Well he did serve behind a desk but Rank is Rank and regardless if he never commanded a starship seniority is seniority.
Well, it was my roundabout way of saying that Stocker was a pitiful excuse for a ship captain.
He nearly got everyone killed.
Well he did serve behind a desk but Rank is Rank and regardless if he never commanded a starship seniority is seniority.
Well, it was my roundabout way of saying that Stocker was a pitiful excuse for a ship captain.
He nearly got everyone killed.
Stocker wasn't a pitiful captain, he wasn't any KIND of captain. He had never commanded a starship in his entire career. That just wasn't his job.
You're missing the point. Stocker was not incompetent.
The episode makes it quite clear that he was not, and never was, a starship captain. You can't blame him for being a bad captain because he was never trained as one.
It'd be like picking some random guy off the street and giving them shit for being a bad soldier. Well, if they were never trained as one, you can't expect them to know anything about how to be one...same story here.
Now as I said, Stocker did assume command of the ship when he knew full well he had no training. Maybe he shouldn't have done that. I don't know. (Sulu wasn't affected, was he? I suppose he should have taken command instead.) But the fact remains, Stocker was never trained as a captain, so you can't expect him to know how to be one.
As for how Stocker was allowed to assume command in the first place? Nobody could stop him.
Edit: For his part, Stocker doesn't immediately jump into the center seat. He tries to get Spock to take over first. But since the virus was affecting Spock as well...as I said, Stocker may have felt he had no alternative.
^ Remember what I just said. Stocker TRIED to hand over command to Spock, but Spock refused.
ScottyWho was next in line to Spock?
Scotty
YepWasn't Scotty one of the aged ones?
Correct. Starfleet has struggled with the distinction between line and support officers and unrestricted line officers. If I recall current US Navy regulations Stocker would likely fall under a support officer and not be eligible to take command unless put in to the chain by a superior line officer.Stocker wasn't a bad sort, but badly misjudged that his own skills and abilities wouldn't measure up to the situation. So that's his mistake, but overall it's Starfleet's fault; if they'd followed the example of navies today, or even in 1800, Stocker would have been prohibited from taking command.
Wasn't Scotty one of the aged ones?
He was.
IIRC, Sulu is next in line after Scotty. And since Sulu was not affected, he should logically have been the one in command.
He was.
IIRC, Sulu is next in line after Scotty. And since Sulu was not affected, he should logically have been the one in command.
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