She’s a good villain in that she is inherently tricksy and calculating. What doesn’t make much sense for her was thinking the Kazon were a good choice to defect to.
I wish she had staid on the show longer. I think it would have been
interesting to see her making her own solo journey back to the AQ doing things the Cardassian way.
Potentially she could have rated well with them but the foolishy killed her and Suder off to soon. They could have provided that internal conflict they would go get the next season with Seven. They really aimed hard in season 3 to be a TNG clone which is why it is one of worst seasons in all of Trek. Jason
I agree with that, but on the other hand, which other party could she have defected to at the time she was forced to leave the ship (and still keep appearing on the show as an traitor, that is)? The Vidiians? They would perhaps have used her but afterwards would simply have taken her organs as well. So I really don't think this is a fault with the Seska character but more of the writers having failed to set up a suitable enemy by then.
She could, good writing permitted, have flipped on Cullah and sided with the more advanced and clearly crafty Trabe.
(Gee Alliances was a missed opportunity on so many levels.)
Enabran Tain...goofy?!Garak's goofy father Cardassian
She probably figured the odds of getting home in her lifetime were virtually zero, so she decided on making her own empire. Her capturing Voyager would have assured it.
How so? She had worn out her welcome on Voyager, and friends willing to take her in, where she was also granted a place of power. She explains everything to Chakotay and Janeway just before she leaves Voyager, and they are totally rational.This doesn't follow. Her actions were irrational, her defecting is a simple plot device that disintegrates if you look at it too closely.
Risk and Reward. With Voyager, the Kazon Nistrom would be all the more powerful. When one nation tried to develop a superior weapon to other nation, so that they can gain supremacy over them, they don't say "this is illogical. Let's just forget it, because if we have this weapon, our enemies will want it."2) Other species would still be after the technology. And unlike Voyager's crew, Seska would have to defend Voyager with a crew of intellectually inferior Kazon.
They wouldn't encounter the Borg, as the Borg had no presence in the region. Otherwise, why didn't the Borg try to assimilate the Ocampa, the Vidiians, the Sikari, the Haarkonians, the Pralor, the Mokra, et al, or even Voyager itself?3) They would have been unable to defend themselves against the Borg, who would have simply taken the ship. The only thing that protected the Kazon from assimilation is their technical and intellectual inferiority. Seska and a bunch of Kazon wouldn't be able to defend themselves against the Borg like Janeway and a Starfleet crew.
In the Brig? She's very dangerous. They wouldn't know what to do with her. They'd probably maroon her somewhere. She's not a Federation citizen.So, Seska would have been better off taking her chances with the Voyager crew. Cardassians aren't stupid.
I'd say that Jonas might not make as much sense, but Seska must have had something on him, or threatened him, or knew he would be susceptible to her manipulations.Seska and the traitor were simple plot devices, and thankfully, they were eliminated from the show when the plot thread had run it's course. I did not like the character or the Kazon or the plot thread, and was glad when they were gone.
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