It was just one of those dumb things, like B'Elanna getting promoted for assaulting a superior. It would have been better for Durst to be the ranking operations officer, and B'Elanna having to serve under Carey for awhile. But Voyager set its status quo quickly, then never let it change.
That thing with B'Elanna actually disturbs me.
If that had happened in "real life", she would never ever have been close to any kind of promotion. I mean, she was actually close to kill him and then it's just waved away as if it was some minor insult.
Personally I would never have come up with such a lousy scenario if it hadn't been planned from the start that b'Elanna should have been killed off in one of the next two episodes. i would have limited it to some shouting argument and then found a way for B'Elanna to be promoted later on.
I actually like B'Elanna as a character and if she was supposed to be a main character, I would never have created that situation in which she was nearly killing Carey.
That's because the book writers saw him as an eminently usable and developable character. The episode writers should have done the same.
Yes, they should.
Pretty much. Hard to explain a lot of the stuff that happened to him (especially him spending 31 years as an ensign) otherwise.
30 years as an ensign is actually devastating to the character. Sort of "he's actually quite worthless but we can't fire him so let's keep him as an ensign with the one and only purpose to look after the toilet so no one can write something stupid about the captain on the toilet walls".
It reminds me of Picard in
Tapestry, in that alternative future which Q created when Picard was an over-aged ensign for his whole carreer and how Riker and Troy dismissed him when he dared to speak up about a promotion.
No doubt why he rather would let Q kill him of instead of having him to live that sort of life.
Excellent!
Honestly, I would have loved to play that role in the movie, playing the guy who is so happy by being condemned to the "iron maiden".
My vendetta against that episode comes not from its quality, but because it's the episode where the writers tried to salvage Harry's character... and were forced to not do so. Harry's long stagnation was set as policy.
I can understand that.
But I still find it weird that they never even tried to make something better out of the character.
If you're continuing the story, that makes sense. If you're ending it, you need to resolve some things.
I'm not sure about that.
If the story was supposed to end, I would probably leave it as it was, then possible fans of the storie could start writing fanfic about how they wanted the character to find a new love osr something like that.
Having him implode the government that destroyed his home would actually be pretty satisfying. Long as they didn't try to tack on some smarmy "I'm happy on Bajor now" ending. As I often say, I see no path to happiness for him... only the grim satisfaction of retribution.
I also find it hard to believe that he would have become "happy on Bajor".
Getting him involved in some sceme to overthrow those who have caused his pain would have been more satisfying.
Or to quote Aerosmith: "Don't get mad, get even"
I'm sorry that happened to you.
Thanks for your concern!
To be honest, it's not some trauma which I'm constantly thinking of. I just brought it up because it had some similarity to Mullibok's fate.
So far I'm not involved in any sceme to "get even". I just avoid that place, that's all.
But I do find a certain glee when it comes to criticize those who were responsible for what happened and their successors.
Also, when it comes to his love life... everyone were acting like his attraction to Seven was something strange. Why? It seems pretty normal to me, unlike other ones...
Harry has no fewer than 11 failed romances over the course of the show.
11!

Oh dear!
It also shows the inconsistent writing of the show. First they decide that Harry will be faithful to Libby and not interested in getting involved with the Delaney sisters or anyone else.
Then they create 11 failed relationships for him! Is that one with Marayna one of them?
I think Seven was the most normal one and it could avtually work... but probably writters dec8ded it would be too good for Harry.
Instead they created the Chakotay/Seven relatinship, the most unrealistic and most hated relationship of them all.
Unfortunately not the first time they showed the "finger" to a certain fan group.
If Harry had been the sort of man who preys on the innocent and inexperienced, he and Seven would likely have made the beast with two backs in "Revulsion".
Of course, regardless of what Seven's Borg doo-hickey would have done to her, Janeway would likely have chewed out Harry, demoted him, reprimanded him, tossed him in the brig, maybe even ordered Tuvok to replicate a cat o' nine tails and flog him in front of the ship's company. Because no way Harry's going to be happy on her watch!
And all that because Harry didn't share the enthusiasm for Iron Maiden that Janeway and many other of his crewmates had.
It didn't even help that he actually tried!
Maybe if Kes came back, real Kes came back, she could talk some sense into Janeway. She has a way of convincing people.
If anyone had managed to convince anyone, it was Kes.
She actually convinced Tuvok to contact the Vidiians for a cure for that disease which Chakotay and Janeway was suffering fromm in
Resolutions.
When poor Harry tried the same thing, he was almost court-martialed.
The real Janeway wasn't like that. Remember that I'm creating hyperbole based on the actions of incompetent showrunners.
The Janeway we knew and loved might have quietly counseled Harry to be careful, that Seven's knowledge of human social customs was vastly limited. But she would not have made his misery her life's work.
However, I could see her and Kes having a hearthlfelt discussion, regarding her concerns for Seven. Kes reminds her that Harry is a good and honorable man, not given to randomly exploiting people. And maybe shares her perspective on her relationship with Neelix.
It's really too bad we lost Kes as a character. DS9 had 20+ significant characters. VOY could have handled 10.
The real Janeway wasn't like that in seasons 1-3.
But the "Mirror Universe Janeway" which all of a sudden showed up on the ship in seasons 4-7 could have done that.
I wonder how that happened. Was Q behind it?
Or was it Henry Starling who managed to mess up time in some way as a revenge for they trying to kill him?
I think even 11 characters could be there... Some just might be recurring.
Some main characters tended to barely appear in most episodes later on, thry coukd be recurring
Well, DS9 had 10 main characters and a lot of recurring characters.
In fact, VOY was a show which really should have needed a lot of recurring character due to the story itself about a crew lost in space.
They were many good characters who could have been recurring characters: Carey, Dalby, Henley, Chell, Gerron, Rollins, Wixiban, Tal Celes, maybe Seska and Culluh too.