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- Jun 28, 2013
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*shrug*
Look at it from their perspective. Their technology has been pretty stagnant since the days we were running around as cavemen.
The last time they stopped by to check on us in the late 1800s (look up Aurora, Texas) - we had barely started dicking around with electricity and magnetism and the printing press. That's considerable improvement, considering we had only started working with steel in substantial quantities about four hundred years before that.
Then, 60 years after one of their drunks crashed his ship during a thunderstorm, and we'd barely started the industrial revolution... they detect a gamma ray burst.
"Well... WTF was that?"
They return to find us zipping around in jet powered aircraft, refining uranium, building particle accelerators, and are well on our way to figuring out solid state devices. The existence of vacuum tubes might have even come as a surprise to them (perhaps no records of such technology exists in their own history - or their own history failed to produce vacuum tube technology).
Further, we'd started hammering out a concept of genetics (even though the cause was still suspected to be proteins or enzymes), immunization, epidemiology, organ transplants and even rudimentary experiments in cloning.
Holy ****. These crazy chimps just went from being creative survivors and social hunters to packs of raving engineers unraveling the secrets of the universe in a little more than a generation.
In all likelihood - we'd kick the unholy shit out of any alien we ran across. In the long run.
Short-term - we'd get caught off-guard and take a lot of losses. Through attrition-ensured dumb luck, ingenuity, or downright creative genius - we'd come up with counters to their technology and tactics.
Just because they are advanced doesn't mean they are superior. It wouldn't surprise me, in the slightest, if humanity is a sort of petri-dish experiment where intelligent species in various environments are subjected to stressors to analyze how they develop to various challenges.
In this case - they might have bit off more than they can chew. The capability to eliminate our existence would come at a very steep cost in terms of 'man'power, industry, and energy. No single 'attack' could eliminate all of us - and it would take a multitude of different strategies to make it work - and we're to a point, now, where we can develop reactionary defenses to many avenues they might use for an attack.
Meaning it'd just make us aware of their presence and piss us off.
I, also, doubt the population sizes of such an advanced civilization. We are approaching, in our own line of technological and industrial development, an era where individuals have an exceptional amount of capability. CAD-to-part systems exist that can build a stunning array of structural and functional parts with very little secondary machine support. Do-it-yourself genetic engineering is getting up there, as well (though it's not advertised, since any fool can play around with pox viruses and potentially make nasty things).
Extrapolated over a few hundred or even thousand years at even a dimutive pace (for us), that will easily lead to the point where many individuals will be able to make just about anything their mind and the properties of the universe will allow. That places a lot of power into the individual - and that will force population density to decrease, considerably. Too many people with too many differing opinions will not stand to live under strong governmental structures for very long. Commuting and commerce are fine - but when you can deconstruct the atoms of someone you don't like, everyone needs a little more elbow-room.
So organizing the kind of response necessary to eliminate us is likely pretty difficult, and 'hyper-advanced' civilizations likely have very diffuse populations with loose structures of governance. The attempt to organize it might very well trigger a war amongst themselves. (If ancient texts and stories are to be read into - 'the gods' used to wage war in the sky through certain eras).
It's quite possible that several wars have been fought amongst relatively small groups (a few thousand individuals on each side) over how our existence is to be handled.
Even if they were shocked at our recent developments and could build much of a consensus in favor of our elimination - it would probably be a century or more before they could even begin acting on that consensus (presuming they are still limited to 'reasonable' violations of our current laws of physics - mostly involving relativity - and haven't so mastered the universe as to be capable of truly commanding it... at which point you're effectively god of this tier of existence).
Which is why I'm horribly skeptical of the notion that we've been contacted in any direct or official capacity (and it is unlikely that 'aliens' would recognize our governments or respect the authority of institutions that rarely last more than a few centuries). Merely revealing their existence and intent to ward us would throw away their greatest advantage. Any display of weapon capabilities would, also, be a horribly bad idea (so following up on any threats to give the illusion of superiority would backfire) - we'd analyze the hell out of it and engineer a counter. Even if we dropped the 'let's go into space' idea, we'd have the solution waiting on the ground.
It's in their best interest to stay enigmatic and to observe. They likely descend from predators, as well - so their behavior should not be nearly as alien to us as some might expect.
if you assume that you are too strong to be defeated then you assume wrong. overcondifence in the number one reason for the fall of empires.