Thoughts on Force
Suppose I'm a mugger, and I shove a gun in your face and demand a single dime from you. You're surprised I only want a dime, but you comply anyway. Then I run away. In such a case, the cost that this mugging imposed upon you was greater than the dime alone; the very fact that someone threatened violence upon you is the greater cost to which the dime is added.- Stuart Hayashi
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The bigger point is that of re-supply. Aircraft don't fly based on nuclear propulsion or Galt's theoretical device, but on fuel which must be drilled, extracted and refined. People have to have food, and a ship's stores can typically only hold enough food for a month. And there's the small detail that the ship itself would have had to have hundreds of active crew for daily maintenance, upkeep, and operations. A warship is a major undertaking.
I think Rand left it intentionally vague not only because it wasn't a critical aspect to the plot but because she herself wasn't familiar enough with the military to write a convincing story. Hmmm. Atlas Shrugged Fan Fiction?
Still, while it's an entertaining discussion, we're also dealing with a fictional story that regularly relies on unknown technology as a deus ex machina. So...
By the way, the ship need not have had nuclear power. John Galt's electrostatic motor technology struck me as easily scalable, even to a scale to move a battlewagon and power all its systems.
A warship also needs support from a fixed port. They don't operate in a vacuum. They need supplies and fuel; even a nuclear ship needs food, fuel for any aircraft, ammunition and various sundries. Ragnar had to have a facility somewhere. That facility could well have included an airfield.
Major point as well: Where would you mount heavy guns on a carrier?
The ship as described sounds like a battleship or heavy cruiser.
I had thought his vessel would have one of two origins.
1. Francisco d'Anconia built it for him. Or:
2. It is the former USS Enterprise CVN-65, which was on her way to the boneyard when Danneskjold's crew hijacked it. He might even have managed to insinuate enough of his recruits onto that ship, for what was supposed to be her last voyage, to represent a majority. Thus the worst crime anyone committed, was barratry--when the officer-in-charge steers a ship to a port other than where the owner wanted her to go.
three students of philosophy here, each with their own convictions on how to destroy the motor of the world.
The ends justify the means? Robin Hood?
I might be splitting hairs but the crew of a ship
Delivering some goods to the people's republic of
France are unlikely to have been involved in the initial looting.