SGT KITTEN wrote:
companyman wrote:
This is why I think hyperdrive is faster than Ridley Scott indicated in Alien/Prometheus, simply because a military would not be able to function as they do in Aliens.
You send a marine unit on a 2-year trip to attack an enemy stronghold, they spend 6 months clearing that out, then 2-years back, only to find the "war" actually ended 18 months after they first left! That would also mean in theory that a Marine, thanks to cryo, may actually end his service in the tubes on the way to the conflict!
How much chaos would ensue if you could only send Marines that were not due to end their term on the way, or even during anticipated hostilities after arrival?
Even in the military today, they just keep you going. Involuntary extension. It happens. We used to have short timers show up on my boat. They made the whole patrol if they ran out while we were deployed. Sometime they could catch a break and hop the mail boat but not always. You sign up and become government property.
Charlie
I'm sure that happens in the current military, which you'd know more about that I would. But, we're talking a situation where a soldier may be due to be mustered out in say three months, but a round-trip is four years. Extension is one thing, forcing someone to complete a whole new involuntary tour, outside of a full-scale declaration of war (like in the ACW when everyone thought it would be over in a few months so only signed up for a short period, or the WWII National Guard units that were then transferred to regular army) is something else.
Due to this, I prefer the Colonial Marines Tech Manual explaination, in that when travelling FTL, time within the ship actually runs faster, so a trip that may only take a few weeks in real-time, seems to take several months ship-time.
As to Hudson's particular circumstances, I suspect the LV-426 op was going to be a brief, routine 'milk-run'. He probably thought he was going to do the op, finish his tour, and get paid overtime just for sleeping his way home. This rude awakening, combined with the loss of bunkmates, and dealing with something never before encountered, probably explains how he fell apart.