"Ensigns of Command" demonstrate that they do not.
That's specific to that particular treaty, where the alien race in question was incredibly difficult. IT was literally one of the federations most complex treaties, and it was written that way specifically so they couldn't find loopholes."Ensigns of Command" demonstrate that they do not.
I'd settle for a diplomacy officer. They literally use a counselor and a supposedly skilled diplomat of a captain to eventually find the weakness in the treaty.That's specific to that particular treaty, where the alien race in question was incredibly difficult. IT was literally one of the federations most complex treaties, and it was written that way specifically so they couldn't find loopholes.
It's not a good barometers for the legal capabilities of a jag equivalent.
Pretty sure a sailor can't wake up one morning and decide to be a Marine and then a week later go back to being a sailor.And in real life you have rank and file who do drift between navy-marines etc.
It has aircraft manned and served by Marines.And the Marine corp has an Air Force of its own. But that isn't its job.
My father was literally part of a "dedicated intelligence organization." The USAF Security Service who's mission:Which isn't part of the CIA. The CIA figures out what to do with that information and leads policy using that information.
You're conflating intelligence gathering with a dedicated intelligence organization. My point isn't that the reds are doing recon work, my point is they're trying to figure what to do with recon work.
Gee, similar to the CIA. (see below)Wikipedia said:The USAFSS was a secretive branch of the Air Force tasked with monitoring, collecting and interpreting military voice and electronic signals of countries of interest (primarily Soviet and their satellite Eastern bloc countries). USAFSS intelligence was often analyzed in the field, and the results transmitted to the National Security Agency for further analysis and distribution to other intelligence recipients.
The CIA said:The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) collects, evaluates, and disseminates vital information on economic, military, political, scientific, and other developments abroad to safeguard national security.
Modern militaries have a variety of pins, patches, insignia, caps and other things to indicate units/divisions/whatever. The uniform colors are the same thing.It's a bad form of comparison because the 3 colors are so different from a modern military.
Starfleet still isn't the CIA. Kirk, Picard and Sisko are given orders by people higher in chain of command. That's how most organizations work. Many not involved with "intelligence gathering."EDIT: It seems very much like Command is focused on where we go and why, with the how being done by blue/ops. Seems like a massive part of that is figuring out what to do with gathered information. Keeping in mind, the CIA's primary source of information isn't spies, it's getting textbooks from foreign country and finding multi lingual individuals who can help decipher what is in those records.
Eh, wearing "red" has been optional. Spock as XO chose to wear blue because he was also the Science Officer. Scott was Second Officer and chose to wear red. Data was also a Second Officer and wore gold. While all Starfleet Intelligence officer wear red, not all officers wearing red are Starfleet Intelligence.Command isn't an officer class or people who are up the command hierarchy. If that were the case all the department heads would be wearing read(while obviously many have at some point))
Command is a specific job.Yes "leadership" but leadership of what exactly?
So every one in Starfleet in in Intelligence now? Yeah, no. Starships are multi-mission oriented. They do everything: scientific surveys, "health checks", personnel and material transport, defense and patrol of borders and warfighting.Yes and "their ship" is almost entirely in the hands of operations/science.
Which would mean we agree that it is almost entirely the mission, which would be heavily based around intelligence.
You're overstretching the concept/context.Pretty sure a sailor can't wake up one morning and decide to be a Marine and then a week later go back to being a sailor.![]()
But the divisions in Starfleet are not analogous to branches of the military. It's one organization. You can transfer from one division to another as Geordi and Worf did.
Yes and that happens because it supports the objective of the marines. You can't use marine aircraft and start doing the air forces job for any extended period of time.It has aircraft manned and served by Marines.
Your example is missing the point.My father was literally part of a "dedicated intelligence organization." The USAF Security Service who's mission:
Gee, similar to the CIA. (see below)
Starfleet intelligence is probably more akin to that and other Military Intelligence organizations than the CIA. The CIA, is a civilian agency. The closest equivalent might be Federation Security seen in The Search For Spock.
The CIA gathers and analyzes intelligence.
Modern militaries have a variety of pins, patches, insignia, caps and other things to indicate units/divisions/whatever. The uniform colors are the same thing.
Starfleet still isn't the CIA. Kirk, Picard and Sisko are given orders by people higher in chain of command. That's how most organizations work. Many not involved with "intelligence gathering."
Spock and McCoy were the top of Operations and Science.Eh, wearing "red" has been optional. Spock as XO chose to wear blue because he was also the Science Officer. Scott was Second Officer and chose to wear red. Data was also a Second Officer and wore gold. While all Starfleet Intelligence officer wear red, not all officers wearing red are Starfleet Intelligence.
Command is a specific job.
You've watched Star Trek, right? They lead on ships, space stations, Starbases, fleets and the whole magilla.
So every one in Starfleet in in Intelligence now? Yeah, no. Starships are multi-mission oriented. They do everything: scientific surveys, "health checks", personnel and material transport, defense and patrol of borders and warfighting.
A part of that may be that starship captains are given a considerable amount of autonomy and leeway in interpreting Federation policy and that in the vast majority of instances, Starfleet generally sides with whatever decision a captain makes aboard his or her ship. In that regard, the need for a legal expert may always fall under special circumstances. It may harken back to ancient naval times in which a captain was the highest legal authority in his particular domain and had the final say in anything involving his ship and crew in regions far from home.My point was exactly that.
You have a crew of 1,000 people stumbling along between random worlds, and you don't have one suitable legal expert?
Given the missions they are on they'd need to have a full legal council on board, if command officers weren't trained in law.
I would prefer Medical in White while Science in Blue
Spock as XO chose to wear blue because he was also the Science Officer.
He was in Science blue in “The Cage”. Though blue shirts are in security in that episode and going by the BTS stuff his position was “First Lieutenant”.That's a good in-universe explanation for why he initially wore yellow - he wasn't science officer yet, or he hadn't reached the conclusion that since he would be spending more time working in that capacity (with other scientists) than command, it just made sense.
A position that didn’t not survive the transition to series. In WNMHGB, Sulu seems to be the Science Officer.Gene Roddenberry said:The Captain’s right hand man, the working level commander of all ship’s functions. From the manning the bridge to supervising the lowliest scrub detail.
In TMP, Medical was mint green and Science was orange.
In ST II - ST VI, Medical was mint green and Science was grey.
In TMP, Medical was mint green and Science was orange.
In ST II - ST VI, Medical was mint green and Science was grey.
I would go with Gold for Command (though in TMP Kirk had that famous white uniform too!)
Red for Engineering and Security (gotta have redshirts man!)
Blue for US scientists
And Medical/Life Sciences would be Green, with white as an option for scrubs!
McCoy had WHITE scrubs and I seem to recall GREEN scrubs in TMP
“Command” in Star Trek is about leadership. They run the ship and make the big calls.
That's a good in-universe explanation for why he initially wore yellow - he wasn't science officer yet, or he hadn't reached the conclusion that since he would be spending more time working in that capacity (with other scientists) than command, it just made sense.
Spock and Scotty are not in the command division.
Spock is both Second-in-Command and Chief Science Officer. He chooses to wear Science blue. (Gold in second pilot.)
Scott is both Third-in-Command and Chief Engineer. He chooses to wear Engineering/Ship's Services red. (Beige in second pilot.)
So the chief engineer is actually in the command division, and could choose to wear a different uniform than rest of engineering?
No, but members of the other divisions can still be in command of the ship without having to run and swap shirts. (Unless it was Chekov in the Kelvinverse.)
Which is why I think designating gold/green/avocado (and later red) as the Command Division color was dumb as is having a Command division. As you said, we see all sorts in the Command color. From the CO down to the lowliest tech. And we also see reds and blues in the chain of command on ships and bases. So a “Command” color is a pit of a misnomer.For what is called the "command division," that doesn't seem so. The division goes from the captain down to phaser crews, who are clearly not running the ship. Spock and Scotty are not in the command division, but are a lot closer to running the ship than Chekov, or Crewman Green, or the woman who pours drinks in the dining room.
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