Thought there might be differences between a starship and a space station, though.
Thought there might be differences between a starship and a space station, though.
Sorry I should have clarified I meant when Sisko was still stationed on the Saratoga until the Battle of Wolf 359.
Had things been different--if they could have seen the Borg coming from a long distance and had more time to assemble a proper fleet--the Saratoga and other such ships would have ditched their passengers and other non-essential personnel at a nearby starbase or Federation member world before going into battle, IMO.
I can't quote it exactly, but an example can be found in "Too Short a Season," during which the wife of the aging admiral mentions that if they'd had ships like the Enterprise earlier, she and the admiral could have been together during his entire career, presumably when he was a captain, too.
"This ship is magnificent. It even has family quarters. Pity we didn't have them twenty, thirty years ago. We could have been together almost all of your career."
Thought there might be differences between a starship and a space station, though.
Sorry I should have clarified I meant when Sisko was still stationed on the Saratoga until the Battle of Wolf 359.
But wasn't he a first officer then?
To give a specific example, in the pilot for DS9 (The Emissary), we saw that Sisko had his family onboard, and he was the first officer. I can see little justification for the captain not be allowed his family on board.
I always thought Jennifer was on the Saratoga as Starfleet or at least a civilian specialist (I can't remember if she had a uniform or not), not because she was Sisko's wife.Sorry I should have clarified I meant when Sisko was still stationed on the Saratoga until the Battle of Wolf 359.
Didn't Captain Maxwell have his family on board with him?
It was not before the next generation of starship like the Ent-D () that families were allowed on board for long exploration journeys.
The whole point of the separable saucer was to allow the civilian element to depart at the first sign of conflict, freeing up the stardrive section for combat duties.
Agreed, and I'm also of the opinion that those who do bring families with them do not make that decision lightly.Had things been different--if they could have seen the Borg coming from a long distance and had more time to assemble a proper fleet--the Saratoga and other such ships would have ditched their passengers and other non-essential personnel at a nearby starbase or Federation member world before going into battle, IMO.
...Although if the officers knew what was really at stake and how grim the situation truly was, and didn't buy Admiral Hanson's uplifting pep talk, they might perhaps have chosen to have their families close to them after all. Better to die in space than be assimilated back on Earth.
Many may think that way in general: better to risk death with loved ones than without.
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