Well, the four shift rotation worked well on DS9 after Kira suggested it...
I think she mentioned that in Starship Down... Apparently, her goal was to bore Sisko to death...

Well, the four shift rotation worked well on DS9 after Kira suggested it...
They are choosing to withhold their confidence in him from the get go. They decide to not be accepting, right off. No " confidence building" words of any kind would be sufficient to change the minds of a group who already decided that this man shouldn't be in charge there, & shouldn't ask for any changes, despite the upcoming crisis, & his total right to do so. The top ranked officer (Riker) set that tone before Jellico even came aboardIt was his job to bridge that gap and effectively work with them especially if they ended up at war under him. He just throws out unreasonable orders without putting in a word or two to get the crew confident in him. They certainly gave him a chance to correct that with Troi giving him advice.
No. It. Was. Not.It was his job to bridge that gap and effectively work with them especially if they ended up at war under him.
He just throws out unreasonable orders without putting in a word or two to get the crew confident in him.
They certainly gave him a chance to correct that with Troi giving him advice.
Troi was actually doing her job, although not entirely outside the chain of command, as the ships counselor she was responsible for the crews mental well-being.That was nice of them. It was also meaningless, and he is well within his rights to tell Troi to stuff her advice. He was The Captain.
It does seem that some people are laying all of the blame for the matter at Jellico's feet while taking no issue with Riker's insubordination, though.No one is saying Jellico wasn't 'within his rights' to act the way he did, merely that his behaviour wasn't an example of good captainship.
Nah, Riker was a dick here too. His initial delay with the crew rotation was valid. If all the department heads think it is a shit idea, it probably is a shit idea, and it is XO's job to tell that to the Captain. And I think Jellico should have at least listened what the worries of the department heads were, before deciding whether it was really worth it. But Riker took all this personally, and behaved like a pouty teenager.It does seem that some people are laying all of the blame for the matter at Jellico's feet while taking no issue with Riker's insubordination, though.
No, they knew that. They didn't know what Picard's mission was.I haven't watched the episode in years, correct me if I'm wrong, but did Nechayev and Jellico let the crew of the ENT know they were on the cusb of full blown war with the Cardassian Union? I seem to recall the actual parameters of their mission were "hush hush"/need to know by everyone the rank of captain and above.
Ah, okay.No, they knew that. They didn't know what Picard's mission was.
I'm willing to admit that because of their naivety, I suspect they just assumed everyone should be on the side of Riker, & because of that, they were a bit lazy about how they presented it, being relative novices about military protocol. If I'm wrong about that, then they had a much more profoundly thoughtful writing team than I ever gave them credit for, because the end result is a nuanced exchange that really forces you to examine your own biases about who the people are to pull for.It would be really interesting to know how the writers actually meant these characters to come across in this episode. Either intentionally or accidentally they managed to create a many-layered situation that has elicited a lot of debate for decades.
The unfairness in what people suggest is that in some way Jellico is a poor captain, based on this singular instance of working with strangers, because he is expecting too much, & not being polite enough about his expectations, even though no one but him knows exactly what SHOULD be expected, enough to say he is outside good measure for his expectationsNo one is saying Jellico wasn't 'within his rights' to act the way he did, merely that his behaviour wasn't an example of good captainship.
Yep. I didn't like that either.One thing that doesn't sit well with me in that episode is Beverly whoring herself just to get transported to the place of the mission. I can't believe that the mission was asking that of her!! It's so undignified!
Geordie definitely thought it was unreasonable which is why he asked Riker to talk some sense into the man. Why doubt Geordie when he's already the suck it up and work hard type? He doesn't even overestimate how long jobs will take like Scotty
The Captain of a ship has two jobs: make decisions and issue orders based on those decisions. Period.
Now I found this debate on YouTube chats
Which one is better picard got to know who his crew and earn there respect. Jellico did not earn their respect and the enterprise crew would probably want to tell him shut up, but he got results and mange to get picard release and save a system from being invaded. Although no one was sad to see him go at the end. And of course be more respectful than the people on YouTube were to each other.
Edit: now that I think about it, I should have just ask if jellico was a good captain.
Edit: so if any new person posting you can just post if jellico was a good captain.
So why did the great captains in these stories bother inspiring their crews going out on a limb all the time for them? Extra credit?
They could just give the order and they're off the hook.
Isn't this part of getting the job done, which is what Starfleet was looking for?
Given what we saw of Starfleet academy I don't think they would expect captains to simply give orders with no situational awareness of the state of the crew.
Expected, yes. Tolerated, no. Ultimately it's Riker's responsibility to suck it up and serve his new captain, and make sure the rest of the crew does the same.At the end of the day we saw the crew having little confidence in him and Riker confronting him about completely giving up on Picard. Jellico would probably a good captain in other situations but there are smarter moves to make there than he displayed in this episode. For instance defiance against leaving a former captain to die should have been expected if he had read anything about Riker's past.
Geordie knew they were close to war all the time and still had issues with the orders, to me that says something
Get the order right. He is unwelcome first. They walked around that ceremony like it was a funeral or a sentencing. His command posture might very well have been a reaction to that. When the social odds are against you, you rely on rank.
Make no bones about it. That crew set the tone, & he just reset it so he could function without having to apologize for being in charge all the time, & they just didn't feel too happy about it
There's a time for inspirational speeches, like on the battle line on D-Day at H-Hour. The time for inspirational speeches is not in the rear echelon when all you're trying to do is get basic shit organized. Expecting the Captain to be Tony Robbins all the time is fucking stupid.
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