What exactly made the Enterprise D the "flagship"?
Well, there's the fact that the characters themselves flat out refer to it as such in several different episodes.

What exactly made the Enterprise D the "flagship"?
I've always agreed with this particular criticism of TNG. Way too smug in attitude. One of the things that made TOS attractive was that is was asprirational in outlook. Okay, Kirk, Spock, McCoy and The Federation might not have been perfect, but they were trying to be better, and trying to do the right thing. This is a good message to see on a weekly basis - maybe things aren't perfect, but that's no reason to not keep trying to make it better. TNG (and VOY) come along and we get told that Earth and the Federation are paradise accomplished and nobody has to want/need anything and we're gonna go out and civilize the rest of the galaxy. Freakin' liberal-progressive wet-dream (we got ours and we're gonna make you all behave the same way as us!), but not so great drama in a weekly tv series. Fortunately, DSN came along and sterred the boat back in TOS' direction.
So, the mere fact that they referred to it as the flagship is what made it the flagship in the first place?Well, there's the fact that the characters themselves flat out refer to it as such in several different episodes.What exactly made the Enterprise D the "flagship"
Of course it should have. Face it, the only thing the Borg have going for them is weight of numbers. The Borg possess no imagination, no creativity, no fortitude, the Borg are a mass of slow moving captive slaves with a single individual calling the shots.Which of course, plausibly shouldn't have happenedGiven that Starfleet always come out ahead in conflict with the Borg (at a price yes)
Comformity can be accomplish through means other than application of force.^Picard ... he was very adamant that they not use force to make others conform
I'll give you "this" if you just change your legal code a tiny little bit.
Okay, now I'll give you "that" if you make a small alteration in your educational system.
Lovely, how about wonderful "trade deal," in exchange for a rewording of your patent laws.
Given that Starfleet always come out ahead in conflict with the Borg (at a price yes) and that Voyager was able in End Game to destroy the Borg, Q was completely wrong.in Q who showing them they weren't as nearly ready to encounter 'anything that is out there' as they thought they were
We are (and always will be) ready for what's out there.
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What exactly made the Enterprise D the "flagship"?
For the vast majority of the time, there was no flag officer aboard the Enterprise D, so it was by no means a flagship in the naval sense.
It wasn't the only Galaxy-class ship, either. So it wasn't the most advanced or powerful ship in the fleet. There's no indication that the Enterprise's role or function was really different from, or more important than, any of the other exploratory operations in the fleet.
Kor
What exactly made the Enterprise D the "flagship"?
For the vast majority of the time, there was no flag officer aboard the Enterprise D, so it was by no means a flagship in the naval sense.
It wasn't the only Galaxy-class ship, either. So it wasn't the most advanced or powerful ship in the fleet. There's no indication that the Enterprise's role or function was really different from, or more important than, any of the other exploratory operations in the fleet.
Kor
Cos the writers don't know naval procedures.....
The Borg's previous successes were based on going after groups who couldn't defend themselves, weak low hanging fruit, Starfleet was able to defend themselves, and possessed imagination, and creativity, and fortitude.
In that case I'd like to make the point that not a single entity or race would ever have a chance against humanity in the trek universe, because the writers cannot afford to let humanity loose (without reversing that situation somehow). So then the question if humanity prevails in any trek episode or movie isn't even applicable, only how they do it.The Borg never had a chance, which the Borg would have know, if the Borg were capable of figuring anything out.
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A big part of the problem is the depiction of the Enterprise Dee's crew as somehow being "the best of the best," and that everyone coming out of the academy wanted to be posted there, and Riker stating that people wait years to be posted there.
Pretentious as all hell.
Riker in FC attributed the Borg's ability to assimilate 21st century Earth to the after math of the third world war, and not to "of course, they're the Borg."
Suggesting that prior to the war Humanity could have defeated them.
The Borg aren't in any way "super beings." Their technology comes from others, and their soldiers come from others.
Cos the writers don't know naval procedures.....
because it's the banner vessel, representing the virtues of the whole, because they represent the benchmark of the fleet. Seeing as Starfleet is primarily an organization of exploration & the D isn't a ship on military duty it need not have a flag officer as such, to be the banner vesselWhy would "The Flagship" need to have a crew that was any more best than the crew of a non-flagship?But the D was the flagship of the Federation. You have to have the best crew on the Flagship.
Yes, just like the fact that them referring to him as Wesley Crusher, made him Wesly CrusherSo, the mere fact that they referred to it as the flagship is what made it the flagship in the first place?Well, there's the fact that the characters themselves flat out refer to it as such in several different episodes.What exactly made the Enterprise D the "flagship"
A very interesting & accurate observationI prefer 'Too perfect' to the usual TV tropes associated with character flaws. Maybe the cast should have been more flawed but 9 out of 10 times flaws and conflict become formulaic and contrived. They fixate on specific flaws and lean heavily on episodes where two characters with opposing flaws are trapped together somewhere and fight first then have to learn to work together to solve a problem. DS9 and Voyager's most annoying moments often came from this formula.
The limitation on conflict may have stifled some good ideas but it stifled a lot more bad ones and forced them to focus on the adventure instead of just trapping Worf and Beverly in a cave or something and having them fight over mercy toward the enemy or something.
Imperfect characters, good. Specific flaws or quirks that become the focus of all character development, very very bad.
Cos the writers don't know naval procedures.....
Come on. It's Starfleet, not the Navy. It's an organisation 300 years in the future and the terminology obviously changed in some cases. I'm completely fine with that. It's an adventure show, not a military ad.![]()
Cos there aren't officers in the USN with the title Lt. Cmdr., right? just something Gene made up for the lulz...
Cos there aren't officers in the USN with the title Lt. Cmdr., right? just something Gene made up for the lulz...
So what? He used a few things like some of the ranks and whatever he needed to tell his story. That does however not mean, that he was under contract, or under some kind of obligation to use everything from the navy. It's what you do as a creative person. You take what you like and you change what needs to be changed to get a point across - and if your show is set in the far future, you are free to change a lot.
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