Remember what Kira said to Dukat about thinking like a terrorist? If you don't have a hammer, use a pipe.I always felt the Maquis did really well. They got some of the best jobs!
Which is ridiculous, at best, especially with how quickly they get essential jobs to sensitive equipment. "Hey, we were hunting you as fugitives but now you get to be trusted members of the crew."I always felt the Maquis did really well. They got some of the best jobs!
Which is ridiculous, at best, especially with how quickly they get essential jobs to sensitive equipment. "Hey, we were hunting you as fugitives but now you get to be trusted members of the crew."
Only in Star Trek.
Of this, I am well aware. He also has a ridiculous amount of special abilities that would make a Navy SEAL seem inadequate.The same could be said about Tom Paris.
And treated with trust in sensitive situations, technology, rather than being hardened criminals who loathed Starfleet. No tension, brief skirmishes of "Starfleet Way" vs "Maquis Way" and Chakotay kowtows to Janeway fairly quickly, buries the hatchet with Paris even faster and can only be fully explored in holograms and time travel.Janeway specifically wanted Tom. The Marquis were thrust upon her.
In the eyes of Starfleet, that's what they are. At least criminals. Perhaps "hardened" and "loathe" were hyperbolic.Since when were the Maquis "Hardened criminals who loathed starfleet"? Not even Eddington loathed starfleet. Nor did Ro, or Hudson, or Chakotay...
- Give Chakotay some real Indian tribes in his heritage...
Hi catshadowi8, welcome to the forumI'm new to this forum but a long time star trek fan (in particular the original series and Voyager). They deal with the unknowns of space exploration and the characters created on these two series are wonderful. I watched them when they first came out, then on Space, and finally Netfex. That said I would change one thing on this series. I would have sent Voyager home at the beginning of season 6. This was just after Equinox when Janeway lost herself and made some highly questionable decisions. As soon as they returned to the Alpha Quadrant I would have had Starfleet immediately demand she turn over the Marquis crew for trial and 7 of 9 for 'examination' of her borg implants. Still raw from risking her crew over Equinox she responds 'over my dead body' and goes rogue. She intends to drop the marquis and 7 of 9 off somewhere and return to 'face the music' but each time something goes wrong. Suddenly they are the hunted. Does the crew agree? Do some betray them? We get alliances formed with other rebel groups and betrayal by those they thought they could trust. How do they honor the Starfleet principles while hunted by the same organization? It also gives the characters a chance to evolve in different directions as circumstances and goals havr changed. Tjmo.
I like the tattoo. It reminds me of something from part of my own culture.
- The funky tattoo ...
I agree with everything @Brennyren says!Oh, please. I, for one, was so intent on that incarnation of Trek having a female captain, that I declared my intention not to watch the show if its commanding officer was male! Having watched Trek since I was a teenage girl, and endured the indignities of "Captain, I'm frightened" and episodes like "Turnabout Intruder," having seen the leading women of TNG cast in traditional, "nurturing" roles, I wanted more than anything to see a female captain, a woman who was as capable in her own right as Kirk or Picard or Sisko were in theirs. You may be sure I had absolutely no complaint about the gender of the captain, the series star -- entirely the reverse! I was thrilled, delighted, and satisfied to finally see someone of my own gender in the center seat.
And yet, I say without qualm that Voyager did not live up to its potential. It failed to exploit much of what was unique about the series, in favor of being too much like any other Starfleet ship. The people of Voyager rarely acted like people who were isolated from the rest of their civilization, or families, or worlds; they never made themselves "at home," and rarely formed pair-bonds. As for the ship, it never even looked as if missed its annual inspection at Utopia Planetia. Why bother to take a ship and toss it all the way out into the Delta Quadrant if it's not going to change much of anything, for the vessel or its people?
Look, if you liked the show just as it was, that's fine and more power to you. Nothing wrong with that. You like what you like, and I like what I like. But to imply that the only reason one could possibly be dissatisfied with Voyager is because one has issues with the captain's gender -- that's not only wrong, it's insulting!
I think some people do resent Janeway being female...![]()
And treated with trust in sensitive situations, technology, rather than being hardened criminals who loathed Starfleet. No tension, brief skirmishes of "Starfleet Way" vs "Maquis Way" and Chakotay kowtows to Janeway fairly quickly, buries the hatchet with Paris even faster and can only be fully explored in holograms and time travel.
It doesn't need a lot more, but an increase in tension would be a part of my rewrite, as well as having some truly unique skill sets among the Maquis that Starfleet doesn't use. Take some more unorthodox ways of making repairs, harvesting food (besides Nelix's cooking).
It's a little thing, but it helps with my suspension of disbelief to have distrust between Maquis and Starfleet the norm, rather than an occasional episode blip.
The only issue I have with the cast is it's too human heavy. Where are all the aliens!!!!As for Discovery it isn't its cast that is the problem... it's everything else![]()
(Not to derail... but I liked the Tardigrade... sweet RipperThe only issue I have with the cast is it's too human heavy. Where are all the aliens!!!!
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