As others have mentioned, my problem with Janeway comes from the incredibly inconsistent way in which she was written. I went into Voyager looking forward to seeing how she was going to handle things, but it did not take long for bad signs to start showing up.
The blustering at the Vidiians about how they would regret it if they ever harvested another member of her crew (after they took Neelix's lung) was completely ignored in all subsequent encounters with them. They murdered one of her crew members and tortured several others and all she did was carry out a rescue with no retaliation at all. Never make threats unless you plan to carry them out.
Her refusal to trade her library to the people who were willing to give Voyager a device that would shave thirty thousand light years off of the trip home because a local law would not allow it indicates a strict adherance to the regs. I mean this was a pretty minor point to get hung up on for shortening a seventy year trip by almost half. If she was a consistent "by the book" officer I could buy it, but roughly a year to a year and a half later she violated the the space of a culture that had clearly warned Voyager off and killed dozens if not scores of these aliens merely to save twelve to eighteen months on the trip home.
Inconsistencies such as these made it hard to take the character seriously, and there are plenty of other examples over the course of the series.
Picard's "by the book" attitude was annoying at times, but when he broke the rules it was always with much soul searching and debate with the crew. That kept his characterization internally consistant.
Sisko was never a "by the book" Captain. He believed in the regs, but when they were wrong or otherwise lacking he did what he thought was necessary. He occasionally came close to being cavalier about the regs (see For the Uniform) but again, it was a consistant part of his characterization.
My point is that my problems with Janeway are entirely due to the poor consistancy of the writing of her character rather than her character itself.
So in answer to your question I would have to say that I did not like her character and I am a guy, for whatever that's worth.
I assume you mean sex rather than sexuality. No, I don't think it means a lot but that was the original question the poster decided to ask.For goodness sakes.
Maybe it should be broken down by culture, height, and religion as well.
Count me in as a male who liked her.
As I've already asked, does ones sexuality have any relevance on the original question?
As Kirk demonstrated in Search for Spock and Picard in First Contact (to name but two examples) when a Starship is being invaded and no chance of saving said Starship, you engage the auto destruct and run like hell as Starfleet really dosn't want their tech falling into the wrong hands, something to do with the Prime Directive.As to Deadlock, blowing up your own ship when you have already lost the battle to deny your enemy the prize is only what you would expect from a Starfleet Captain. After all her crew was being harvested and Voyager was all but overrun.
But as it stands now, the poll suggests that women are sexist because they are more likely to not like Janeway.
the other stupid thing about Janeway and territoriality is she refused to go around The Swarm's space, yet when politely told to bugger off in the end of 'Year of Hell part 2' by the Krenim, she then does so. yet in the other timeline, she refused.
they couldn't even make her consistent in the same sodding story!
I can understand the relevance of why the OP asked for ones gender, even though it may seem a bit, well pointless as what's the point? To prove that all men hate her and all women love her? But no, as a man who is very open minded about his sexuality and counts himself just about straight, I don't see why if one is heterosexual, bi sexual or homosexual has any relevance.
And that may be a moot point now, but I felt like answering this before reading a further three pages on the topic![]()
But as it stands now, the poll suggests that women are sexist because they are more likely to not like Janeway.
Actually you're wrong, but you have to work out the numbers yourself to discover that. You can't base your conclusion on the procentages listed on this page as these are based on the total count of voters.
To find the actually number you have to separate the answers into men and women and yes and no like this.
Female voters: 38
32 says yes equalling a procentage of 84.2% (32/38*100).
6 says no equalling a procentage of 15.8% (6/38*100).
Male voters: 59
41 says yes equalling a procentage of 69.5% (41/59*100).
18 says no equalling a procentage of 30.5% (18/59*100).
Which means that a larger procentage of women right now votes yes for Janeway than men. To be exact 14.7% more women. Which also means that 14.7% more men say no to Janeway.
Edit...hmm...looking at the automatically generated numbers on this page, I'd say you're still wrong. These say that 6.19% of women dislike her where as this number is above 18% for men.However, these numbers don't show the real procentages as I've stated above.
As Kirk demonstrated in Search for Spock and Picard in First Contact (to name but two examples) when a Starship is being invaded and no chance of saving said Starship, you engage the auto destruct and run like hell as Starfleet really dosn't want their tech falling into the wrong hands, something to do with the Prime Directive.As to Deadlock, blowing up your own ship when you have already lost the battle to deny your enemy the prize is only what you would expect from a Starfleet Captain. After all her crew was being harvested and Voyager was all but overrun.
That's what I said. It's what any Starfleet captain in that situation would do, thus it's nothing special.
I do wish to make clear that I am in no way attacking Janeway in these posts. That would be silly, she is a fictional character. My problem is with the writers who were unable to come up with a consistent personality or set of core values for her character. A real person who behaved in such a staggeringly inconsistent manner could only be described as crazy.
In the examples above (leaving out the Vidiians) it was break a very minor local law where no one gets hurt in order to get 30 years closer to home and the answer is no. But it is ok to break Starfleet regs, Federation law and local laws to violate someones space and kill many of their species to save a few months. That is crazy, and the writers should have figured that out.
Actually I think the writers problem with the Swarm was that it was the B story. They were so caught up with writing the EMH story that they just wanted some action for the background and to distract the rest of the crew so that Kes had to deal with the problem herself. This, however, only points up their laziness. What, they couldn't come up with a threat to Voyager that was not instigated by Janeway breaking all the rules!!! That's crazy again.
I also noticed that nobody, not even Chakotey who normally was very sensitive to others beliefs and rules, even seemed to feel bad about casually murdering these aliens. Oh well, they were just bugs anyway.
While the A story was rather entertaining, the B story turned this episode into a mess.
Just to be clear. I actually enjoyed Voyager and have not jumped on the "Voyager bashing bandwagon" that some people talk about. With that said however the writing, particularly for Janeway could be uneven. I realize that could be said for any of the series which is why I am not one of the slam Voyager crowd.
The writing for most of the cast was reasonably consistent in characterization, there were exceptions but for the most part they were the same character from week to week. But the writing for Janeway was so inconstant that you never knew how she would react to an issue. Would she her A personality where the rules must be followed no matter what, or her B personality where the rules were...eh what rules.
I wanted to like Janeway, just like I wanted to like Picard and I wanted to like Sisko. Picard I didn't much care for at first, but he slowly grew on me. At first I thought his style was a bit too restrained, but I got used to him.
Sisko I very quickly grew to like. In fact he is my favorite captain.
As for Kirk, well he's The Kirken and I grew up watching him so he kind of sets the standard.
Janeway, for the reasons I have listed above I never could get to like. And I think that is a shame.
It's been said that Voyager did not live up it's potential, and that is true. But it could also be said of the other series as well. But the most unrealized potential was the character of Janeway who the writers could apparently never define in any kind of rational manner.
My problem with the poll -- and the reason I have no intention of taking part in it -- is because there's no distinction between "I like Janeway," "I have no particular problem with Janeway," and "OMG Janeway is the most awesomest character ever!" Also missing from this poll is the entire question of whether one's like or dislike is so strong that it impacts the person's reaction to Janeway's death. Some may love the character but recognize her death is just a dramatic device in a fictional universe; others may despise they way she was portrayed on TV, but also view the decision to kill her as creatively bankrupt.Clarification: This poll is not part of some "clever plot" to make people admit this, that or the other thing. As previously stated it isn't even my original idea but I agreed with ktek that the results would be interesting - if only to see if certain assumptions made around here are true or not.
As for sexual orientation the question isn't about whether or not you'd do her it's quite simply do you like her?
'Nuff said.![]()
I cant remember the name of the episode (perhaps "The Swarm" because that's what the aliens called themselves) but they assaulted a shuttle crew and left a map in the computer with a message that said KEEP OUT. They also had a detector grid around their space to spot incoming ships that they had to figure a way to fool. That is not some vaguely defined border, but a clear military obstruction. During Voyagers violation of their space they sent vessels to deal with the invaders, as is their right, during which Voyager destroyed dozens of their 2 to 4 person ships.
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