When Picard issues his "Admiral's orders" they are in an urgent and dangerous situation and Shaw knows it just would not be possible for him to dispute it and convince his officers that Picard's actions are illegal. The lower ranking officers ...this was not a plot hole.
My way of seeing it is that under routine circumstances Picard has no authority to change Shaw's standing orders but that in an emergency/engagement scenario where the ship is at risk of destruction then there are powers in place to allow him to supersede Shaw's authority and take command.
I don’t think Picard suddenly has actual authority. I read the scene as Picard counting on institutional (military) reflexes. A senior officer starts barking orders, lower ranks fall in line in the heat of the moment. At least, that’s my guess on how the writers approached it. Beyond that, the needs of the drama outweigh the needs of verisimilitude.![]()
Again, I see things differently. Picard ALWAYS had the authority. Nowhere was it stated that Picard lacked the authority and now suddenly he has it. Shaw clearly thinks Picard and Riker are a bunch of old retired "cowboys" and he did not like them coming onboard. He makes that clear in the dinner scene in ep 1 but that did not mean that Picard lacked the authority. In ep 1, Picard could have ordered Shaw to go to the Ryton system and Shaw might have protested but he would have obeyed. Picard just chose not to use his authority. He asked Shaw instead of ordering him and so Shaw said no.
Re: Romulan_spy: I don't think he has actual authority. At the dinner table, yeah, Picard does first "suggest" that he and Captain Riker want to change course, and Shaw says no. When Picard says "I'm an admiral" that is essentially pulling rank (if he had it). If Shaw had shot down an active Admiral when pulling rank, he would have been disobeying an order. When Shaw reminds him of his retired status, and turns down Riker who does have rank, but doesn't have a command/is not in the chain of command, I think that is pretty clear that neither Picard nor Riker has authority.Regarding Picard's authority...
I wonder if it has to do with the difference between a routine inspection versus going on active duty in which "the senior officer must assume command", to quote Captain Spock from WOK.
Yeah, I know. I agree that they do show Starfleet ships with a variety of strength levels. I just personally think the technology level and capabilities of Starfleet should make any ship (even those that are not the strongest/newest ships) at least contenders in most situations. Look how easily it was for Starfleet to replicate hundreds of the most advanced ships available at the end of S1 (I know that is cheating as that scene is annoyingly dumb); that tech should enable most normal ships to be upgraded easily.We know this isn't the case though. Starfleet vessels are not all designed to be taking an utter pounding damage wise, there's still a bit of mix of lighter designed and heavier designed vessels and there's no real hint that the Neo Connies are anything other than fairly mid tier ships like the Luna's before them...
I agree that the Defiant isn't in the weight class of a larger ship like the D or Soverign class. I just called it a battleship as in a ship designed for battle (as opposed to general purpose/non-combat ships Starfleet normally builds). The Defiant isn't able to destroy that Mirror Universe Klingon Flagship either. But the Defiant can take out most anything other than a "superbattleship" level opponent - it can even hold off the Klingon Vor'cha when rescuing the Detapa Council in "Way of the Warrior" even with its shields down (and presumable not firing torpedoes due to lack of shields at that time). Being able to upgrade the 80+ year old Excelsior design to parity could also argue for my contention that Starfleet ships should generally be shown to outclass their otherwise newer opponents via regular upgrades.The Defiant isn't a battleship though, it is a dedicated warship but too small to be called a battleship. When the Valiant went up against an actual (Dominion) battleship, it got beaten badly. It was out of its weight class. We also saw that an old (though somewhat modernised) Excelsior-class ship can fight the Defiant to rough parity...
+It's in the Federation. The Fed let Riker and Troi's son die rather than reactivate a synth, we're all but told that the Federation wasn't a safe place for Crusher and her son to be a family with Picard on Earth, Seven is immediately paired with Shaw who still has Borg issues rather than letting him truly heal from them *before* assigning him with an ex-Borg, and Raffi is given the one job in the Federation that immediately opens her to underworld elements giving her constant opportunities to relapse into whatever she was addicted to before. That's not even getting into what everyone has to look forward to come the future shown in Discovery.
While I think it is true that there are places or times in earlier Trek where the ideals of the Federation aren't always upheld (that was practically DS9's overarching theme - the series, not the exact setting on DS9 in Bajoran space/the frontier), in previous Trek it always seemed to be more one-offs. One bad admiral, one bad day, or one bad situation. A lot of the situations Uhura's Song mentions are external threats, one-offs, or not as extensive as reported (in ST VI it's only a few command officers as far as we know; a small cabal). And in the end, with a few exceptions, the result was to realize the failure, to try to fix it, or to improve things. Maybe that was somewhat a function of the episodic nature of earlier Trek, but now it seems like failures/dark underbellies/vices are the basic background for whole seasons and not just corruptions of the status quo. In earlier Trek the bad stuff could occur often (we do want/need conflict to help drive drama), but it wasn't the point; it was the exception that proves the rule of a more enlightened, and improving, society.The Vulcans made Kirk & Spock fight to the death in "Amok Time." Talosians imprisoned various races with the idea of using them as slaves to reppopulate the planet. Kirk wanted to let the Klingons die in "Undiscovered Country." A huge swath of Federation "leadership" plotted to assassinate the President of the Federation to prevent peace from breaking out. The Crew turns on Spock in "Galileo Seven." How many times did Kirk, or Spock, or Data, or the TOS/TNG crew disobey orders or steal a ship, or stop some fascist Admiral or judge from a nefarious plot? I've lost count....
People pushing the nuTrek distopia/abondoning Gene's vision thing just need to stop. It is laughably inaccurate. On both counts. The future was never utopian and free of conflict, inside the Federation or not. And NuTrek has not abondoned Gene's optimistic take.
But there has to be conflict for good drama. It has come from various places:
...
The main diffetence is that in older Trek (mostly episodic) the threat gets wrapped at the end of the episode and everything resets. Whereas in NuTrek (most serial) there is a threat that looms over the whole season and does not get resolved until the end. So the whole season seems darker and doomier (though some of DS9 & ENT were this way).
...
Maybe that is how I need to look at this whole post-Dominion War period - that it was more profoundly affecting than I realized, and even the Federation is seriously damaged by it in the medium term. Not just physically and economically but socially, mentally, and institutionally. Maybe post-PIC-S3, there will be a rebirth, a new golden age, where things aren't so bleak all the time...Regarding the progress and evolution of the Federation, it's worth remembering that progress is seldom an unbroken upward trajectory; at best, its two steps forward, one step backward. Even if you're generally ascending overall, there are still going to be rises and dips, relapses and backlashes, and if you get complacent, you may find yourself losing ground and having to climb the same hill all over again.
That's not pessimistic or dystopian; that's just the way it works.
To quote Picard himself: "We think we've come so far. Torture of heretics, burning of witches, it's all ancient history. Then - before you can blink an eye - suddenly it threatens to start all over again."
(From TNG no less.)
I like your take on the ending of S1 of PIC. I wish I "felt" that that was the story that was told. The ending was so rushed and just not explored that I don't really get that that was the message of the show or even the plot (at least as far as Starfleet/the Federation is concerned). Because it was so contracted, when I think back about it, it "feels" to me that Starfleet only really cared that Riker came to them with info on a Romulan plot and they sent a fleet to protect innocent beings. That is kind of the minimum anyone should be able to expect from Starfleet - oppose evil attackers and protect an innocent planet. Because Riker and the fleet warps away immediately and because the synth ban is dealt with offhand in a single line of dialogue, I think it is safe to say the show wasn't really concerned much with those plot lines or what they really said about the Federation at large being damaged or changing/healing. I think the show was more interested in proving to the androids that we weren't all bad because some of us reacted negatively and banned them. And because the show is so serialized, and can really only cover one story a season, there hasn't been any real revisitation to any of the events/characters/arcs from season 1 - it's almost like they keep soft-rebooting this show each season......Even at its absolute darkest, the Federation of Star Trek: Picard is not a dystopia. It is clearly still a constitutional liberal democracy in which poverty, disease, and most systems of oppression have been eliminated. Picard S1 begins at the tail end of a time when the Federation has betrayed some of its values, but the plot of S1 is literally Jean-Luc Picard leading the Federation into realizing it has done wrong and making amends for it. I mean, it literally ends with the Federation Starfleet sending an armada to protect the androids whom it had once banned from being genocided and rescinding their laws against synthetic lifeforms.
...
No. The Federation of Next Generation was a society with serious systemic issues and a lot of internal corruption. In substance, the Federation of Picard is not that different from the Federation of Next Generation -- what you are responding to is tone, not substance.
I pulled these two bits out to discuss them separately:...
Hell, Star Trek: Voyager arguably depicted the Federation as far worse than Picard ever did, since it depicted the Federation as using sentient EMHes for slave labor in "Author, Author."
...
Seven kills an unrepentant murderer who poses an ongoing threat to the lives of innocent people and who lives on a planet where there is no rule of law. I repeat: Bjayzl lived above the law on Freecloud, a non-Federation world. Killing organized crime leaders in an environment where the rule of law does not exist is a very different moral question than in one where there is the rule of law...
As for Seven killing Bjayzl: while I kind of like the execution (no pun intended) of the story of Seven getting revenge on this obviously evil person, I still think it does a major disservice to the character of Seven and the "character" of Starfleet/the Federation/Star Trek. It doesn't really fit in Trek. That a main heroic character, "raised" by Janeway to understand the principles of the Federation and what it means to be human and in Starfleet (though she technically wasn't), who developed and demonstrated a set of principles and morals throughout 4 years of VOY, would decide to beam back down and in cold blood kill someone (even a ruthless gangster), and suffer no consequences to her psyche, to her reputation, or any criminal penalties (as far as we have seen), undermines what Star Trek is supposed to be about. Even when Sisko did his most questionable acts (e.g., "In the Pale Moonlight", "For the Uniform"), it was done knowingly, with an examination and recognition of the ethical questions and consequences of the actions. In Seven's story, it was more like a "look at her being badass and violating some moral/ethical boundaries to get petty revenge on someone who harmed her" without ever addressing what any of it was trying to say about her character as a person. I don't think they were actually concerned about what it meant for her character, especially as it has never been referenced again.
One, nothing about Seven as painted as positive. She does what she has to do. It cuts similarly to TOS in terms of decisions that are not always right or positive. Just a grim reality of the situation, i.e. this is a lawless space where someone like Bjayzl would face no consequences if not stopped.As for Seven killing Bjayzl: while I kind of like the execution (no pun intended) of the story of Seven getting revenge on this obviously evil person, I still think it does a major disservice to the character of Seven and the "character" of Starfleet/the Federation/Star Trek. It doesn't really fit in Trek. That a main heroic character, "raised" by Janeway to understand the principles of the Federation and what it means to be human and in Starfleet (though she technically wasn't), who developed and demonstrated a set of principles and morals throughout 4 years of VOY, would decide to beam back down and in cold blood kill someone (even a ruthless gangster), and suffer no consequences to her psyche, to her reputation, or any criminal penalties (as far as we have seen), undermines what Star Trek is supposed to be about. Even when Sisko did his most questionable acts (e.g., "In the Pale Moonlight", "For the Uniform"), it was done knowingly, with an examination and recognition of the ethical questions and consequences of the actions. In Seven's story, it was more like a "look at her being badass and violating some moral/ethical boundaries to get petty revenge on someone who harmed her" without ever addressing what any of it was trying to say about her character as a person. I don't think they were actually concerned about what it meant for her character, especially as it has never been referenced again.
I doubt it. I think we’ll get a DNA test next episode based off the end credits sequencePicard's lying.
Lying to save Beverly. Lying to avoid having to turn Jack over to Vadic.
I thought too fast. Villain: too fast Shrike: too fast. Worf: too fastIt’s moving a little slowly is my biggest concern at the moment.
A solid "7". I want to LOVE it but the issues from my last review persist. It makes me want to watch season 1 again: more subtle, better written, breaking new ground for the character with the name on the box.
All is not lost. Revelations coming we are told.
Season one was a mess. It meandered. The need to give data a second death was not necessary and frankly creepy how they did it. Chabon was in charge and it showed on the story. He didn't break new ground with Picard or star trek. He made the characters and show feel like we were watching characters in the 21st century not the late 24th. It did not feel like star trek. The Orville which Camelot at the same time got it better. This third season while not perfect is a whole lot better so far. Without Chabon it might continue to be good. Hopefully.
Don’t bother with him.It was terrific Trek and seems even better in retrospect as my short review on the season suggests.
Give it another once over. Look at it from a different angle. Purge pre-conceptions. You'll probably love it.
It was terrific Trek and seems even better in retrospect as my short review on the season suggests.
Give it another once over. Look at it from a different angle. Purge pre-conceptions. You'll probably love it.
While I agree with you, and find Season 1 the most engaging content with Picard, the poster you replied to is not changing. Very conservative Trek opinion and Trek shaped box.It was terrific Trek and seems even better in retrospect as my short review on the season suggests.
Give it another once over. Look at it from a different angle. Purge pre-conceptions. You'll probably love it.
I thought too fast. Villain: too fast Shrike: too fast. Worf: too fast
We’re two hours in and have barely moved in the plot or character introductions — which is especially slow since we already know some of the characters. It needs just a little more speed over in the Picard/Riker thread. A little.
We’re two hours in and have barely moved in the plot or character introductions — which is especially slow since we already know some of the characters. It needs just a little more speed over in the Picard/Riker thread. A little.
The Riker Picard thread is densely plotted. It's full of subtext and information. Give it a second chance. You might be surprised what you might find.
Everyone knows something is only an established fact if it is repeated three times.I can follow all of it, but it is moving very slowly. We established Picard Jnr is a naughty boy — twice — we established he may not be all that naughty — twice — we established Riker thinks he is Picards son — twice — we established New Captain is not an arse — twice.
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