their counselor's are just that good, that's why Troi spends so much time on the bridge, she only nas to do actual counseling from 9 to 10:30 on tuesdays and thursdays
Those therapists on the bridge!!!

Good points!
their counselor's are just that good, that's why Troi spends so much time on the bridge, she only nas to do actual counseling from 9 to 10:30 on tuesdays and thursdays
You know, I actually hadn't thought of that. That's a pretty good hand wave for what otherwise was an unrealistically quick return to duty... never mind that it gets completely undone by the First Contact movie, where Picard is now inexplicably having dreamy communion with the Borg Queen, & he's like the Borg whisperer all of a sudden. Couple that with his Ahab obsession, & he seems awfully damn compromised there.They probably had a team of telepaths scan him and they concluded after 5 seconds that he wasn't brainwashed.
In The Best of Both Worlds, Riker is given a promotion to the rank of captain along with being put in command of the Enterprise following Picard's apparent loss to the Borg. Later, when Picard is recovered, he is put back in command of the Enterprise and Riker goes back to the rank of commander. My question is: Why?
Sure, I understand why Picard would be given back command of the Enterprise. Even if Starfleet offered to let Riker stay in command, I think he would insist that Picard get the ship back. Part of the story was that Riker essentially made peace with the fact that what he really wanted, more than getting his own ship, was to be Picard's first officer at that point in his career.
But why would they take back the promotion? The rank of captain and the position of commanding officer are not one and the same. In TFF and TUC, we have Spock with the rank of captain but the position of first officer. It might be unusual, but it's not unprecedented. Why give Riker a demotion right after he literally saved the Federation from the Borg?
The only even remotely analogous situation I can think of is when Decker was bumped down to the rank of commander in TMP when Kirk took over. But even that was specifically stated as a temporary grade reduction. And at the end of the film, in Kirk's report to Starfleet, he is referred to as Captain Decker. It was not a permanent demotion as Riker's was.
Thoughts?
3) Apparently the "captain as position" and "captain as rank" are one and the same concept in the Star trek universe. If that hadn't been the case, there would have been no reason to not let Riker stay a captain (by rank), and perhaps give Picard a promotion as well so he still outranks Riker (and not only by seniority).
IRW, it's very common on larger vessels (like carriers) for both the captain and first officer to hold the rank of captain. And apparently, as someone else mentioned, has happened in Star Trek also, with Spock.
Think it's only carriers and not the first officer. You have the ship's commanding officer who will be a four strip captain as will be the commander of the air group (CAG) and possibly a captain of engineering but the later two won't be in the ship's chain of command unless things get really bad (you've lost the CO and the XO and other senior command officers).
The whole "our entire senior staff is made up of captains and commanders" thing may have been an extreme aberration, made possible only by Kirk's influence and willingness to wield that influence to get his way. I can easily imagine higher-ups in Starfleet rolling their eyes every time they thought about it ...That's a really good question that bothered me since i first saw these episodes. I never found an explanation for the demotion that makes sense, if one considers Spock in TUC.
Apparently the "captain as position" and "captain as rank" are one and the same concept in the Star trek universe. If that hadn't been the case, there would have been no reason to not let Riker stay a captain (by rank), and perhaps give Picard a promotion as well so he still outranks Riker (and not only by seniority).
Think it's only carriers and not the first officer. You have the ship's commanding officer who will be a four strip captain as will be the commander of the air group (CAG) and possibly a captain of engineering but the later two won't be in the ship's chain of command unless things get really bad (you've lost the CO and the XO and other senior command officers).
While certainly not universal, I'm pretty sure that if the ChEng is a "captain-by-rank" then the XO would be one as well, given that the XO is senior to the ChEng in the chain-of-command (XO is always 2-i-C, ChEng can be anything from 3-i-C down to many 6th or 7th [though a four-striper would always be 3-i-C).
Like a Captain Morgan commercial.So they wouldn't end up with a situation like on the Enterprise-A where every department head was a Captain.
Kor
In fact, that's what I've been saying. Not a demotion, but a stepping down, because it wasn't an option to hold the position he wanted as Picard's 1st officer, & still keep the rank. Maybe it was an option in other circumstances, for past commands like Kirk & Spock, but that's really the only example, & could easily have been a standalone situation that no one wanted repeated.Some could object that Riker wasn't demoted. He just chose to take his number one position back.
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