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Archive 1

Untitled Comments

no mention of the unique environmental invasion as written about in the war against the cthorr series? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.31.33.21 (talk) 23:31, 11 September 2007 (UTC)


Editorializing moved here:

On the face of it, the most severe problem with this theme is that Earth is a horrible place in many ways: 1. It is so hot here that water is liquid. 2. It is so cold here that matter exists in un-ionized form. 3. Water is as close to a perfect solvent as any known substance, and Oxygen is is the second most corrosive gas known. For most forms of life, Earth is probably Hell.

On the other hand, the unique nature of Earth's environment means that for any other life-forms that thrive in such conditions, Earth represents very rare and valuable real estate.

  • this article is outlandishly speculative and presumptive. I am going to rewrite it user:vroman
  • The whole article should be deleted.... starting from scratch would be better.
  • The Earth Defense section is ridiculous in numerous ways, I'd say it needs revision the most.

Well perhaps you would care to back up your opinions with logical reasoning. Exactly why is this article "ridiculous in numerous ways"? It's dealing with a hypothetical scenario - there is no right or wrong!

Given that the very existence of intelligent extra-terrestrials is in question - much less what would happen should they invade or attack Earth - it goes without saying that this article will be speculative. As aforementioned, it's a hypothetical scenario. That said, the article is definitely POV, basically stating that if aliens exist, they wouldn't have reason to attack Earth. In this general argument it poses, it equates human reasoning to a life form that isn't human, AND only applies one-sided logic to beings that may or may not behave in what is percieved by us to be logical, AND equates technological intellect and advancement with enlightenment, possibly moral enlightenment. No one would argue that virtually any adult is more technologically adept and savvy than an infant, but that doesn't mean they're less prone to random acts of barbarity and cruelty that have no sound reasoning. Quite the contrary in fact. And that's just one counterpoint. Aliens may not want to conquer Earth for resources or slave labor, they may just do it for sport or sadism or religious fanaticism or some other reasoning we couldn't possibly ponder. Who knows?
Since this is such a speculative subject the article should be far more open minded and represent more possibilities than just cold logic and science that generally doesn't permit for the existence of the creatures in discussion in the first place. It's a well written article, but the authoritative voice that repeatedly dismisses the idea of an invasion even taking place undermines the entire piece. If it's all hypothesis it should be a lot less POV (especially considering their are limited reliable references to back up the authoritative statements being made). I'll try to research and update whenever possible. jcomp489
Thanks. Considering this article tends to cover a fictional theme, I would rather have this article focus more on the fiction than speculative fact. I would like examples, the alien invasion as allegory for colonalism, the cold war, etc., variations on the theme such as interdimensional alien invasion or Earth invasion of alien planets, etc. --YoungFreud 18:38, 14 July 2005 (UTC)

Starting over

Please refer to Wikipedia:No original research. This is not the place to write your own personal essay about alien invasion. Hopefully we can turn this into a proper article about a subject in science fiction. — Phil Welch 03:07, 20 July 2005 (UTC)

I would suggest that the subject lends itself well to the areas listed such as Exopolitics - which - regardless of peoples perceptions is a legitimate philosophical and perhaps reasonable excercise in discussion on sociological impacts, and philosophical arguments. Just because we don't have little green men running around the U.N. does not mean we should not research the subject in the (unlikely) event they do show up. Consider the implications that such discussions would have had on colonists of the Americas, Asia and so on had they been allowed to occur before people had made contact. Sequestering such discussions as 'fiction' merely because you consider them to be - does not make them so. The topic is legitimate, and worthy of research, if only from anthropological views - as it allows a history of our current human perceptions of theoretical scenarios -- although agreeably, perhaps somewhat far fetched scenarios - they are none the less valid, IMHO. Rjakobson 22:11, 5 September 2006 (UTC)

Destruction

I'd have to say that although there are many variations on the alien invasion theme, I like the "land on earth and destroy its cities" version best, because it features a lot of action. The other ones I don't care for a whole lot, especially the demonic alien invasion theme. Scorpionman 02:30, 10 October 2005 (UTC)

Well, that said, I like your work with the introduction to the section and the mention of combination. I'm considering adding a few more variation, such as alien raids, which would be short-term, small-numbers hostile alien contact and more with the intention of probing defenses, sending a message, or terror raids than occupying or genocide, etc. (I think Signs would be a good example: the aliens bug out for no real reason), and something I'm referring to as Little Green Man's Burden for the time being, in which the aliens invade with the intent to civilize humans. --YoungFreud 03:52, 10 October 2005 (UTC)

I created the pageInvasions of earth in science fiction, not knowing that this page existed - please merge/incorporate and link. Are there any other examples of benign alien first contact - or humans being the invaders? Jackiespeel 18:29, 10 November 2005 (UTC)

Article needs a lot of work

This entire article reads like a high school original research project. There is no mention of any scholarship. No history of the genre. No references. Just generic generalizations and unsourced analysis mixed in with incomplete lists of various popular books and movies. There is probably material here that is valid, but the very structure of the article is undisciplined and shows a lack of research from the leading scholars in the genre. Not even sure it's a valid article. Perhaps "Alien invasion literature"? It needs someone to do some proper research and report on what the scholarship says. --Stbalbach 23:19, 28 November 2005 (UTC)


Extragalactic alien invasion?

This "new type of invasion" really looks to be more like Star Wars fancruft. Can I get a second example before I consider removing this?--YoungFreud 21:29, 29 December 2005 (UTC)

ID4 Ships

The ships do not use a "heat ray", if you look CLOSELY, into the green or blue-green beam, you'll see what looks like a fireball travel down the beam. It is a blob of antimatter that strikes the targeted building, and the detonation of this "bomb" is what destroys the city or other target. Two of these destroy the White House outright, then Washington DC is consumed in the blast. I have a DVD copy of this movie. I was told long ago that a cup full of antimatter making contact with matter is like setting off a 30 MEGATON H-Bomb, only there is no lingering radiation. Martial Law 09:52, 13 January 2006 (UTC)

It’s like dropping a water balloon on a sand castle. The ships light a beam on the structure and the ball/blob of plasma is released/dropped down the beam and splashes/spreads out into a circle went it hits the ground.

-G —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.246.112.186 (talk) 18:16, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

Some direction on this page

After reading through the Interstellar War article, I found some direction for this page! I'm thinking about limiting this to hostile first contact or something like that. Thus, we can remove references to "human invasion of alien worlds and such" and that "extragalactic alien invasion" and put them there. --YoungFreud 06:15, 24 January 2006 (UTC)


Could use votes to save this article, thanks MapleTree 22:14, 28 September 2006 (UTC)

I think at least one of the Superman movies concerns an alien invasion ("Kneel before Zod!"), although that invasion consists of, like three aliens. Superman himself is an alien, for that matter. 204.52.215.107 21:50, 29 March 2007 (UTC)

Demonic alien invasion

I hadn't originally consider this an alien invasion, but it's more than acceptable. I like the Childhood's End reference, but because its submitter admitted it's borderline, I would like to get more examples for this. The closest ones I can think of Doom and Urotsukidoji, but those might be considered a bit low-brow, especially in regards to Childhood's End.--YoungFreud 04:59, 8 October 2005 (UTC)


I once read a book by Dean Koontz about an invasion/xenoforming attempt by creatures with some seemingly supernatural power, they are shown to be (extremely) malevolent aliens from some kind of twisted hell like dimension, and if you consider hell a dimension, then a demon would fit the position. Also, the aliens/demons seem to desire that children suffer but are unable to cause harm to them themselves and don't do anything to the humans that hurt the children. Oh, and there is an announcement thing on the radio that proclaims (backwards) that it is the devil, Satan, Baal, Abaddon lists all its names in various religions and calls itself the eater of souls. By the next day, almost all human souls have been harvested and the demon/aliens left, leaving only human children and a few humans.--Hoyt596 (talk) 02:55, 19 September 2010 (UTC)

X-Files?

No mention? 18:44, 15 April 2007 (UTC)


Briefly: All throughout the last two or three series of X-files, as well as the two movies, there was the underlying story of Mulder chasing for the truth which was basically aliens colonising planet Earth on the 21st December 2012. I think it is certainly worth a mention after getting the story line absolutely correct. Dave. Bushy555 (talk) 07:45, 21 May 2011 (UTC)

The link looks dead. 94.219.124.255 (talk) 14:10, 21 November 2009 (UTC)

On 1/20, I added Battle for Terra as a reference to a type of alien invasion where Humans are invading another planet. Xin Jing (talk) 20:39, 21 January 2010 (UTC)

Reference to "Watchmen" is wrong

Under '3 Notable examples', someone wrote:

"In Alan Moore's Watchmen, Ozymandias uses cloning and teleportation technology to fake an alien attack on New York, destroying it instantly, in order to provide a catalyst for peace between the USA and Soviet Union, who only moments before had been on the verge of a nuclear war."

I would like to point out that the film does not feature any alien reference, and especially no alien attack. This piece should be removed. Tomdebock (talk) 22:15, 29 September 2010 (UTC)

Invasion

The wikipedia page on invasion specifies its military character and yet 'alien invasion' also appears to include non-military, non-violent encounters with aliens that occur on Earth, or what would normally be understood as First Contact encounters if thehy occurred elsewhere. See for example the discussion about the nature of Arthur C. Clarke's novel Childhood's End. Ignoring the contradiction just looks odd. Corduroyalmond (talk) 2 January 2011

No, I'm afraid you've read it wrong. I've reverted your continued changes as OR. Please use sources. Viriditas (talk) 02:53, 3 January 2011 (UTC)

Original research

This article reads like an original research essay. More reliable sources are needed to verify the content of this article. Vanalman (talk) 22:47, 22 December 2011 (UTC)

H. G. Wells Story As Allegory For European Colonialism

I'm positive this is false, so until a proper citation is provided, I've removed it. When I've some more free time I'll come back and fix some of the other errors I spotted ( I didn't remove those becuase I'm not so sure as I was about the gunboat reference ). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.150.206.25 (talk) 22:10, 19 February 2012 (UTC)