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#16
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Have to agree with HNM here.
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#17
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But gosh, every frontier mining town needs its 'house of ill-repute' staffed by some 'soiled doves'
Avatar, more than anything else, is a classic western! But you are probably right: there isn't any official brothel and no official prostitutes. But on the other hand, six years is a long time for those big, brawny testosterone-filled mercenaries to control themselves. There are certainly some women at Hell's Gate, but the male-female ratio, at least among the soldiers, is extremely lopsided (from what we see). Every military in history (including the US) has made arrangements to see to the troops' sexual needs. Since there aren't any local women, they are going to have to bring their own.
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#18
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Last edited by Ashen Key; 02-28-2011 at 02:52 AM. |
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#19
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There is another subtext to the whole question of how many people Hell's Gate can hold. It's an issue Scott touched on in one of his posts and that is the issue of community size.
Larger communities tend to be more stable than smaller ones. The bigger the community the easier it is for people to fit in and blend in with the rest of the crowd. But, the other subtext that hasn't been addressed (yet) in this thread is one I want to bring up. It concerns the issue of how stable the people at Hell's Gate are. Think about it like this. The people at Hell's Gate are going to the most hostile place known to the human race. They are a very, very long way away from home, from all their friends, family, and the only world they know. They are now in a place that whose atmosphere would kill them in minutes without exopacks, let alone the dangers to them outside the fence. But most important, they are a very, very long way away from home. That means the RDA would want to select the most stable people they can find to go to Hell's Gate. You can bet they have very, very rigorous psychological screening procedures and tests to weed out those won't be able to hack it and therefore are not psychologically capable of handling a full tour on Pandora. This relates to the subject of this thread because if a community gets big enough, it becomes much more likely that someone will slip past the tests and screening, someone whose instability will not manifest itself until they are a part of that community. So, the RDA would want to balance the benefits of a small, close-knit community with the strengths of a larger, more stable community. That's a difficult balancing act, to be sure! Another way to think about what I'm talking about in this post is to realize we have a real-life analog to Hell's Gate, right here, on Earth, in the present day. It is the collection of bases and research stations in Antarctica. I am not talking about just the American research bases and stations. I am talking also about the bases run by other countries, like the United Kingdom, France, Poland, Russia, Australia, etc. Some of those bases are staffed (albeit at a much reduced level) through the brutal Antarctic winter and believe me, the people that go down there to spend a winter on the ice have to be stable, mentally, psychologically, and emotionally stable. Granted, the six months they spend down in Antarctica are long (especially those at the American base located at the South Pole) but nowhere near as long as a six-year tour on Pandora. I am using Antarctica as an example because it's about the closest thing we have to a "Hell's Gate" colony here on Earth.
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#20
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Throwing a random idea out there about this limited ISV space dilemna: Most of the ISV's space is devoted to storage for cargo (like unobtanium). On this evacuation flight, most of that space would have been unused. I wonder if was possible to manufacture makeshift cryomods via stereolithography and bring them onto the ISV using the shuttle. We do not see much of what happens immediately after the battle is over but I would imagine that some sort of agreement (terms of surrender) was reached in which the humans had several days or a few weeks to prepare for departure. Last edited by Banefull; 02-28-2011 at 05:50 AM. |
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#21
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#22
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Well, if the miners (and possibly some mechnics) participated in the attack (and were all/almost all killed as a result) then 500-800 seems reasonable, although as I mentioned before with the numbers of marines on the ground, I would guess the lower end of that figure. This would also then make sense in terms of the number of survivors all fitting onto the ISV. For staff like Selfridge, then all it would really need was him and maybe 2-3 others working for him, plus the control room staff as most of the administration would be done on Earth, since I don't really see much of a need for pay etc while they are actually on Pandora) - they would be part of the people who were sent back to Earth, along with maintenance staff and any survivors from the attack (which, as I already mentioned before, are unlikely. Wile a few may well have survived (there are at least two marines getting onto the shuttle, one injured), the vast majority of them would have died) For the psychological point, that is an excellent point, and makes me think the true number would maybe be around 400 or so. OF course, the people who were employed would probably have been psychologically tested for such things (although that doesn't explain how blatant psychopaths get there, but then again, that's a different issue to stability) and I'm sure there would be at least a couple of employees who had their job as monitoring the staff. The cryo units would probably be too complex (and slow) to manufacture on Pandora, and a return flight contains an equal (or almost equal) number of people returning if the staff are there for fixed contracts (e.g. 6 years). I would guess that it was only because Quaritch's attack got everyone killed that the remaining staff were able to fit in the ISV for the return trip.
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#23
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#24
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Excellent observation - I never actually counted those
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#25
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All Avatar writings ------------------- Selected writings: You came back How do you make up after you've done the unforgivable? Jake and Neytiri have a conversation in the wake of Hometree's destruction, during their first real moment alone following his return as Toruk Makto. The Last Train Home Fourteen years after the war, a lone spaceship appears in the sky. The former members of the Avatar program watch its approach – expecting the worst, fearing for their adopted home. Then the ship lands. And suddenly, nothing makes sense anymore. Five seconds too late This is a different kind of Jake/Neytiri romance, the story that would've unfolded had she been delayed for just five seconds while trying to reach him following the fight with Quaritch. |
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#26
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I add these pix as proof. http://www.tree-of-souls.com/members...327-avs_1.html http://www.tree-of-souls.com/members...328-avs_2.html http://www.tree-of-souls.com/members...329-avs_3.html http://www.tree-of-souls.com/members...330-avs_4.html http://www.tree-of-souls.com/members...331-avs_5.html http://www.tree-of-souls.com/members...332-avs_6.html http://www.tree-of-souls.com/members...333-avs_7.html Note, the one in the dorm cabin is hard to see, but a blue shadow is seen walking by, and is several feet taller than the human scientist walking along outside the same window.[EDIT, if you see two in the dorm cabin, add one.] I wonder why scientists walking outside don't fear attack by stingbats...
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Last edited by EywaBlessMe; 03-03-2011 at 12:49 AM. |
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#27
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And thanks for putting up those pictures! That actually helps in trying to see them all. (also, your banner! with the Blue Sky Mine quote! I was starting to think I was the only one who connected that song with canon. !)_
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#28
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I'm glad you connected it. Mind you, the song came out nearly two decades ago...
I didn't want to put too big a pic, but with the lettering the mine is difficult to see.
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#29
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Oooh... thanks for the screencaps; they're excellent. Definitely a useful reference.
Hmm, this is interesting. The way I got "ten," initially, is that I studied shots of the link room and the longhouse. There are definitely ten link beds and ten bunks, so I'd assumed that there were ten avatars. If there's more, the question is where are the "extra" avatars linking up, and where are they parking them at night? We know the mobile link station has 3 links, so they could be using that. But I don't see any good reason that they wouldn't have enough bunks to accommodate all the avatars, as it doesn't seem like it'd be difficult/expensive to make more. I'll have to think about it.
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All Avatar writings ------------------- Selected writings: You came back How do you make up after you've done the unforgivable? Jake and Neytiri have a conversation in the wake of Hometree's destruction, during their first real moment alone following his return as Toruk Makto. The Last Train Home Fourteen years after the war, a lone spaceship appears in the sky. The former members of the Avatar program watch its approach – expecting the worst, fearing for their adopted home. Then the ship lands. And suddenly, nothing makes sense anymore. Five seconds too late This is a different kind of Jake/Neytiri romance, the story that would've unfolded had she been delayed for just five seconds while trying to reach him following the fight with Quaritch. |
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#30
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Just remembered something else. The man and woman leaning over Jake when he first wakes up in his avatar... are also avatar-drivers, out of link. The man definitely is, because you see him climbing into a link during one of the deleted scenes. I can't remember if you see the woman doing the same, but she shows up a lot in other scenes and seems to act and react like an avatar-driver.
The plot thickens.
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All Avatar writings ------------------- Selected writings: You came back How do you make up after you've done the unforgivable? Jake and Neytiri have a conversation in the wake of Hometree's destruction, during their first real moment alone following his return as Toruk Makto. The Last Train Home Fourteen years after the war, a lone spaceship appears in the sky. The former members of the Avatar program watch its approach – expecting the worst, fearing for their adopted home. Then the ship lands. And suddenly, nothing makes sense anymore. Five seconds too late This is a different kind of Jake/Neytiri romance, the story that would've unfolded had she been delayed for just five seconds while trying to reach him following the fight with Quaritch. |
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