^Is it a nice chest?![]()
I think Admiral2 needs a Snickers![]()
Maybe I should have qualified a little further.Also, I'm getting a little tired of people talking about how "hard" changing procedures aboard the Enterprise would be because canon proves otherwise. We are talking about episodes in season 6 of TNG. If you'd been watching the series straight through the past five and a half seasons you know that the technology aboard the Enterprise-D is designed to facilitate change. The Galaxy Class starship and the systems inside her are the epitome of an Open Design Architecture. You can configure each control surface to whatever set-up you need. You can change the way the main deflector and shields operate for any given situation. You can make the Bussard Collectors expel material instead of attracting it. You can redesign systems using the holodeck and even create new systems there and tie them into the operation of the ship. In five and a half years the crew of the Enterprise has reconfigured the ship's systems to do things that I'm sure the engineers at Utopia Planitia would have told you to go pound sand if you'd suggested making them standard functions when they built the thing, and they often did those things under serious time pressure.
So the notion that the changes Jellico wanted them to make in a day or too would have been "too hard" is utter bullshit. They could do it, because they have done things just as hard and in just as little time, and the only reason it was harder in this instance was because they spent more time whining about the changes than actually making them.
"But Jellico was mean! He shouldn't have been mean!"Pay attention: In the history of human beings being called "Captain" and being given command of ships, never once has being nice been a job requirement. He doesn't have to be your friend, he doesn't have to be your bro, he doesn't have to join you and the other officers for poker, he doesn't have to be your father figure. His only function is to make decisions and issue orders based on those decisions, and it is the job of his subordinates to follow those orders, period.
It's not nonsense. TDY or permanent, they'd have the same ceremony. Jellico was taking over for an undisclosed period of time, not "in a pinch." I know that Starfleet didn't specify it as TDY, but it ended up being so. Wasn't that their intention all along? Or were they expecting that the chances of Picard returning weren't very good? If Picard is one of the best Starfleet captains, why "throw him away" on such a mission, when he's a very valuable asset? I think they had great trust in Picard and expected that he would return.Enough with this "permanent or temporary" nonsense. There is such a thing called a "temporary duty assignment," TDY. If Starfleet Command considered Jellico's command of the ship a TDY assignment, they would have told him, Picard and the crew it was a TDY assignment.
There was a Change of Command ceremony, where Picard was relieved of his command of the Enterprise and Jellico was ordered to assume command of the Enterprise. Nobody had to walk around saying "temporary this" or "temporary that" because the only people with the right to say that - their mutual superiors - made Captain Edward Jellico the rightful commanding officer of the Federation Starship Enterprise, and anyone with half a brain would have to accept that assignment as permanent unless and until there is another Change of Command ceremony. If their intention had always been to return Picard to the center seat on Enterprise, then you have no idea when or if that second ceremony will take place because you don't know if Picard's going to live through the mission he was sent on, so you have to assume the assignment is permanent because Command hasn't said otherwise and circumstances may force the issue.
Starfleet has military and science missions. The USS Enterprise was not a warship. They have the Dreadnought class for that. The USS Enterprise has been a flagship vessel of exploration, not a battleship. Now, that does not preclude the Enterprise from engaging in battle. It has to be prepared for that. And it has been... we've seen it go into battle before. But it's not the primary mission.
Maybe I should have qualified a little further.
Starfleet has military and science missions. The USS Enterprise was not a warship. They have the Dreadnought class for that. The USS Enterprise has been a flagship vessel of exploration, not a battleship. Now, that does not preclude the Enterprise from engaging in battle. It has to be prepared for that. And it has been... we've seen it go into battle before. But it's not the primary mission.
Anytime a vessel has a commander, he sets the tone and structure for how his command will be. The crew acclimates to it. It doesn't happen in just a few days. It takes time.
Jellico came on board and started making drastic changes, expecting the crew to fall in line in just one day.
And for what? Is it common practice for a Starfleet vessel to operate on a 4 shift rotation? What's wrong with 3 shifts?
Certainly the Enterprise crew demonstrated their ability to handle it. Yes, the Enterprise doesn't end up in battle, because Jellico manages to negotiate well enough to avoid it. But had they gone into battle, I'll bet anything that the main structure is a 3 shift rotation, but other crew members will do double-shifts in a pinch.
Jellico made a demand upon the ship that didn't seem to be truly warranted. He didn't make any kind of clear assessment that the crew couldn't handle the job with a 3 shift rotation. It's Jellico who is used to operating things that way and wanted to make the change purely because of that. Jellico can't rip everything apart in short notice and expect it all to run smoothly.
It's not nonsense. TDY or permanent, they'd have the same ceremony. Jellico was taking over for an undisclosed period of time, not "in a pinch." I know that Starfleet didn't specify it as TDY, but it ended up being so. Wasn't that their intention all along?
Or were they expecting that the chances of Picard returning weren't very good? If Picard is one of the best Starfleet captains, why "throw him away" on such a mission, when he's a very valuable asset? I think they had great trust in Picard and expected that he would return.
Anyway, I won't push this part. It's not as important as the other point about readiness and Jellico's unwillingness to be flexible with the situation.
Right on the edge of flaming/trolling. Not welcome in this forum.And you're complaining that he wanted this done in a day? Even the most significant change, as quoted upthread, would only take a day. So we're supposed to hate Jellico for making the crew take the amount of time the changes would take anyway? Get the fuck outta here!
I do not want to engage in a lengthy debate with you Admiral2. This multiple slicing/dicing of individual segments of content makes it cumbersome to respond going beyond 3, and I'm not willing to engage it.
I never said I hate Jellico. You keep putting words in my mouth. That also makes this a pissing contest, not a constructive debate. You want to win? Fine. I'll pin a medal on you if it makes you happy. I don't give awhen the debate tone becomes hostile.
I served in the US Air Force. I participated in a 4 shift rotation on deployment. We were on/off/on/off... that meant working 6 hours, off 6 hours, rinse and repeat. You don't get 8 hours of sleep. You're on overdrive. It's really no big deal if you do it for a week or two, but permanently? It messes with your morale. Jellico gave no timeframe for the change. And you're telling me a ship that is well accustomed to a 3 shift rotation should just take it without any erosion of morale? Repeatedly, we're told in Star Trek that the Enterprise is not a warship. And if it's going to serve as one for an extended period of time, it makes sense for the commander to set the tone. Jellico could have done that. It takes just a few minutes to be nice. But he took command, and without any follow up just said "Dismissed" to everyone present. No back story. No setting of expectations. He could have managed it better.
Normal military operations is 3 shift. If you're in an battle situation, you switch to 4. There was no reason to have the whole crew "wound up tight", as Riker remarked. I realize you disagree. Fine. But you're not changing my mind. This and his attitude towards the crew was my only complaint about Jellico. The uniform for Deanna and the reconfiguration of screens -- no big deal. The pressure on Geordi? Understandable. Those engines needed to be in top form for battle. We've seen far too many cases of the Enterprise getting pummeled in combat, probably due to less than 100% readiness.
"Get the fuck outta here!"
Seriously?
No, the Enterprise crew sucked, mostly Riker and Geordie. They were unprofessional crybabies, they were complaining that the captain acted like he was in command and gets to order them around.Jellico sucked.
Normal military operations is 3 shift. If you're in an battle situation, you switch to 4.
Whether Jellico was a good captain or not, that's debatable, but he sure behaved like a little kid who doesn't get what he wants.
No, the Enterprise crew sucked, mostly Riker and Geordie.
Where was Jellico at the Battle of Wolf 357, hmmm?![]()
I agree with you Serveaux up until your last line. But thank you for adding this -- yes indeed, the Enterprise was up against the Borg, a far more formidable enemy than the Cardassians... and without a 4 shift rotation, they successfully fought the Borg cube.The whole premise is absurd.
Starfleet threw everything they could muster at the Borg, and got their asses kicked.
Earth was fucked. The Federation was fucked.
Captain William Riker and his Enterprise crew - one ship - stopped the Borg from destroying everything.
A few years later a truculent old self-impressed officer is posted temporarily aboard and yammers about "insubordination" and such nonsense. He has no idea how to make good use of the people he commands.
Truth is, he was simply insecure at having someone he knew to be more capable than himself serving under him.
Jellico sucked.
Jellico made no pretense to sympathize with the sudden change. NONE. And I think that backfired on him.
"Nursemaid" goes quite a bit too far, IMHO, if you keep it all in context.Probably because he was told the Enterprise crew was the best of the best. He figured he wouldn't need to nurse maid them through the change in command.
If Picard was still in command, I envision he'd have instructed Riker like this: "Commander Riker, in view of the impending circumstances, we'll need to operate on a 4 shift rotation, starting with the next shift. I want to be 100% battle ready in case things go wrong with the Cardassians. And see about assigning more engineers to Geordi's staff. We need engineering to be running at maximum efficiency during this engagement."
Chain of Command I said:JELLICO: How many duty watches does the crew stand?
RIKER: We've a standard three shift rotation.
JELLICO: I'd like to change that to four starting tonight. I'd also like to examine the duty roster and the crew evaluations as soon as possible. I want readiness reports from each department head by fourteen hundred hours, and a meeting of the senior staff at fifteen hundred. Do you prefer Will or William?
RIKER: Er, Will, sir.
(Jellico steps into a turbolift)
JELLICO: Where are my quarters, Will?
RIKER: We have you assigned to cabin seven thirty five. Deck si
JELLICO: Deck seven. I'll see you at thirteen hundred hours.
You're quoting one interaction, which I agree was perfectly fine. There were plenty of others that weren't... and that's what framed so many polarized opinions about him.Not sure how much nicer Jellico needed to be?
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