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| The Next Generation All Good Things come to an end...but not here. |
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#46 |
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#47 | |
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To boldly go...
Location: Kansas City
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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Just because it's futuristic doesn't mean it's practical. |
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#48 |
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Commodore
Location: New Yawk
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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"Tranya is people!" |
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#49 | |
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Vice Admiral
Location: In pre-production
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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John |
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#50 |
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Commodore
Location: New Yawk
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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"Tranya is people!" |
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#51 | ||
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Earth
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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#52 | |
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Writer
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
The problem, as I've been stressing throughout the thread, is that the later showrunners who'd taken over TNG after the first season abandoned most of what the creators had intended, and had the ship engaged in military and political missions more often. So there's a discrepancy between the model that Roddenberry intended -- in which having civilians and families onboard was not only believable, but essential -- and the very different model that subsequent showrunners employed, in which having families onboard made less sense. Maybe it would've made more sense if Roddenberry hadn't been so attached to the Starfleet paradigm. I think his later self who was less comfortable with the military was at odds with his '60s self who was comfortable with being a WWII veteran and making his show about a military vessel. What he tried to do was keep the name and trappings of Starfleet but re-envision it as a more peaceful, scientific organization, yet that clashed with viewers' expectations about Starfleet being a military service. So maybe what he should've done instead was to have two distinct space services, one scientific (say, UESPA) and one military (Starfleet). That would've fit right in with my two-ship model.
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#53 |
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Earth
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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#54 |
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To boldly go...
Location: Kansas City
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
Maybe by the 24c people lost the "Think of the children!" mentality and thought brining them along on a decade-long space mission was worth the risk given the odds they were presented with. Which, again, consider that over the course of seven years there were only a handful of time the ship's occupants were under real mortal danger. Civilians and families today live on military bases, in or near countries not entirely friendly to the U.S. and do work for a greater cause either on their own, through an organization or for the military. Is someone wanting to be a botanist on a starship really that much different than someone who up-roots their entire family to live in a hut in Africa to provide good medical care? People take risks all of the time with their children either by choice or bu living circumstances. Should people who live in the ghetto not do so with/have children? I mean it's not safe to go out on the streets or to school there. The "OMG think of the children!" mentality is gone, hell episodes even suggested that the fear, worry and mourning of death itself was gone. People saw bringing their children on the ship as an acceptable risk and a necessary part of wanting both a career in Starfleet and a family.
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Just because it's futuristic doesn't mean it's practical. |
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#55 | |
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Writer
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
But those original creators left and were replaced by different people who changed the way they portrayed the ship and its mission -- changed it in ways that conflicted with the original intentions, by taking what had been meant to be a deep-space research platform that was as much civilian as Starfleet and instead using it as a diplomatic and military flagship closer to home with the civilian population all but forgotten. And that's the reason for the contradiction you're seeing.
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#56 |
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Admiral
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
"Wagon Train to the Stars..."
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Thiptho lapth! Ian (Entire post is personal opinion) The Andor Files @ http://andorfiles.blogspot.com/ |
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#57 |
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Writer
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
Although come to think of it -- why does nobody ever complain about the fact that they had civilians and family members on Deep Space 9? That station was hardly safe; it was in the most strategically important and contested part of the quadrant. So how come you never hear people raising the same objections to Jake and Keiko and Molly -- not to mention civilians like Quark and his family -- being on the station that they raise to families and civilians aboard a Starfleet vessel? Isn't that a contradiction? If fans can live with it on DS9, why can't they live with it on TNG?
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#58 |
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Admiral
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
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#59 | |
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Admiral
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
However, for me, it meant that the chances of seeing an Andorian or two in TNG might have increased. (Not by very much, as it turned out, but I didn't know that then.)
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Thiptho lapth! Ian (Entire post is personal opinion) The Andor Files @ http://andorfiles.blogspot.com/ |
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#60 |
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Commodore
Location: Toronto, Ontario
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Re: Is it smart to have families on the Enterprise-D?
"1,014 men, women, and children were killed earlier today when the Enterprise-D was destroyed by some strange inverted nebula that caused the crew to turn inside-out. Horrible deaths, but the worst thing is that this never had to happen. First we create an enemy out of the Borg that threatens our very existance and now this. How many more lives will be lost before StarFleet stops poking its nose where it doesn't belong?" -- FOX News, Stardate 47457.1.
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"Who are you?! And how did you get in here?!" "I'm the locksmith. And... I'm the locksmith." |
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