#NotTheMilitaryNot to mention Starfleet had a bunch of kids running around Dominion space in “Valiant”. The couple of senior officers they had were killed, but the Starfleet doesn’t have some kind of recall order programmed in, in case of some kind of emergency?
And why would you give cadets one of the warships you need to, you know, fight the actual war you’re losing?
Star Trek is chalk full of military silliness.
It's hard to take the tricorders thing seriously as an offense when we've never, ever seen tricorders passed out after the away team beamed down.
For... reasons? Mariner needs counseling. ASAP.Anyway, it seems like Mariner was supposed to have the tricorder for the mission and purposefully left it (them?) behind.
I want a dog like the dog![]()
The Dog
I find this show mildly entertaining but I wouldn't be annoyed if it didn't get a second season.
She needs counseling, true. But the reason she was fucking up was explicitly stated: she saw that her friend was trying to recruit and promote her and she didn't want to be recruited and promoted.For... reasons? Mariner needs counseling. ASAP.
Of course she did it. She's a dog!I do too. I wish we'd gotten to see more of her transformative abilities. She morphed into a metal cube and rolled down the corridor at one point.
Whatever the rationale, the final result it's the same: she disappointed and lied to a friend who trusted her. In universe, this makes her at least a hypocrite, considering all the times she lectured us on the meaning of friendship. Out universe, I don't really know what's the point made by the writers: you can make fun of people who have faith in you if you're cool enough?She needs counseling, true. But the reason she was fucking up was explicitly stated: she saw that her friend was trying to recruit and promote her and she didn't want to be recruited and promoted.
Should she have just said no? Sure. The show does not explain explicitly why she did not do that.
Some possibilities as to why Mariner didn't just say no:
- She is embarassed to want to be a perpetual ensign in a Starfleet that emphasizes ranking-up. This possibility is reinforced by the episode when she asked why it's not enough to remain a really great ensign.
- She didn't want to have a potentially painful discovery/conversation with her friend.
- She didn't want to hurt her friend's feelings by directly rejecting an offer of promotion.
- She didn't want to have to deal with the salt from Ramsey's existing officers, including the Vulcan officer who was barely restraining her disdain about Mariner).
- She has PTSD and the possibility of promotion triggered her into avoidance and other unhealthy behavior. From Episode 1, Mariner has said she has "seen things." And she was driven by PTSD to obsess over Boimler's girlfriend being too perfect. So it is possible that PTSD drives her to want to stay in the lower ranks, rather than/in addition to her stated reasons. The trouble with that explanation IMO is that when there are potentially traumatic experiences generally in big emergencies (crew-turned-zombies, aliens attacking, threats to the ship, etc.) Mariner does not show any signs of being traumatized. She thrives in those situaitons.
- There's also thte "well, otherwise, the episode wouldn't happen as planned and we writers would have to work harder" explanation, which may be the correct one at the end of the day. Although truth to be told, there would be more humor to be derived from Mariner shutting down the promotion offer straight-up and Ramsey trying to convince her otherwise, with Durga and the rest of the crew rolling their eyes.
I think the point of this episode is to hint that something definitely happened to Mariner to traumatize her into refusing to advance in life. She's pretending she's still in her early 20s even as she's clearly at least in her early 30s.
I really think that's her rationalization for avoiding moving on with her life. She's in her early 30s but living like a 22-year-old because something happened to her and she's refusing to deal with it.
It matters because no one culture should be depicted as being dominant over others in an egalitarian future. "Anglo" should not be the default setting for the human race.
When did she lecture about friendship in such a way that it would make her actions in this episode hypocritical?Whatever the rationale, the final result it's the same: she disappointed and lied to a friend who trusted her. In universe, this makes her at least a hypocrite, considering all the times she lectured us on the meaning of friendship. Out universe, I don't really know what's the point made by the writers: you can make fun of people who have faith in you if you're cool enough?
And she never apologized for her behavior: it's perfectly clear from the episode that she is convinced she was right!
Could be Mariner also has a mild case of Peter Pan syndrome. She just simply doesn’t want to grow up and experience all the soul-crushing responsibilities that come with it.
FWIW, there are days when I can relate to that - more often as I get older.
Can we all agree that if it weren't for the space monster's intervention, Mariner would have lost the respect and friendship of a person who once held her in high regard?
In any case, I really doubt everything would be as it was before. She behaved like an incompetent buffoon and made life difficult for many people for the most stupid and selfish of reasons.I think it would depend on how deep the friendship was, and Ramsey coming to the realization that Mariner didn’t want the job.
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