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      |  |  | In lugnet.space, Mark Sandlin writes: > in article GGFCIK.C25@lugnet.com, Lorbaat wrote:
 >
 > > I don't know if that's what you might have meant by "at the beginning of the
 > > Federation" but I thought I'd throw in a little more detail.
 >
 > Well, yeah, that's what I meant. :^)
 >
 > Apparently, when the show begins, Starfleet Exists, but the UFP does not.
 
 Then I think that already mucks with the first technical manual put out back
 in the 70's. Yet I realize that printed matter is not necessarily canon, as
 per a Roddenberry quote[1]. At one time I would have considered that manual
 the show's bible, but as new people take over the show, it becomes more
 doubtful. Shoot, varying publications can't even agree what year Enterprise
 was launched![2]
 
 In the old manual the UFP charter provides for, among other things, a
 starfleet, of which there were originally 13 heavy cruiser Constitution
 Class I starships, not to mention similar numbers of ships each in Scout,
 Destroyer, and Tug/Transport classes. IIRC, the charter's tone suggests that
 the starfleet is created by the charter, not merely incorporating something
 existing. I'll hafta check, or somebody else can, because in addition to
 building ships, it could also be "authorizing" the fleet, in which case it
 could already have been more or less in existance and replacing old ships.
 
 One thing that makes the show rather exciting IMO is if/how the Vulcans play
 a role in helping humanity actually make it in substantial numbers out into
 space. It should make some interesting stories visiting the Vulcan, Proxima
 Centauri, Eridani and Epsilon Indii systems for the first few times.
 
 And BTW, what the heck is a Klingon anyway?
 
 -Tom McD.
 when replying, 0.04% of all Sol system asteroids contain 3 parts per 10^9
 spamcake compounds.
 
 [1] Though not verbatim, the Roddenberry quote basically said, Whatever
 happens in a ST TV show or a ST movie is what actually happened.
 [2] I realize that there now may be a "definitive answer".. I was just
 referring to older official publications that didn't agree.
 
 |  |  |  
 
 Message has 1 Reply:
 
  |  |  | Re: Star Trek: Enterprise 
 | 
 |  | (...) It seems to me that the time of ST:E involves Earths first steps outside our own solar system (warp speeds are only 100 years new to Earth, and speeds beyond warp 1 are new in ST:E). If all of the Eugenics Wars and WWIII are over and done (...)   (24 years ago, 13-Jul-01, to lugnet.space, lugnet.off-topic.fun) 
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