Re: Why not promote Picard to admiral and let Enterprise D be his flag
Wait...so you're saying that Picard was an arrogant fool because....why? Because he told Q they didn't need his help?
I suppose the whole purpose of exploration would be thrown out the window, then. Why have a ship to take you light-year to light-year? Just have Q snap his fingers and you're halfway across the quadrant! New species? Let's see what Q has to say about them! Arrogant, insipid, droveling pre-evolved beings? Hell, we wouldn't want to deal with them, let's move on (even though that's what he said about the last twenty species we were about to contact)!
Perhaps Picard refused Q's help because he, as a representative of the human race and one for believing in the ideals of Starfleet (you know, that whole 'to seek out new life, boldly go, etc' shtick?), wanted to move forward into the galaxy and experience new things for themselves...I mean, heaven forbid we should ever do anything for ourselves, right? Picard only asked for Q's help because, after being unwillingly thrown into the delta quadrant and running into the Borg, Picard had no choice but to say, "Q, I need your help!" Again, let me repeat: unwillingly thrown into the Delta Quadrant. Did Picard ask Q to that? No. Q did it on his own, thus forcing Picard into a situation. That's arrogance?
And correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Tasha decide to try and walk past Armus on her own initiative? It's not like Picard was telling her exactly where to go, nor did Riker have any immediate control over her. People lose their lives in the line of duty all the time on the show...why single out Yar? What about that boy's mother in "The Bonding"? Yep, that was Picard's fault all-right! Don't see how, but it was his fault! He was trying to help the boy by getting him away from that alien, came to terms with Wesley about his father's death which helped the other boy get over it, but it was still Picard's fault. Right?
Seems like you're of the absolute that no matter what proof is presented, you will not hear anything cited against your arguments. Most of your reasons are kind of vague, as if you're just citing example but not backing the rest of it up with clear, concrete evidence to support it.
"At least when Kirk lost men it was for a reason. Even Archer and Janeway lost people for reasons. Picard? Oh well, somebody died when I sent them into Cardassian space on a suiciode mission. Hohum."
What? Again....Tasha's funeral, dealing with the boy in "The Bonding", Kirk's death in Generations...and wasn't the focus of that "Cardassion mission" episode on the crewmates, instead of Picard?
Fraid not, Red Ranger. The very Q example you cite is the evidence. Retcon or not, by the time Picard says "We don't nee3d your help!" it conclusively proves that he is an arrogant fool. Miscalculation and mistake I can accept from most anyone. It happens. Personal character flaw arrogantly expressed in the face of direct evidence of as superior godlike being is STUPID.
At least Kirk had a reason to ask "why does godf need a starship? when confronted with a similart threat situation to make the correct deduction.
Picard committed the worst sin in my book, that a commander can commit. he was stupid: not once but many times.
Buy time for Humanity? Scoff. Q wanted to play with the mouse and hear him squeak. Nothing Pocards said or did mattered in the Farpoint trial.
Tasha Yar was lost due to criminal stupidity. For that I blame Riker, the dufus, for failing to run a scan on the creature and engage it in talk. he should have spoken first, not Yar. Leaders lead, not stand around and look stupidly on as events cascade around them.
At least when Kirk lost men it was for a reason. Even Archer and Janeway lost people for reasons. Picard? Oh well, somebody died when I sent them into Cardassian space on a suiciode mission. Hohum.
Dreadful character writing and acting, simply dreadful.
Wait...so you're saying that Picard was an arrogant fool because....why? Because he told Q they didn't need his help?
I suppose the whole purpose of exploration would be thrown out the window, then. Why have a ship to take you light-year to light-year? Just have Q snap his fingers and you're halfway across the quadrant! New species? Let's see what Q has to say about them! Arrogant, insipid, droveling pre-evolved beings? Hell, we wouldn't want to deal with them, let's move on (even though that's what he said about the last twenty species we were about to contact)!
Perhaps Picard refused Q's help because he, as a representative of the human race and one for believing in the ideals of Starfleet (you know, that whole 'to seek out new life, boldly go, etc' shtick?), wanted to move forward into the galaxy and experience new things for themselves...I mean, heaven forbid we should ever do anything for ourselves, right? Picard only asked for Q's help because, after being unwillingly thrown into the delta quadrant and running into the Borg, Picard had no choice but to say, "Q, I need your help!" Again, let me repeat: unwillingly thrown into the Delta Quadrant. Did Picard ask Q to that? No. Q did it on his own, thus forcing Picard into a situation. That's arrogance?
And correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Tasha decide to try and walk past Armus on her own initiative? It's not like Picard was telling her exactly where to go, nor did Riker have any immediate control over her. People lose their lives in the line of duty all the time on the show...why single out Yar? What about that boy's mother in "The Bonding"? Yep, that was Picard's fault all-right! Don't see how, but it was his fault! He was trying to help the boy by getting him away from that alien, came to terms with Wesley about his father's death which helped the other boy get over it, but it was still Picard's fault. Right?
Seems like you're of the absolute that no matter what proof is presented, you will not hear anything cited against your arguments. Most of your reasons are kind of vague, as if you're just citing example but not backing the rest of it up with clear, concrete evidence to support it.
"At least when Kirk lost men it was for a reason. Even Archer and Janeway lost people for reasons. Picard? Oh well, somebody died when I sent them into Cardassian space on a suiciode mission. Hohum."
What? Again....Tasha's funeral, dealing with the boy in "The Bonding", Kirk's death in Generations...and wasn't the focus of that "Cardassion mission" episode on the crewmates, instead of Picard?
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