In "Equinox," Voyager meets another Federation ship taken by the Caretaker. Unlike Voyager, the crew of the Equinox has abandoned their principles and resorted to murdering sentient aliens for fuel.
Captain Ransom tries to justify his actions by claiming that his crew had it harder than Janeway's. I'm disappointed that Janeway never pointed out why her crew had the advantages it did. The Equinox noticbly has not picked up any new crewmembers on its journey like Voyager has. The reason Voyager had Seven's Borg nanoprobes, Neelix as a guide, and Kes's ESP to help them is because they showed compassion to these individuals, and it paid off. Allowing their EMH to expand his personality, rather than deleting half of it for short-term gain, also led to him becoming more creative. I'm disappointed that this point wasn't touched on in all the moral debates of the two-parter.
While it's brilliant writing that the Equinox hasn't taken on any newcomers, it's very lazy writing that it's entire crew is Human (and seemingly Westerners). I assume this is because the writers wanted to emphasize what human beings are capable of when we abandon our principles. But many of "Star Trek's" aliens are pretty on-the-nose symbols for aspects of humanity, so why not take advantage of that? Have a Vulcan who managed to concoct a "logical" reason for her heinous actions. Have a Bajoran twist his religious beliefs to justify murder. Naturally, keep the captain and probably first officer human. But the crew should've been more diverse. Even at the end when Janeway punishes the five surviving crewmen, we couldn't have a Bolian or a Napean or something in there?
I realize this is a nitpick, but it bugs me nonetheless.
Captain Ransom tries to justify his actions by claiming that his crew had it harder than Janeway's. I'm disappointed that Janeway never pointed out why her crew had the advantages it did. The Equinox noticbly has not picked up any new crewmembers on its journey like Voyager has. The reason Voyager had Seven's Borg nanoprobes, Neelix as a guide, and Kes's ESP to help them is because they showed compassion to these individuals, and it paid off. Allowing their EMH to expand his personality, rather than deleting half of it for short-term gain, also led to him becoming more creative. I'm disappointed that this point wasn't touched on in all the moral debates of the two-parter.
While it's brilliant writing that the Equinox hasn't taken on any newcomers, it's very lazy writing that it's entire crew is Human (and seemingly Westerners). I assume this is because the writers wanted to emphasize what human beings are capable of when we abandon our principles. But many of "Star Trek's" aliens are pretty on-the-nose symbols for aspects of humanity, so why not take advantage of that? Have a Vulcan who managed to concoct a "logical" reason for her heinous actions. Have a Bajoran twist his religious beliefs to justify murder. Naturally, keep the captain and probably first officer human. But the crew should've been more diverse. Even at the end when Janeway punishes the five surviving crewmen, we couldn't have a Bolian or a Napean or something in there?
I realize this is a nitpick, but it bugs me nonetheless.