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What would you have liked to see in VOY?

And I'm saying that Winn and Garak's development had to do with concepts and plots that were unique to DS9, and that "developing" any background folks on VOY in that way wasn't possible.

So you are saying that development of secondary characters to the level of Winn and Garak was impossible due to the fact they were a ship in space rather than a spacestation?
I don't really see your logic here, all character development requires is good writing, attention and effort, the premise is besides the point.

Secondary characters on VOY couldn't be developed to that level, period.
Bullcrap, see above.


For the entire cast not falling to pieces and spending the entire show hating one another, while the ship turns into a floating piece of garbage?

ONCE AGAIN, your argument consists of taking peoples words and pushing them to the extreme.
I and others say we would like to have seen a bit more conflict and some more long term consequences as a result of battle damge.
What do you do? You turn our words into "the entire cast not falling to pieces and spending the entire show hating one another, while the ship turns into a floating piece of garbage".
This really is an elementary school level of debate Anwar.
Nobody said anything about the entire crew hating eachother and the ship turning into a piece of garbage.
Why can't you just address the argument directly without twisting the words of the person you are arguing against?
Is it is difficult for you to do this?


The endless criticisms that started in S1 and never ended, for one thing.

Nope, not a good enough explanation.
You claimed that character development was uneven because of poor viewer feedback. Well I didn't see anyone saying that they only wanted Seven and the Doctor's character developed and that everyone else should be pushed into the background anywhere. You have totally failed to address the argument.


Talk to Exodus.

Your evidence consists of what some poster on a message board said? Wow, great work there!

Well, clearly we need to know the entire life stories of everyone on VOY for the show to be "real" :rolleyes:.

HILARIOUS! :guffaw: :guffaw: :guffaw:
Once again you revert back to that tried and tested argument technique of yours where you don't address the point, you just pull someone's words to the extreme in an attempt to make them look foolish and this time you even used a rolly-eye smilie!
So, me saying that I would like some of the other characters on the ship fleshed out equates to knowing the entire life stories of the Voyager crew? WOW!

We hardly saw the rest of the station's crew for DS9, I suppose that means the Station's role as a Starfleet outpost wasn't "real". Do you want the lives of all 40,000 humans in the Battlestar fleet to be examined as well? Perhaps Babylon 5 would've been better if they showed us the lives of all 250,000 people living on the station?

Another example of you using hyperbole....
Not sure why I bother really.
Those shows did not need to show us the lives of all the people in the fleet of the space station, they only needed to show us the lives of the people who mattered to the story.
And since it was the whole crew of Voyager that was trapped in the delta quadrant not just the privileged senior officers and lackeys, we should have seen more of their stories.
We needed to see some more of what was going on in the ship to feel it was real just as DS9 allowed us to see what was going on with the founders and the cardassians and the klingons as well as the officers on DS9 to make the Dominion story feel real.

They had NO differences outside of the Cardassian situation, and continuing them in the Delta Quadrant would've been nonsensical. You want the crews to be at odds over real problems, make the other crew Romulans and not Maquis.

So there was no difference between a bunch of starfleet officers and a bunch of renegades at all besides the Cardassian situation? Are you actually being serious?
Even the show acknowledges on occassions that there were differences but apparently you disagree with that too.

If the audience had just accepted the alien species introduced as antagonists then they would've been a good source of conflict. They hated everything, leaving the VOY team with nothing to work with.

If the writers on Voyager had really cared that much about viewer feedback, they would have done a lot differently.
 
So you are saying that development of secondary characters to the level of Winn and Garak was impossible due to the fact they were a ship in space rather than a spacestation?
I don't really see your logic here, all character development requires is good writing, attention and effort, the premise is besides the point.

It was impossible because they weren't stationary, they weren't in perpetual contact with other cultures and groups integral to the show, and whatever "development" these background characters would get would lack these plot devices that were integral to the development to the DS9 characters you keep using.

ONCE AGAIN, your argument consists of taking peoples words and pushing them to the extreme.

Or rather, showing your arguments for what they are.

I and others say we would like to have seen a bit more conflict and some more long term consequences as a result of battle damage.
What do you do? You turn our words into "the entire cast not falling to pieces and spending the entire show hating one another, while the ship turns into a floating piece of garbage".
This really is an elementary school level of debate Anwar.

No, I'm showing what these arguments are at their core. Whenever it comes to VOY it's always the same old "Ship should be trashed and never get better, the Feds should abandon their ideals and become pirates, the Maquis should have mutinies and do everything they can to kill Janeway so they can steal the ship, blahblahblah".

You claimed that character development was uneven because of poor viewer feedback. Well I didn't see anyone saying that they only wanted Seven and the Doctor's character developed and that everyone else should be pushed into the background anywhere. You have totally failed to address the argument.

They liked their actors and what happened to them, they hated whatever else they tried with all the other characters. All the time and money the writers put into the other characters turned out to be a major waste of effort, and the complete lack of even minor positive praise from the audience killed whatever further attempts at developing the rest of the cast would've been made.

And I see you're still hiding behind the "I know better so I'll just ignore you and everyone who agrees with you" BS. Exodus made it clear how VOY was in a more precarious position than the other shows.


So, me saying that I would like some of the other characters on the ship fleshed out equates to knowing the entire life stories of the Voyager crew? WOW!

Close enough, yes.

Those shows did not need to show us the lives of all the people in the fleet of the space station, they only needed to show us the lives of the people who mattered to the story.

Like VOY did.

And since it was the whole crew of Voyager that was trapped in the delta quadrant not just the privileged senior officers and lackeys, we should have seen more of their stories.

Their stories weren't important enough compared to the main cast.

We needed to see some more of what was going on in the ship to feel it was real just as DS9 allowed us to see what was going on with the founders and the cardassians and the klingons as well as the officers on DS9 to make the Dominion story feel real.

DS9 did a story that involved the entire existing Trekverse, thus justifying the usage of all the major Empires. VOY didn't do anything to justify exploring all the alien species they encountered, and the premise wouldn't have allowed for it since they were always just passing through.

So there was no difference between a bunch of starfleet officers and a bunch of renegades at all besides the Cardassian situation? Are you actually being serious?
Even the show acknowledges on occassions that there were differences but apparently you disagree with that too.

Their ONE and ONLY point of difference was the DMZ agreement. Other than that they were both Fed citizens/former fed citizens who were members of organized space services. Chakotay's group were an organized group, not just random rebels.

If the writers on Voyager had really cared that much about viewer feedback, they would have done a lot differently.

Negative feedback got rid of all the stuff that would've been used to do things that likely would have shut the audience's complainers up. It's their own fault for rejecting everything the show gave them. They got what they deserved.
 
We hardly saw the rest of the station's crew for DS9, I suppose that means the Station's role as a Starfleet outpost wasn't "real". Do you want the lives of all 40,000 humans in the Battlestar fleet to be examined as well? Perhaps Babylon 5 would've been better if they showed us the lives of all 250,000 people living on the station?
lol, taking it a bit extreme aren't we. You don't need to tell the lives of EVERYONE on the ship/station to get a perspective on what life is like for the non-main characters who are suppossed to be as ESSENTIAL as the main cast! Clearly the ship isn't only being maned, repaired,re-armed, upgraded, and defended by: Harry Kim, Tuvok, and Seven. :lol: I mean seriously, why even have a crew then? why make such a big deal out of "GETTING MY PEOPLE HOME!". In B5 you get stories about the the lower sectors, dock workers, fighter pilots stationed their, markets, ops, ambassadors, black market smugglers, etc etc. It just makes you get a sense that it is an actual station, that is not difficult to understand. Hell, it's not like they don't have time to tell their story, there supposed to be going on what a 70 year journey.
 
ONCE AGAIN, your argument consists of taking peoples words and pushing them to the extreme.
Or rather, showing your arguments for what they are.

No, I'm showing what these arguments are at their core. Whenever it comes to VOY it's always the same old "Ship should be trashed and never get better, the Feds should abandon their ideals and become pirates, the Maquis should have mutinies and do everything they can to kill Janeway so they can steal the ship, blahblahblah".

-I have not said I wanted the ship to be trashed and to never get better.
-I have not said I wanted the Maquis to kill Janeway and steal the ship (pretty sure no one has)
-I have not said that the Feds should abandon their ideals and become pirates.

You're just taking people's points of view and changing them into something else to make it easier for you to counter-argue. This is not a mature thing to do at all and so far you have basically not answered most of the points due to this childish tactic.
Don't presume you know what my ideas are "at the core", I know that and I express that clearly enough to let everyone else know without them exaggerating it.

They liked their actors and what happened to them, they hated whatever else they tried with all the other characters. All the time and money the writers put into the other characters turned out to be a major waste of effort, and the complete lack of even minor positive praise from the audience killed whatever further attempts at developing the rest of the cast would've been made.

All the time and money the writers put into the other characters turned out to be a major waste of effort?
Where is this all coming from and how do you even quantify this? I personally enjoyed several episodes that focused on Neelix, B'Ellana, Tom etc.
Why do you think you have the right to speak on behalf of every Voyager viewer ever?
The complete lack of praise from the audience killed attempts at even character development?- You haven't really said anything that proves this, as far as I can see people were receptive to plenty of episodes that focused around characters that were not Seven or the Doctor.


And I see you're still hiding behind the "I know better so I'll just ignore you and everyone who agrees with you" BS. Exodus made it clear how VOY was in a more precarious position than the other shows.

Exodus did not work at UPN or Voyager, he has little more idea what actually went on than we did.


So, me saying that I would like some of the other characters on the ship fleshed out equates to knowing the entire life stories of the Voyager crew? WOW!

Close enough, yes.

Really? You actually think its the same thing? You think that maybe 5 good secondary characters equates to 150 characters (a number thirty times larger?)
It was just another example of you using hyperbole as tactic to attempt to win an argument and it didn't work.

Those shows did not need to show us the lives of all the people in the fleet of the space station, they only needed to show us the lives of the people who mattered to the story.
Like VOY did.

The story was of two crews forced together to find their way across the delta quadrant back home. Every member of the crew was important to the story and the writers therefore should have made an attempt to at explore the lives of at least a few other members of the crew.


And since it was the whole crew of Voyager that was trapped in the delta quadrant not just the privileged senior officers and lackeys, we should have seen more of their stories

Their stories weren't important enough compared to the main cast.

They're not real people you know. Their stories wouldn't exist until the writers actually wrote them, something that would make the show much fresher.


So there was no difference between a bunch of starfleet officers and a bunch of renegades at all besides the Cardassian situation? Are you actually being serious?
Even the show acknowledges on occassions that there were differences but apparently you disagree with that too.

Their ONE and ONLY point of difference was the DMZ agreement. Other than that they were both Fed citizens/former fed citizens who were members of organized space services. Chakotay's group were an organized group, not just random rebels.

So here you are actually disagreeing with the writers of Voyager that you seem to worship?
Despite the differences we actually saw on rare occassions on screen, you are going to maintain that someone who dropped out of Starfleet due to it not suiting their personality actually has near enough the same kind of personality as someone who found Starfleet suited them fine?
Don't you see how this is a complete contradiction?

Think about how a bunch of rebels and a bunch of well disciplined military people might get along in a situation in real life and see if you still hold that ludicrous opinion.

If the writers on Voyager had really cared that much about viewer feedback, they would have done a lot differently.
Negative feedback got rid of all the stuff that would've been used to do things that likely would have shut the audience's complainers up. It's their own fault for rejecting everything the show gave them. They got what they deserved.

I'm not buying it one bit and I don't think many others here to either.
 
I'm beginning to wish I'd never mentioned Garak, Kai Winn or Nog... :D

Don't be. I only wish Anwar hadn't leeched on to it.

Speaking of Anwar... I knew it was a bad idea to get involved in this debate. Yet I must be as sadistic as the rest of you, cause I just can't help myself...

Negative feedback got rid of all the stuff that would've been used to do things that likely would have shut the audience's complainers up. It's their own fault for rejecting everything the show gave them. They got what they deserved.

You really are... something, aren't you Anwar? The worst bit is you actually believe all this BS you're constantly spouting!

First of all - do you REALLY think the writers/producers/execs gave a crap about what the audience thinks? Ratings and actual audience feedback are two different things. I've recently started watching a little show called Firefly, dunno if you've heard of it - the viewers/fans had NOTHING to do with the show's cancellation. If you'd prefer an example closer to home, you can't claim Enterprise was cancelled because of the FANS and not because the writers/producers royally fucked up the first two seasons! Especially considering Season 4 finally started to get good!

Second of all, "they got what they deserved" - REALLY? I can't believe you honestly think that, especially seeing as you're supposedly a Voyager fan yourself (though even the best of fans usually have enough intelligence to admit their show has flaws, and could have done things better). I was... let's see, Voyager started in 95 - I was 4, at the time. And it ended in 01 - when I was 10. Are you saying I, as a Voyager fan, got what I deserved? Even though I didn't even watch it in the original run?

Thirdly - "rejecting everything the show gave them" - are you KIDDING me?! I don't remember ANY of us in this forum, at any point, rejecting ANYthing. I LIKED Voyager, it had a decent enough premise, I liked the characters - even undeveloped and annoying ones like Harry and Neelix. The Kazon were kind of silly, but I even liked the Borg episodes, and the Killing Game! I liked Jeri Ryan being brought on, not cause she wore a catsuit and has big boobs, but because Seven was one of the only characters the writers actually developed.

I liked Voyager for what it was - but does that mean I wouldn't have liked it BETTER if it had done things differently - Because if you'd stop your Crusade for a minute, you'd realise thats what this thread is about - Maybe you'd rather answers like 'Seven of Nine in a pool of lime green jello', but personally, I find those kind of answers not only stupid, but also generally kind of... dull, when it comes to discussion.

Now, if you'd like to make a thread - "Come and give me an exaggerated version of what you think Voyager should have been, so I can 'debate' with you, and tell you all the reasons it wouldn't have worked" then go right ahead!

ONCE AGAIN, your argument consists of taking peoples words and pushing them to the extreme.
Or rather, showing your arguments for what they are.



-I have not said I wanted the ship to be trashed and to never get better.
-I have not said I wanted the Maquis to kill Janeway and steal the ship (pretty sure no one has)
-I have not said that the Feds should abandon their ideals and become pirates.

You're just taking people's points of view and changing them into something else to make it easier for you to counter-argue. This is not a mature thing to do at all and so far you have basically not answered most of the points due to this childish tactic.
Don't presume you know what my ideas are "at the core", I know that and I express that clearly enough to let everyone else know without them exaggerating it.

I agree with pretty much everything you've said You_Guyz - and you've saved me saying them.

But just to be clear. I especially agree with the above points.

I also don't know where you get the idea that they have infinite resources - especially considering that goes against the show itself, where they had to collect various resources! They don't have an infinite supply - especially not enough to make infinite torpedos and shuttlecraft!

I don't think I have enough energy to continue debating further... I have better things to do than run around in circles with Anwar. :rolleyes:
 
-I have not said I wanted the ship to be trashed and to never get better.

This whole argument started when I pointed out how cliche and silly it would be for the ship to NOT become a wreck, and you countered how that was supposedly integral to the show.


-I have not said I wanted the Maquis to kill Janeway and steal the ship (pretty sure no one has)
So all the usual "More tensions and nastiness between the crews" stuff is all a lie, then?

-I have not said that the Feds should abandon their ideals and become pirates.
Uh-huh, so someone who wants the ship to get trashed and the crews to he at each others' throats would be A-okay with the Fleeter crew sticking to their morals :rolleyes:.

All the time and money the writers put into the other characters turned out to be a major waste of effort?
Yep, they tried to develop the chars more in the early seasons and got nothing but cruel criticisms over it, showing that all the time and money the writers put it was a total waste since the audience had proven that they just weren't going to accept anything the writers did. Seven and the Doc were exempt and thus got more development.


Exodus did not work at UPN or Voyager, he has little more idea what actually went on than we did.
He has a far better understanding of how VOY was different and more restricted than either TNG or DS9 when it came to creativity and budget, than you.


Really? You actually think its the same thing? You think that maybe 5 good secondary characters equates to 150 characters (a number thirty times larger?)
You keep going on about how we should've seen everyone in the crew, everyone should've had a story, blahblahblah. So yes, I do think it's the same. Give them 5 secondary characters, they'll just demand 10 more. And seeing how big a waste of time and money it was to try and get the audience to like the developments the main characters were undergoing, I can sympathize with the writers for NOT doing this.

The story was of two crews forced together to find their way across the delta quadrant back home. Every member of the crew was important to the story and the writers therefore should have made an attempt to at explore the lives of at least a few other members of the crew.
They did, occasionally. Anything more would've been a waste of time and money.

[quote[So here you are actually disagreeing with the writers of Voyager that you seem to worship?[/quote]

No, just you.

Despite the differences we actually saw on rare occassions on screen, you are going to maintain that someone who dropped out of Starfleet due to it not suiting their personality actually has near enough the same kind of personality as someone who found Starfleet suited them fine?
People change and develop, and as you've just demonstrated people just didn't LIKE the developments the writers did and wanted the crew to just be a bunch of jerks for the whole series.

Think about how a bunch of rebels and a bunch of well disciplined military people might get along in a situation in real life and see if you still hold that ludicrous opinion.
Chakotay's Maquis weren't just rebels, they were an organized force with a chain of command and all that. And it wasn't that different from fleet protocols in the first place.

And yes, I have plenty of problems with VOY. I think there were problems with the premise itself, not just with what happened later, and in general with when the show was made and how it was made (they should've waited til DS9 was wrapping up). I wrote a multi-page thread on how I would've done the show for crying out loud. I just don't agree that the Maquis thing and ship damage were big issues.
 
Voyager did give us recurring characters, even after the so-called "great criticisms from viewers" in the early seasons. The problem was that they were never truly developed, or at least not enough. Characters like Icheb, Mezoti, Azan, Rebi, Samantha Wildman, Vorik, Tal Celes, and Owen Paris would only have benefited, and the show benefited as well, if they had more screentime and development.

The problem was that when these characters were shown, they were one-dimensional. Icheb was always just Wesley-lite. Mezoti, Azan, and Rebi were always just oddball children. Samantha Wildman was always just another Starfleet crewmember (The most obvious way to develop her character would be to focus on her role as a mother. However, I can only remember once when this was actually developed, in "Once Upon a Time" when she thinks she'll die and never see her daughter again. Sadly, that was her next to last appearance. :scream:). Vorik was a typical Vulcan, nothing more. Tal Celes was a clumsy, unconfident underachiever, nothing more. Owen Paris wanted to see his son again, nothing more.

Would it have really hurt the series to show something like Icheb being a brilliant young student who learns to cut loose every once in a while with Tom Paris on the holodeck just for fun? Or Mezoti, Azan, and Rebi deciding to stay on the ship instead of leaving? Or Samantha Wildman trying to juggle being a mother with all her duties aboard the ship? Or Vorik being something other than a stereotypical Vulcan (maybe he could treat himself to Tellarite mudbaths on the holodeck but never allow anyone to see him enjoying it)? Or Tal Celes overcoming her shortcomings and becoming a more contributing member of the crew? Or Owen Paris' obession with getting his son back making him a little demented and crazy (maybe he becomes so obsessed that he's willing to bend Starfleet regulations in order to achieve his goal)? (It always struck me as odd that he was so determined to get his son back but acted like it was out of the question to do something against Starfleet protocols in "Pathfinder.")
 
I do like the CGI on the above page regarding the launch of the AeroWing from the base of Voyager. They discuss that TPTB didn't want to steal TNG's thunder since a similar scene was being filmed for "Insurrection".
 
A male Seven of Nine, as orignially conceived (or so I've heard.) Jeri Ryan was pretty good, but one week you'd have butch Seven, all proud of being hardass Borg and barking at everyone, while the next you could get weepy Barbie, all self pitying about being an evil genocidal Commie/Nazi/robot and quivering like jello when faced with social interactions with people. (Unlike similar claims about Janeway being inconsistent, this one is true!) If it had been a male Borg, we wouldn't have gotten the damsel in distress cliche crap.

Tom Paris as a genuinely screwedup screwup, instead of a Gary Stu with barely hinted at Daddy Issues. Writing the hotshot pilot, in the great romance of the series, a job as medic, an official sidekick, and, most glorious of all, making him a WRITER, the summit of humanity, may give the character screen time and lots of scenes, but doesn't actually make him a character. Not only did Paris never do anything bad, he was actually the most successful character on the show. He was even too cool to be a geek. He was so cool that he started to suffer from Jack O'Niell syndrome, where he was too cool to get concerned about the events around him. All indications are that the character was groomed to be the male lead (did anyone really think BermanTrek was going to make Robert Beltran the male lead?) with the Unresolved Sexual Tension with Janeway going to him. (Check out the hairstyle in the first episodes, designed to make him seem to be a better age fit with Janeway.) The character consistently hit a false note.

A character for Torres that didn't basically boil down to "I have really mixed feelings about my Black heritage." Getting rid of the scene in seventh season where she turns her child blond would have been justification for retroactively excising her from the series! She should have just been a defective human (aka bitch,) looked much better without that rubber on her forehead and been a much more believable character.

The show should have showed that the Maquis were kind of glad to have an honorable excuse to get out of a losing war that would get them all killed, and therefore not too unhappy about taking a long time getting home. And that they were too diverse a group to mount any threat of mutiny. Indeed, the main conflict within the ship should have been the inability of the Maquis to maintain discipline and competently perform their tasks and their quarrels with each other, sparked by their self loathing over their relief over being out of their losing war. (The desire to see the Maquis as terrorists is pure dumb fuckery, and is largely a covert desire to see characters reject traditional Trek humanism.)

The above are the main ones, but showing Seven of Nine and Harry as sort of sibling rivals for Janeway's affections could have avoided pointless J/7 innuendo. Or alternatively, they could have done J/7.
 
I don't think Paris was meant to be a geek, just the ultimate outcast who was considered bad news by both Fleeters AND Maquis. But that isolation and distrustful attitude needed to be played up more (he's had lousy luck with Fleet, and the Maquis didn't like him all that much either), the barely concealed contempt or at least indifferent attitude the others should mostly all have for him.

Then it's up to the writers to either have him be indifferent right back while showing his value at a pilot and maybe a soldier, maybe form his own third faction within both groups for those who are increasingly dissatisfied with Janeway and Chakotay while admiring Paris' thick skin in maintaining his dignity despite all the disrespect.

Just my opinion.
 
-I have not said I wanted the ship to be trashed and to never get better.

This whole argument started when I pointed out how cliche and silly it would be for the ship to NOT become a wreck, and you countered how that was supposedly integral to the show.

I CHALLENGE you to find where I said I wanted the ship to be a "wreck".
I think you will find I actually used the word "degrading" which is nowhere near as strong and only suggests that the ship not be in pristine condition for the entire show but rather gets a bit older and worn like any ship would in their situation.

I have not said I wanted the Maquis to kill Janeway and steal the ship (pretty sure no one has)
So all the usual "More tensions and nastiness between the crews" stuff is all a lie, then?

Erm, are you still have problems with basic comprehension Anwar?
Since when does "increased tension" = Maquis killing Janeway and stealing the ship?
Once again you have twisted everything I have said and made it into something else so you can have an easier time replying.
I wanted more tension and conflict on the ship, that does not mean I wanted the Maquis to kill Janeway and take over the ship.

THESE ARE NOT MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE, DO YOU UNDERSTAND?

Uh-huh, so someone who wants the ship to get trashed and the crews to he at each others' throats would be A-okay with the Fleeter crew sticking to their morals :rolleyes:.

-I have never said I wanted the ship to get trashed-
-Loosening of codes of conduct and being more flexible with morals in the case of pragmatism DOES NOT equal becoming pirates.

THERE ARE MORE THAN JUST TWO EXTREMES TO EVERY SITUATION, DO YOU UNDERSTAND?


Yep, they tried to develop the chars more in the early seasons and got nothing but cruel criticisms over it, showing that all the time and money the writers put it was a total waste since the audience had proven that they just weren't going to accept anything the writers did. Seven and the Doc were exempt and thus got more development.

Good writers should attempt to develop characters evenly and well in a tv show, the writers on Voyager failed to do this, they have no good excuse.



You keep going on about how we should've seen everyone in the crew, everyone should've had a story,

Ah, except that I didn't actually say everyone should have had a story did I? Are you even reading what I'm writing?
What I write is what I think, don't assume otherwise.

Give them 5 secondary characters, they'll just demand 10 more.

By your logic, DS9 friends aren't happy with secondary character development because they wanted more. This isn't the case and your theory therefore fails.

And seeing how big a waste of time and money it was to try and get the audience to like the developments the main characters were undergoing

I'm failing to see how episodes like "Parallax", "Emanations", "Meld", "Cold Fire", "Dreadnought" etc were failures. These episodes pulled in just as many viewers as a Doctor or Seven of Nine episode and there was plenty of praise to be had for them as well.


So here you are actually disagreeing with the writers of Voyager that you seem to worship?

No, just you.

Ah, except that in this case I am actually agreeing with the writers of Voyager. They make it clear in a few episodes (and not enough) that there are integral differences between the Starfleet crew and the Maquis crew.
Since I agree with the writers and you disagree with me, it means you disagree with the writers. I hope I haven't blown your brain with this elementary logic.

People change and develop, and as you've just demonstrated people just didn't LIKE the developments the writers did and wanted the crew to just be a bunch of jerks for the whole series.

Development and change requires hard adjustment and struggle, all we wanted to see at least was Maquis deal with that in whatever way they would. Unfortunately we didn't get to.
And I'd love to know who specifically wishes that the crew were "jerks" throughout the entire run.

Chakotay's Maquis weren't just rebels, they were an organized force with a chain of command and all that. And it wasn't that different from fleet protocols in the first place.

1. Since when can rebel groups not be organised and have chains of command? Rebel groups can be just as organised as state military.
2. Maquis protocols and methods weren't that different from Starfleet? Then perhaps you'd like to explain why we quite frequently heard the phrase "an old Maquis maneuvre in the show" particularly in the early days when it was made quite clear that Maquis and Federationites did not operate the same way.
Unfortunately the two very different approaches were not formed into one (emphasised particularly in "Alliances", Starfleet took over and it made the show less distincitve.
 
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I CHALLENGE you to find where I said I wanted the ship to be a "wreck".
I think you will find I actually used the word "degrading" which is nowhere near as strong and only suggests that the ship not be in pristine condition for the entire show but rather gets a bit older and worn like any ship would in their situation.

"Degrading" means constantly getting worse and worse over time, with the logical progression being a wreck. Unless they manage to fix the ship, thus preventing it from the real degradation in the first place.

Erm, are you still have problems with basic comprehension Anwar?
Since when does "increased tension" = Maquis killing Janeway and stealing the ship?

All this typical whining over the Maquis hating the Fleeters, mutinies, etc. Mutinies are for the purpose of violently deposing the current authorities and seizing the vessel in question. Maquis "tensions" leading to a violent confrontation with the intention of getting rid of the existing command staff and either killing them or getting rid of them somehow.


-Loosening of codes of conduct and being more flexible with morals in the case of pragmatism DOES NOT equal becoming pirates.

It leads to it, once you loosen your morals it just gets easier to ignore them or loosen them to the point where they become negligible.

Good writers should attempt to develop characters evenly and well in a tv show, the writers on Voyager failed to do this, they have no good excuse.

The audience and fandom (which had become a Hatedom by the time VOY hit the air) rejected their every attempt at character development, but gave the Doctor and Seven a free pass. I don't know why the audience was so picky and unfair, but they were.

Ah, except that I didn't actually say everyone should have had a story did I?

Close enough, with the whining about how the show didn't seem real because we didn't have episode after episode of the ship janitors' great contributions to the show.

By your logic, DS9 friends aren't happy with secondary character development because they wanted more. This isn't the case and your theory therefore fails.

It's a double standard. DS9 gets a free pass while VOY never would get praised for anything no matter what the writers did.

I'm failing to see how episodes like "Parallax", "Emanations", "Meld", "Cold Fire", "Dreadnought" etc were failures. These episodes pulled in just as many viewers as a Doctor or Seven of Nine episode and there was plenty of praise to be had for them as well.

That even after these, the audience still wouldn't shut up over lack of character development.

Ah, except that in this case I am actually agreeing with the writers of Voyager. They make it clear in a few episodes (and not enough) that there are integral differences between the Starfleet crew and the Maquis crew.

And these differences were overcome for mutual benefaction. The writers made THAT clear, so you just don't get it.

And I'd love to know who specifically wishes that the crew were "jerks" throughout the entire run.

All the mutiny-supporters.

1. Since when can rebel groups not be organised and have chains of command? Rebel groups can be just as organised as state military.
2. Maquis protocols and methods weren't that different from Starfleet? Then perhaps you'd like to explain why we quite frequently heard the phrase "an old Maquis maneuvre in the show" particularly in the early days when it was made quite clear that Maquis and Federationites did not operate the same way.
Unfortunately the two very different approaches were not formed into one (emphasised particularly in "Alliances", Starfleet took over and it made the show less distincitve.

1) Yes, and theirs wasn't that different from Starfleet's seeing how so many Maquis WERE ex-Fleeters.
2) Maquis maneuvers refers to tactics used for smaller vessels and guerilla warfare. Improvisations in the field. A fleeter could make them up if they had to. It's something anyone from any military can do.
 
Personally I've would've done a lot of changes in the development of the series/characters, etc. But I'm not going to get into that. I'm just going to look at the show as it was and offer some ideas.

1. Maquis-Starfleet conflict going on longer and being a bit more bitter. I would've liked it if it took a season at least for Chakotay and the other Maquis to don Starfleet uniforms, if at all. Also, more conflict between Chakotay and Tuvok and Chakotay and Paris.

2. Keeping Seska alive. I thought it would've been interesting to actually have that kid be Chakotay's. And maybe she could be hunting VOY or they could have her reintegrated into the crew.

3. Greater use of the Equinox crew. Could've been more interesting new blood that wasn't as 'cute' and useless as the Borg kids.

4. Promoting Harry to Lieutenant at least by Season 5. I think he deserved it, especially before Paris got promoted.

5. Less use of the Borg; more use of Species 8472.

6. Less use of the Kazon; more use of the Viidians. I think VOY writers made a mistake with using the Kazon more than the Viidians, which were a truly unique and creepy villain for Trek. Unlike the TNG writers who corrected themselves with the Ferengi, and gave us the Borg, it took the VOY writers a longer time to put the Kazon on the shelf.

7. Making it tougher for VOY to recover from battles, find resources.

8. Not turning VOY into the Seven of Nine show. I also agree with the posters who lamented the poor or uneven character development for many of the VOY characters. I think this got worse after Seven's debut.
 
I CHALLENGE you to find where I said I wanted the ship to be a "wreck".
I think you will find I actually used the word "degrading" which is nowhere near as strong and only suggests that the ship not be in pristine condition for the entire show but rather gets a bit older and worn like any ship would in their situation.

"Degrading" means constantly getting worse and worse over time, with the logical progression being a wreck. Unless they manage to fix the ship, thus preventing it from the real degradation in the first place.

Let's not get into semantics. The fact is, I did not want the ship to become a wreck unable to get past warp 5. Neither did I want the ship to remain in pristine condition. Somewhere between the two extremes would have been nice, do not forget a place between extremes exist.

Erm, are you still have problems with basic comprehension Anwar?
Since when does "increased tension" = Maquis killing Janeway and stealing the ship?
All this typical whining over the Maquis hating the Fleeters, mutinies, etc. Mutinies are for the purpose of violently deposing the current authorities and seizing the vessel in question. Maquis "tensions" leading to a violent confrontation with the intention of getting rid of the existing command staff and either killing them or getting rid of them somehow.

-I did not say the Maquis should have "hated" the Starfleet crew.
-I did not call for a mutiny.
-I am well aware of what a "mutiny" is and I don't need it explained to me and I did not want a mutiny.

I did not want a mutiny, I only wanted some increased tension between the crew due to conflicting belief systems and ways of getting things done.
This done not mean I wanted there to be a mutiny or Janeway to be beamed out into space.
A place between extremes exists, do not forget that.


-Loosening of codes of conduct and being more flexible with morals in the case of pragmatism DOES NOT equal becoming pirates.
It leads to it, once you loosen your morals it just gets easier to ignore them or loosen them to the point where they become negligible.

"The slippery slope argument" is never a very convincing one and it does not convince here. Placing pragmatism over principles on occassion and relaxing codes of conduct does not inevitably lead to loosing your moral compass completely and becoming a murdering pirate.
A place between the extremes exist, do you get it yet?

The audience and fandom (which had become a Hatedom by the time VOY hit the air) rejected their every attempt at character development, but gave the Doctor and Seven a free pass. I don't know why the audience was so picky and unfair, but they were.

This is a chicken and the egg argument.
I will argue the writers chose to more often write for Seven and the Doctor because it was easier due to the distinctiveness of their characters, I will also argue that it was lazy for them to abandon the development of other characters simply because writing for them was a little harder.

You argue the only reason characters wrote for Seven and the Doctor much more is because of feedback from fans that suggested they were the only two characters the viewers really like.

I believe my suggestion is much more plausible for two reasons
-From what I saw, the writers didn't really take viewer feedback into much consideration at all and there was much less writer-fan interaction than on DS9 for example.
-I don't believe that fans were that annoyed when a story chose to focus on Tom/B'Ellana/Chakotay etc.

Ah, except that I didn't actually say everyone should have had a story did I?
Close enough, with the whining about how the show didn't seem real because we didn't have episode after episode of the ship janitors' great contributions to the show.

Once again you completely twist my words and revert to your old childish tactic by changing what I had actually said in order for you more easily counter-argue.

-I did not say I wanted the stories told of every single crew member, I think you will find I said I would have liked at least 5 secondary characters to have been fleshed out.
-Claiming I wanted "episode after episode of ship janitor's great contributions" is childish sarcasm and it didn't relate to my actual comment whatsoever. Please grow up.


It's a double standard. DS9 gets a free pass while VOY never would get praised for anything no matter what the writers did.

Do you have the ability to see alternate universes or is it just your (slightly wacky) opinion that had the writers rectified problems fans had with the show that they fans still would have hated it?
I disagree, if the writers had really taken fan feedback on board, we would have had a different show and the show would have received less criticism.
You seem to be imagining some prejudice that all fans felt towards the show no matter what the writers did, I don't feel that there was at all, not during its time of airing anyway.


That even after these, the audience still wouldn't shut up over lack of character development.

The episodes I mentioned were from S1 and S2 when there was even development, most people have a problem with S4 and afterwards where a few characters seemed to dominate and other characters were pushed into the background.
Ronald D. Moore said himself that the writers on Voyager said they had given up on B'Ellana's character a long time ago. I don't believe that was because viewers had a mass letter writing campaign saying they hated her, it was because the writers were lazy.


And these differences were overcome for mutual benefaction. The writers made THAT clear, so you just don't get it.

I didn't actually see differences being overcome for mutual benefaction on screen and since this is a tv show, I woulda kinda appreciated that. Developments taking on behind the scenes that are integral to the show's premise and to the show's story is not acceptable.

And I'd love to know who specifically wishes that the crew were "jerks" throughout the entire run.
All the mutiny-supporters.

You appear to classify anyone who wanted at least an iota more conflict on the show to be a mutiny supporter even if they explicitly said they didn't want to see a mutiny (e.g. me) so we can take your words with a pinch of salt here.

1) Yes, and theirs wasn't that different from Starfleet's seeing how so many Maquis WERE ex-Fleeters.
2) Maquis maneuvers refers to tactics used for smaller vessels and guerilla warfare. Improvisations in the field. A fleeter could make them up if they had to. It's something anyone from any military can do.

-I didn't see any evidence that shows that Maquis were anything like Starfleet except beyond the existence of a captain. In fact, as far as I can see the Maquis were far from the bloated bureaucratic monster that Starfleet was.

-In almost all encounters with alien species, the Starfleet approach was taken. The only time it was considered to follow a Maquis approach was in "Alliances" and after one failure, suddenly they dropped it altogether. There is a reason for the derision this episode recieves. The blend of Maquis (who were distinct in their approaches to Starfleeter no matter what you may claim) and Starfleet officers on board Voyager was part of the whole premise of the show and we should have seen a compromise between the two sets of beliefs, we didn't and the show failed to live up to a large chunk of its premise.

-Why are you under the impression that "so many" Maquis were ex-Starfleeters? It was actually made quite clear in DS9/TNG that most Maquis were just colonists who took up arms in the face of Starfleet antipathy against their plight.
The episode "Pre-Emptive Strike" didn't appear to actually include any ex Starfleet officers as far as I can remember.
Sure, some Starfleet officers did defect but there was no suggestion they formed up a large part of even a majority.

Even by looking at the (surprisingly few) Maquis we know the backgrounds of on Voyager, its clear your assumption is misplaces.

-B'Ellana left Starfleet due to being completely incompatible with it and became a Maquis - not a Starfleeter
-Seska was never in Starfleet
-The crew members in "Learning Curve" were not in Starfleet
-Chakotay was the only ex Starfleet maquis we are aware of

Judging from the Maquis we saw, most appeared to have never actually been in Starfleet, it is here that your point falls like so many of your points do.



You may see a pattern emerging in my arguments.

You appear to believe only the extreme of every situation was possible
-The Voyager crew either stuck by Starfleet principles 100% or they became pirates who murdered and pillaged.
-The ship was either in pristine condition all the time or it became a wreck barely able to move.


What I've been arguing and what you've had difficulty comprehending for whatever reason is that I wanted somewhere between these two extremes to exist - something that you apparently don't believe is possible or simply have not heard of.
I liked Voyager a lot (as you should be able to tell from my avatars) but I did want some changes to make it a little more realistic and my suggestions have been clearly outlined, I would appreciate if you would not warp them and turn them into something else.
 
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Let's not get into semantics. The fact is, I did not want the ship to become a wreck unable to get past warp 5.

:rolleyes:

Neither did I want the ship to remain in pristine condition. Somewhere between the two extremes would have been nice, do not forget a place between extremes exist.


And like I'm saying, with their technology and the abundance of aliens in the Trekverse, it still wouldn't be like that. You want the ship to get trashed like that then set the show in a universe where there aren't any aliens and their tech isn't capable of dealing with minor repairs. Otherwise in Trek it's not going to happen.

-I did not say the Maquis should have "hated" the Starfleet crew.

Tensions = bad blood/relations, which logically leads to mutual hatred.

-I did not call for a mutiny.

That's where tensions between factions trapped together lead to.

"The slippery slope argument" is never a very convincing one and it does not convince here. Placing pragmatism over principles on occassion and relaxing codes of conduct does not inevitably lead to loosing your moral compass completely and becoming a murdering pirate.

If you were willing to loosen morals in the first place, it only shows you weren't a moral person to begin with and it'd only be easier to loosen them more and more until they're not there at all. While the story of a bunch of folks who were supposed to have some morality turning into a bunch of savages might appeal to some, it doesn't fit in Trek. Go watch something else.

You argue the only reason characters wrote for Seven and the Doctor much more is because of feedback from fans that suggested they were the only two characters the viewers really like.

Pretty much, the others had some fans but every attempt at developing them was met with negativity by the audience for whatever silly reason they had to dislike the characters. The Doc and Seven were exempt due to blatant favoritism even though this was mainly due to the development they got. Basically, the audience screwed themselves with the characters and got what they deserved.


-I did not say I wanted the stories told of every single crew member, I think you will find I said I would have liked at least 5 secondary characters to have been fleshed out.

And I'm saying that if you did that, rather than praise or ANYTHING good the audience would just whine that 5 wasn't enough.

-Claiming I wanted "episode after episode of ship janitor's great contributions" is childish sarcasm and it didn't relate to my actual comment whatsoever.

It's the truth enough, the characters in the main cast were already the most important ones to the show and to the ship. Your "secondary characters" stories would be the equivalent of watching a bunch of janitors.

is it just your (slightly wacky) opinion that had the writers rectified problems fans had with the show that they fans still would have hated it?

They would still have hated it, bottom line.

You seem to be imagining some prejudice that all fans felt towards the show no matter what the writers did, I don't feel that there was at all, not during its time of airing anyway.

The fandom tore into the show 30 minutes into "Caretaker" and have never let up, to this day. I've witnessed it for the last 15 years since I watched the show when it began.

The episodes I mentioned were from S1 and S2 when there was even development

And they didn't like the development, even back then.

, most people have a problem with S4 and afterwards where a few characters seemed to dominate and other characters were pushed into the background.
Ronald D. Moore said himself that the writers on Voyager said they had given up on B'Ellana's character a long time ago. I don't believe that was because viewers had a mass letter writing campaign saying they hated her, it was because the writers were lazy.

Moore is just another whiner, like Ira Behr. And by S4 the writers had gotten into the only pattern of writing the audience seemed to hate less than what they were doing beforehand.


I didn't actually see differences being overcome for mutual benefaction on screen and since this is a tv show, I woulda kinda appreciated that. Developments taking on behind the scenes that are integral to the show's premise and to the show's story is not acceptable.

So they chose to be subtle rather than blatant in in-your-face over the matter, closer to reality, and still get slammed for not being realistic enough. And people wonder why I have a problem with how whiny Voy detractors are.

You appear to classify anyone who wanted at least an iota more conflict on the show to be a mutiny supporter even if they explicitly said they didn't want to see a mutiny (e.g. me) so we can take your words with a pinch of salt here.

And I pointed out above that your preference for the show WOULD'VE led the a mutiny anyways.

-I didn't see any evidence that shows that Maquis were anything like Starfleet except beyond the existence of a captain. In fact, as far as I can see the Maquis were far from the bloated bureaucratic monster that Starfleet was.

They were planning on forming their own nation, with their own armed services. A bunch of ragtag rebels don't do that, an organized service with rules and regulations for its members do.

-In almost all encounters with alien species, the Starfleet approach was taken.

Because that's what Starfleet DOES, make contact with new species. They never bothered explaining what the Maquis way was in the first place. In ANY of the shows.

The blend of Maquis (who were distinct in their approaches to Starfleeter no matter what you may claim) and Starfleet officers on board Voyager was part of the whole premise of the show and we should have seen a compromise between the two sets of beliefs

We didn't see it in every episode in a totally blatant way, you mean. It was a Fleet ship, it was crewed mainly be Fleeters, the Maquis way were never established in the first place as radically different from the Feds, the Maquis should've been grateful Janeway didn't lock them up for their criminal activities. There wasn't much to compromise over to begin with.

-B'Ellana left Starfleet due to being completely incompatible with it and became a Maquis - not a Starfleeter

She got over it.

-Seska was never in Starfleet

She died.

-The crew members in "Learning Curve" were not in Starfleet

They got over it.

-Chakotay was the only ex Starfleet maquis we are aware of

He was their leader, brought tactics and organization with him. So they were closer to how a small Fleet team would operate anyways.

I liked Voyager a lot (as you should be able to tell from my avatars) but I did want some changes to make it a little more realistic and my suggestions have been clearly outlined, I would appreciate if you would not warp them and turn them into something else.

I thought there were issues with VOY's very premise that needed to be changed, frankly. But this whole debate is just the usual VOY-bashing I've grown so disgusted with and been countering for a while now.
 
Let's not get into semantics. The fact is, I did not want the ship to become a wreck unable to get past warp 5.

:rolleyes:

So this is what you've been reduced to? Rolly eye smilies?
You appear to be suggesting that I don't know my own opinion, would you care to share how you have more knowledge of my inner thoughts than I do?

]Neither did I want the ship to remain in pristine condition. Somewhere between the two extremes would have been nice, do not forget a place between extremes exist.


And like I'm saying, with their technology and the abundance of aliens in the Trekverse, it still wouldn't be like that. You want the ship to get trashed like that then set the show in a universe where there aren't any aliens and their tech isn't capable of dealing with minor repairs. Otherwise in Trek it's not going to happen.

WHERE DID I SAY I WANTED THE SHIP TO BE TRASHED!?????
You are once again putting words in my mouth.

I wanted the ship to have some wear and tear and not always have an easy time getting repaired. I certainly didn't want massive damage to the ship to be repaired between shows.
Why are you incapable of reading what I have written and processing the information reasonably, what is your malfunction?


Tensions = bad blood/relations, which logically leads to mutual hatred.

I'm starting to wonder if you have ever experienced human-human interaction or if all your experiences of humanity are seen through daytime soap operas.
In real life tension can exist without turning into hatred.

-I did not call for a mutiny.
That's where tensions between factions trapped together lead to.

Do you have evidence from the last 5000 years of human history to show that every single time civilised people with different beliefs get trapped in the same situation, murder and mutiny occurs?

No, I didn't think so.

All I wanted was to see the two different factions struggle with their differences and then find some new ground and eventually become one crew. I wanted to see this on screen and I didn't want it to only be covered in two episodes.


If you were willing to loosen morals in the first place, it only shows you weren't a moral person to begin with and it'd only be easier to loosen them more and more until they're not there at all. While the story of a bunch of folks who were supposed to have some morality turning into a bunch of savages might appeal to some, it doesn't fit in Trek. Go watch something else.

:guffaw: :guffaw: :guffaw: :guffaw:

Poor, predictable Anwar. Once again you revert to hyperbole and exaggeration to attempt to win an argument rather than actually discussing the issue at and.
I wanted the crew to become more pragmatic in their search for a way home, Tuvok's actions in "Prime Factors" are exactly the type of actions I am talking about in the context of the show.

Changing your view on your own principles in the name of pragmatism =/= turning into savage cannibals.

If you can't see that, then I suggest you open your door and go outside to experience the real world.


Pretty much, the others had some fans but every attempt at developing them was met with negativity by the audience for whatever silly reason they had to dislike the characters. The Doc and Seven were exempt due to blatant favoritism even though this was mainly due to the development they got. Basically, the audience screwed themselves with the characters and got what they deserved.

I'm awaiting evidence that some fans disliking "Thirty Days" or "Nemesis" led to Chakotay and Paris being sidelined.


And I'm saying that if you did that, rather than praise or ANYTHING good the audience would just whine that 5 wasn't enough.

Its possible some people may whine, but its certain that there would be less people complaining about lack of secondary character development when there are around 5 in the show.
This is basic logic, it seems you'd make a terrible Vulcan.


It's the truth enough, the characters in the main cast were already the most important ones to the show and to the ship. Your "secondary characters" stories would be the equivalent of watching a bunch of janitors.

I personally would have loved to see how Samantha Wildman balanced being a single mother and member of the crew. A good and attentive writer could have fleshed out her character tremendously.

I'm also failing to see your "the main characters were the only important people on Voyager", the only reason it appears that way is because it was written that way and it seemed implausible even then That Neelix would be going on dangerous missions when he was only the cook and the rest of the crew were barely every involved in anything ever.

Good writers would have made the ship a more believable ship by showing us some of the lives of the others on board and how they dealt with being years from home and trapped in a dangerous part of space. I think I will rest this point here, the vast majority of people here agree with me which should tell you something and should certainly encourage you to reevaluate your opinion.

is it just your (slightly wacky) opinion that had the writers rectified problems fans had with the show that they fans still would have hated it?
They would still have hated it, bottom line.

Sorry, I had no idea you had the ability to see into parallel universes.

The fandom tore into the show 30 minutes into "Caretaker" and have never let up, to this day. I've witnessed it for the last 15 years since I watched the show when it began.

Maybe, just maybe a lot of people didn't like it because of the problems that have been discussed here? Its a totally "out there" idea but hopefully you can see the logic in it.


And they didn't like the development, even back then.

Ah, Anwar speaks for every single person who has ever watched Voyager, well done. Are you forming some sort of hive mind with all of us that we're not aware of?


Moore is just another whiner, like Ira Behr. And by S4 the writers had gotten into the only pattern of writing the audience seemed to hate less than what they were doing beforehand.

Whether Moore is a "whiner" (real mature there) or not is besides the question. He worked on the show and was told by the writing staff that they had "given up on B'Ellana a long time ago". This isn't acceptable conduct for good tv writers and shows the systemic problems within the Voyager staff.
You claim it was because the writers were hanging on every single word of forumers (unlikely) and only writing for the characters people seemed to like. This is possible but it doesn't excuse them from totally avoiding even character development like good tv writers should be aiming for.

You appear to classify anyone who wanted at least an iota more conflict on the show to be a mutiny supporter even if they explicitly said they didn't want to see a mutiny (e.g. me) so we can take your words with a pinch of salt here.

And I pointed out above that your preference for the show WOULD'VE led the a mutiny anyways.

1. As I pointed out, two groups with different beliefs together doesn't always lead to mutiny and murder, if you think otherwise you really need to get a clue.
A couple of years ago I shared an apartment with 5 other people and there was a lot of tension there, guess what. No one murdered anyone! We came to a COMPROMISE and we WORKED THROUGH OUR DIFFICULTIES.

Humans are capable of that just as much as murder, and certainly the future beings of Trek.
All I wanted to see was the characters work through their differences and come to a compromise on screen.

I wonder if you're getting this yet

So they chose to be subtle rather than blatant in in-your-face over the matter, closer to reality, and still get slammed for not being realistic enough. And people wonder why I have a problem with how whiny Voy detractors are.

By subtle, you actually mean they didn't deal with it whatsoever. We, the viewer only saw what was on screen, it is ridiculously lazy to not address the issue whatsoever and hope the viewer assumed it all worked out off camera.
Its like Sylar becoming "good" off camera in "Heroes" and no one mentioning how.


They were planning on forming their own nation, with their own armed services. A bunch of ragtag rebels don't do that, an organized service with rules and regulations for its members do.

Since when do rebels not plan on forming their own nation?
The whole freaking point of rebels on earth is to overthrow governements and form their own government and nation instead. The communist rebels in Pre-Civil War China were organised and their aim was to make China communist forming their own nation of the People's Republic of China.
You should really read over what you wrote because this is definitely the most nonsensical statement you have made so far, you should be embarrassed.


Because that's what Starfleet DOES, make contact with new species. They never bothered explaining what the Maquis way was in the first place. In ANY of the shows.

I seem to remember a quite clear explanation in both TNG and DS9, maybe you missed those episodes.

And what was wrong with taking a new approach to alien encounters combining the Starfleet regulations and the more pragmatic Maquis approach?
The episode "Random Thoughts" comes to mind. Janeway was willing to let some aliens give B'Ellana a harmful lobotomy, what was wrong with straying away from Starfleet regulations and using a more useful one since they were 60, 000 lightyears from the Federation?

The blend of Maquis (who were distinct in their approaches to Starfleeter no matter what you may claim) and Starfleet officers on board Voyager was part of the whole premise of the show and we should have seen a compromise between the two sets of beliefs
We didn't see it in every episode in a totally blatant way, you mean. It was a Fleet ship, it was crewed mainly be Fleeters, the Maquis way were never established in the first place as radically different from the Feds, the Maquis should've been grateful Janeway didn't lock them up for their criminal activities. There wasn't much to compromise over to begin with.

I think it was made quite clear than in all the essays dealing with the Maquis across TNG/DS9 and the Maquis episodes in Voyager that the Maquis operated quite differently from Starfleeters. I'm sorry that you can't see this.


She got over it.

She died.

They got over it.

My point was that most of the Maquis were not Starfleet, contrary to your belief.
Was it so much to ask that we saw how some more of the Maquis "got over it" through the course of the show? Since, you know, it was HALF THE PREMISE of the entire show?


I thought there were issues with VOY's very premise that needed to be changed, frankly. But this whole debate is just the usual VOY-bashing I've grown so disgusted with and been countering for a while now.

Voyager's premise was sound, its execution was not.
As for your opinion that this has all been "Voyager bashing", well I'm not even sure how to respond to this. All that people have been doing is pointing out the flaws in Voyager and suggesting ways to improve the show. I'm not sure why you attach the word "bashing" to this activity. Surely "bashing" would be a thread asking to list everything Voyager had done wrong and even then, that would be more than allowed under the forum guidelines.
You need to get over your bizarre love for Voyager and the need to defend it like it was a person.
 
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A couple of years ago I shared an apartment with 5 other people and there was a lot of tension there, guess what. No one murdered anyone! We came to a COMPROMISE and we WORKED THROUGH OUR DIFFICULTIES.

I'll bet you wouldn't have done if one of them was Anwar. :devil:
 
WHERE DID I SAY I WANTED THE SHIP TO BE TRASHED!?????

When you said it would unrealistic for the ship to not get trashed as the show went on, you know when Exodus and I were talking in a civil way a few pages ago?

I'm starting to wonder if you have ever experienced human-human interaction or if all your experiences of humanity are seen through daytime soap operas.
In real life tension can exist without turning into hatred.

The kind of tensions you want, do.

Do you have evidence from the last 5000 years of human history to show that every single time civilised people with different beliefs get trapped in the same situation, murder and mutiny occurs?

One side tends to survive over the other, one way or another, yes. Or they escape to fight later, or just escape from the other entirely and go somewhere else.

All I wanted was to see the two different factions struggle with their differences and then find some new ground and eventually become one crew. I wanted to see this on screen and I didn't want it to only be covered in two episodes.

Then the other crew should've been Cardassians or (better) Romulans, people with REAL DEFINED differences in ideology, culture and politics than Feds. The Maquis had nearly none of that and thus weren't so different to waste so much time on.


I wanted the crew to become more pragmatic in their search for a way home, Tuvok's actions in "Prime Factors" are exactly the type of actions I am talking about in the context of the show.

And like Janeway said at the end of that episode, Tuvok's line of thinking could be used to justify ANYTHING no matter how immoral and horrific.

I'm awaiting evidence that some fans disliking "Thirty Days" or "Nemesis" led to Chakotay and Paris being sidelined.

Did anyone say they actually enjoyed those episodes or found them good for character development? No? Well there's your answer.

Its possible some people may whine, but its certain that there would be less people complaining about lack of secondary character development when there are around 5 in the show.

They'd just whine there weren't more recurring characters than that and the recurring characters used weren't used all the time and taking all the spotlight.

I think I will rest this point here, the vast majority of people here agree with me which should tell you something and should certainly encourage you to reevaluate your opinion.

Ah, side-stepping the argument with the "More people back me up so that makes me unquestionable", nice to see that hasn't changed.

Maybe, just maybe a lot of people didn't like it because of the problems that have been discussed here? Its a totally "out there" idea but hopefully you can see the logic in it.

They hate it for the fact that it existed.

You claim it was because the writers were hanging on every single word of forumers (unlikely) and only writing for the characters people seemed to like. This is possible but it doesn't excuse them from totally avoiding even character development like good tv writers should be aiming for.

They tried, and all the work and money they put into it turned out to be a huge waste because the fans weren't pleasable anymore. Why waste further time and money when you know no one will ever accept your work?

A couple of years ago I shared an apartment with 5 other people and there was a lot of tension there, guess what. No one murdered anyone! We came to a COMPROMISE and we WORKED THROUGH OUR DIFFICULTIES.

Then there weren't any real tensions to begin with. Not the kind you advocate for VOY.

Since when do rebels not plan on forming their own nation?
The whole freaking point of rebels on earth is to overthrow governements and form their own government and nation instead. The communist rebels in Pre-Civil War China were organised and their aim was to make China communist forming their own nation of the People's Republic of China.
You should really read over what you wrote because this is definitely the most nonsensical statement you have made so far, you should be embarrassed.

You're just supporting my argument, that the Maquis had organization and chain of command, stuff NOT unlike how the Feds worked.

I seem to remember a quite clear explanation in both TNG and DS9, maybe you missed those episodes.

Eddington's "You're the Borg!" BS? That line is what made no sense.

And what was wrong with taking a new approach to alien encounters combining the Starfleet regulations and the more pragmatic Maquis approach?
The episode "Random Thoughts" comes to mind. Janeway was willing to let some aliens give B'Ellana a harmful lobotomy, what was wrong with straying away from Starfleet regulations and using a more useful one since they were 60, 000 lightyears from the Federation?

You don't piss off local powers and empires when you have nothing to back you up, that's what was wrong.

My point was that most of the Maquis were not Starfleet, contrary to your belief.
Was it so much to ask that we saw how some more of the Maquis "got over it" through the course of the show? Since, you know, it was HALF THE PREMISE of the entire show?

VOY had flaws in its very premise. I've said it before. The Maquis were one of them, and were dealt with appropriately as thus.


Voyager's premise was sound, its execution was not.

Nah, there were problems right at the shows' core. It needed more time before being aired. When DS9 was ending.

All that people have been doing is pointing out the flaws in Voyager and suggesting ways to improve the show. I'm not sure why you attach the word "bashing" to this activity. Surely "bashing" would be a thread asking to list everything Voyager had done wrong

Funny, the stuff people list here seem to be all the stuff they claim VOY did "wrong". It matches your description of bashing quite well.
 
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