing "dehumanizing" of Adama, and puts him less in touch with the feelings and priorities of "the common man".
The "Unfinished Business" episode has a darker side too. Adama called out the chief, then too, to teach him a lesson about the primacy of duty. Adama said explicitly that he had gotten too close to those he led. We have to ask ourselves is that as bad a thing as he thinks? Did Adama have to allow himself to be beaten bloody to atone for this grievous error? Those were uncomfortable scenes for me to watch and to think about later. In reasserting a distance between himself and the people under his care, Adama is taking a just as big a risk as he did when he "cut them some slack". To me, Adama's actions in the "Unfinished Business" episode were almost an act of hubris, almost as if he were thinking of himself as a living parable, allowing himself to be beaten for the instruction and moral edification of his troops. At once patriarchal and Messianic.
Leading, as he does, under the most extreme of wartime conditions, Adama's character is constantly challenged and tested. He is walking a thin line most of the time, and in this episode he appears to have strayed a bit too far from it. One of the most appealing aspects of Adama, however, is that he appears to be able to learn from his mistakes, to admit them to others, and to change course when he realizes he has gone astray. I'm hoping this will happen again.
Baltar, as a counter example, was a scheming egotist interested in self-aggrandizement from the first moment we saw him in the mini-series. For the following 40 or 50 hours of airtime we seen, he's been scrambling for his life from one crisis to another. Should he have taken a bullet rather than signing the infamous death order when coerced by the Cylons ? What would that have accomplished ? What would that have done for the prospects of Gaeta, who was in the position to supply the intelligence to the rebels and, ultimately Galactica, that resulted in the liberation of New Caprica. I'm sure Tigh would have rather seen him die rather than sign a document. But Tigh himself has done more than sign death warrants, he has been judge and executioner, even to his own wife, who did nothing but try to keep him alive at any cost. What has Tigh learned after this lesson but to be more intransigent than ever ?
Also, didn't it seem that no matter how well skilled the refiners could be on the Tillium vessel, that there was an absolute shortage of the raw material itself? The cavernous hanger deck seemed almost empty, with only a small heap of ore left. Looks like the fleet will have to do some more mining.
Also the conveyor mishap itself appeared to have been a deliberate act of sabotage by one of the crew, who put a batch of contaminated ore on the belt itself, or am I just mis-inferring that from one of the scenes ?
Last edited by anotherquestion; April 26th, 2008 at 02:00 PM.
I'm rather shocked that no one in this discussion has pointed out that Cally was formenting rebellion on a military ship in a time of war. You can't unionize a military vessel, especially not in a time of war. What if the cylons had jumped in right when the deck crew was refusing to launch except for nessecary missions. Do they have a dradas down there? Would they have believed a call from CinC? Would the people in CinC have had to go down and show them proof that one launch was nessecary?
I believe the point the writers were making is that you can have a strike on a civilian ship and that's appropriate, but not on Galactica. You can't have crewmen deciding orders are optional. This is true of every military in the world, even in democratic countries.
Also, someone up thread said something about Roslin having the captain arrested for reading a book. No, that's not what he was arrested for. He was arrested for threatening to stop the fuel supply and have "accidents" in time of war. That kind of behavior would get you arrested in any established democracy as well.
Granted, I thought Roslin was a bit out of character in this episode at the start, but I think it balances rather well when you put it in comparison to the way President Adar was ready to send the troops in against a teachers union on Caprica. It's apparent to me that Colonial society has a history of violently putting down unions and in that context Roslin's reaction is rather enlightened. After all she did talk to the chief and they did come to an understanding in the end.
As for the comparisons of Adama to Cain... at one point in Pegesus, Adama tells Tigh that there is a context to actions, and out of context there are actions Galactica has taken that would look just as bad as the ones attributed to Cain. Now we've been told by RDM that yes Cain did do those things, but I wonder if she would come off as such a villin if we had seen those actions and the events surrounding them.
I'm new to the forum, but am I the only one who thinks there is a copy of Baltar on the Refinery Ship confirming he is a cylon? The attached picture is taken from the scene right before Cheif Tyrol is about to shutdown the refinery coveyor operation and the camera zooms in on this guy for about 3 seconds. It's an uncanny resemblance to Baltar...
I liked seeing the working part of the fleet. Unfortunately I found the end to be very weak.
My favs:
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Some people have commented they were amazed at Baltar's change of voice.
Doesn't take much to please some people it seems.
James Callis graduated from the London Academy of Music & Dramatic Arts in 1996
This makes him something the British call "An Actor", I know Americans just have "Stars".
Also
James studied for a BA in English and Related Literature at the University of York, where he was a member of Derwent college. He graduated in 1993.
University of York is, unsurprisingly in Yorkshire, England. And that accent he did was mmmm pretty much a Yorkshire accent.
Funny how many of the best people we see in movies and TV are Canadians, Koreans and Brits.
1. Baltar. So, he's originally from a backwater planet, abandoned everyone he knew to head for Caprica eventually got elected President of the Colonies, sold his people out to the Cylons and 'now' he's trying to play champion of the lower classes? I don't blame Roslin for wanting to airlock him!
2. I do think that Baltar's gotten into her head to an extent though and I think that it might have subconsciously influenced her thinking on the labour dispute in that she may have attributed the strike mentality to the fact that the strike leader had read Baltar's writings.
3. On the other hand, I'm sympathetic to Adama's POV here. Yes the workers have cacky lives. However it's "United we stand, divided we fall" with the Cylons on their backs and that's something the unionists seemed to have forgotten. They may have had a case and they may have gotten away with their stunt but they were gambling with the safety of the entire fleet a bit too casually for my liking.
And maybe that explains why Tyrol was reluctant to get involved to start with, pre-Cylon New Caprica this is not.
Definately better than last week and rang truer than "The Woman King"
This episode sucked. Here we are in outer space, we've broken the light speed barrier, and our tilium fuel refinery consists of... wait for it... a conveyer belt!!! Okay now that I got that out. Here is my list of reasons to hate this episode.
1) Adama forgives mutiny again. Following on the heels of such shows as Stargate and Startrek, it is of course required to forgive mutiny, insubordination, etc at least once every four episodes; but I still prefer Vader's method.
2) Did I mention the conveyer belt! They might as well have put a wind mill on top of the ship driving the conveyer belt.
3) You've got to get a man's hand ripped off cause you can't shut the magical conveyer belt down or the whole ship will blow up. Then after the guy's hand is ripped off you go shut the magical conveyer belt off. um yeah.
4) Space OSHA
5) President Rosyln takes a 'hard line' against the workers from the beginning and caves at the end. I'd just like to think she has demonstrated more intelligence than to completely ignore the captain of a ship that makes all of the fuel for her fleet. Hmm you seem to have a problem that your workers are working 18 hour shifts for the last 6 months without a break; why don't you go directly to jail, do not pass go, do not collect 200 dollars, er credits or sometihng.
6) This goes back to the whole magical conveyer belt thing... You can make creatures with artificial intelligence so great that they can reason, dream, kick your ass, look like you, feel, think, wroship, etc; but you can't automate your conveyer belt so that you have a simple robot arm dropping the magically sand, I'm sorry Tilium, through a screener.
I felt like the whole episode was written by a hollywood producer who felt he could speak for the working class because his great great grandfather worked in a hot dog factory.
I love the idea of a Yorkshire planet! The people who lived there would be certain it was the best planet in the galaxy, wouldn't they?
I didn't buy that conveyor belt bit at all. It was obvious when they tried to fix it without turning it off first that somebody was going to get hurt. It seemed quite hypocritical of Tyrol to turn it off and call the strike after the guy got injured, since surely Tyrol was in charge and knew it was dangerous to stick your hand in moving machinery? In other words, the accident was Tyrol's own fault.
And were half the cast away on holiday? No Helo, Sharon or whatever her name is, Tigh, Lee (well, I don't remember him being in it), Gaeta, Dee.... and I know that Zarek is only a "recurring character" but they surely needed him to be in this one, or at least pretend Roslin was discussing the situation with him on the phone? Not one of my favourite episodes, I have to say.
Please... leave the touching to the experts.
Just watched the episode.
While I commend Tyrol and the Union for what they did, I also don't agree with them going on strike... Like, what would happen if the Cylons showed up?
It was also good to see the diplomatic side of Laura again. I was beginning to think they had set her too cold in S3... She and Adama just arrested everyone that went against what they thought... It's good to see her compromising again.
Baltar scares me... Because he's... good at what he does. But I don't understand what he was trying to do there? Get people on his side for his "trial"? I don't know.
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