In that first one they point out that the arguments from trekkies are "Federation has tech Wars lacks" and "Federation has tech that beats Wars tech" and then only defends the second point. Once again it deflects away from the issues.
Are you talking about the first link I posted with 'that first one'?
Do you mean they don't adres the presence of unique ST techs adequately? They do have a page on both 'special' ST and SW techs:
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Empire/Tech/Special/Special1.html and
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Empire/Tech/Special/Special2.html.
If you meant something else, could you elaborate?
For the record, saying that faction A of universe B could overpower its counterpart from universe C doesn't imply anything about any artistic or entertainment merit of either, and as said it's trivially easy to create a fictional universe that dwarfs a given other universe. So even if one's favored franchise loses, that doesn't really, you know, mean anything substantial (I'd rather have a interesting universe of lower power scales than the opposite). Just wanted to throw that out there.
We mean that Star Wars cannnon is whatever one of literally thousands of different people pulled out of their ass on a random day. The numbers vary immensely. Star Trek isn't perfect but it's more consistent.
If you accept the highball numbers, vast parts of the cannon stop making sense.
Ok, but the arguments they make mostly refer to numbers either derived from observation from events in the movies, or from official Lucasfilm sources.
Also, I believe they adres the problem of different 'levels' of canon here:
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Empire/Misc/Canon.htmlAlso this (
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Empire/Essays/Analysis.html) and this (
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Empire/Misc/Sources_and_Abbreviations.html) page seems relevant when it comes to discussing sources used.
But no one in Trek would do that. It's against their sense of self preservation. It's like talking about how bad modern armies are at cavalry charges. Then someone brings up tanks and you say "stop changing the subject!"
Again, could you please refer to the exact page you are talking about here? That'd make it easier for me to follow. Still, even if nobody in Trek would do it, that doesn't change things about their capacity for it. It'd also kinda hamper them in a case of total war, if they are unwilling to pursue that option.
It's also lowballing what is shown to be possible in Star Trek. When Sisko is chasing Michael Eddington he poisons several planets, rendering them inhabitable for colonization. He does this to several planets in a single day without any special preperation. (Personally I think he would have been court martialed but I guess it's okay if no one is living there.) So that shows what is possible in Star Trek if they are actually trying to burn the ground.
I've seen a little ST in my time, but not nearly all of it. Could you perhaps give me episode titles so I can look them up and see what happened (or rather, check the episode synopsis)? Because I have no idea what the circumstances or scope of these events are right now to be honest. I mean, from looking it up quickly I suspect you are referring to this:
http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/For_the_Uniform_(episode)
Is that correct? Because if yes, it kinda seems they just used good ol' chemical warfare on a bigger scale. We have similar capabilities in real life today, sort of, in the form of cobalt bombs that could make large areas uninhabitable.
The obvious conclusion is that in Star Trek inhabited planets have defenses.
Do they ever directly refer to these defenses, what they are, what their capabilities are? Or is this only derived from inference? Because I could think of other explanations of why they would refrain from just nuking the shit out of a planet/population.