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37's Timeline, If Voyager Stayed.

Mansa40

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Red Shirt
After watching the 37's again it got me wondering about what might have happened if Voyager had stayed and attempted to build a 'Human Civilization in the Delta Quadrant'. This might have amounted to an interesting show IMO. Any way I thought I would put my mind to it, thoughts? I am building a Fanfic.
 
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It would have been a mindnumbing boring show, since they already had a city that reminded the crew of the Earth they know, so there wouldn't be much to add other than certain technology that those DQ Humans did not manage to develop. They were quite advanced already.
 
After watching the 37's again it got me wondering about what might have happened if Voyager had stayed and attempted to build a 'Human Civilization in the Delta Quadrant'. This might have amounted to an interesting show IMO. Any way I thought I would put my mind to it, thoughts? I am building a Fanfic.

The more I'm thinking about it, the more I wish that they would have stayed on the planet and helped the people there to build a "New Federation" in the Delta Quadrant. The possibilities for new adventures with our favorites would have been endless. Just think of how many Voyager books we would have had even after the series ended!
 
They would ahve attracted a lot of aliens who would want to take Voyager as their own. Not a nice trade for a people that hid from view when Voyager first showed up.
 
^Also, they would have to fight the Viidians and the Kazon. Oh, and Seska would have found them....
 
I wouldn't have liked them to stay on the planet and it was a nice moment when Janeway realises everyone wanted to stay on Voyager. I was thinking it would have been cool if one of the people off the planet wanted to go with Voyager. I did initially think it would be cool if Amelia Earhart had went with them but since she's a real person that might have been odd. I would have liked to see a 30s perspective on all things Voyager though.
 
I thought it was kind of ridiculous that -nobody- on Voyager wanted to stay on the planet myself. I would have expected at least one former Maquis who wasn't happy with how things were going on Voyager to want to get off the ship.

Oh well.
 
I thought it was kind of ridiculous that -nobody- on Voyager wanted to stay on the planet myself. I would have expected at least one former Maquis who wasn't happy with how things were going on Voyager to want to get off the ship.

Oh well.

Well, you know, no one wants to be "that guy." :)

I uh, might not remember this quite correctly, but:

There's a scene in Narnia's The Voyage of the Dawn Treader where Caspian and Drinian ask their crew if any of them want to continue sailing towards the very edge of the world - or else stay behind on the lush island full of food (Ramandu's Island) where they're currently parked. If they do not get enough crew to volunteer, they will be unable to sail their ship, The Dawn Treader, to the edge and break a sleeping spell on three Narnian lords.

Some of the crew agree to set sail, but not enough to properly man the ship. Ramandu's Island is quite close to the edge already, so many of the sailors feel their mission is fulfilled. Why go further?

Caspian knows he cannot force them to come along, so he turns to reverse psychology and announces that sailing to the edge is a privilege, not a right. He makes the crew believe that he only wants the best and brightest to come along. All of a sudden most of them want to go. He then gives them a short amount of time to make their final decisions.

Anyway, a few of the crankier sailors band together and decide to hang out on the island. As time passes and the deadline gets closer, however, more and more of them drift away to join those who want to leave. Eventually, only one man is left. He sticks it out past the deadline, but he ends up feeling horrible about being "that guy" and runs to Caspian with a change of heart.

The sailor is told it's too late and everyone leaves without him, promising him they'll return after their short journey to pick him up. The sailor tries to enjoy the island paradise, but mostly ends up being bored until the others come back. He eventually convinces himself mentally that he did sail to the edge with the others, and tells pretend stories about his glorious adventure at the end of the world once he gets home.

So, anyway, maybe there were some Maquis standing in that cargo bay, and as more and more of them re-thought their plans and drifted off, the last couple holdouts realized they didn't want to be the odd ones out and left before the command team found 'em.

We humans are quite sheep-like when we want to be. :)
 
Next on Celebrity Deathmatch - Captain Janeway vs. Prince Caspian...who gives better oratory??? Find out SUNDAY SUNDAY SUNDAY!!!

It's a good thought, but my main concern with it is that the Narnia books are written for children. Everyone staying on the ship seems like a "Disney" ending to me, not how things really go.

Though I also take a dim view of people who are dismissive of people who are afraid to continue on a journey where there's no guarantee they'll be better off. A scene where Janeway made her peace with the, say, 1-5 people who decided they wanted to settle and have a (non-starship) home could have been executed rather well, I think.
 
Next on Celebrity Deathmatch - Captain Janeway vs. Prince Caspian...who gives better oratory??? Find out SUNDAY SUNDAY SUNDAY!!!

It's a good thought, but my main concern with it is that the Narnia books are written for children. Everyone staying on the ship seems like a "Disney" ending to me, not how things really go.

Though I also take a dim view of people who are dismissive of people who are afraid to continue on a journey where there's no guarantee they'll be better off. A scene where Janeway made her peace with the, say, 1-5 people who decided they wanted to settle and have a (non-starship) home could have been executed rather well, I think.

Naw, you're right. In the real world, someone would probably want to stay back. That Narnia scene just popped into my head. Probably because I really like Narnia. :lol: It's just that perhaps if only one or two Maquis were bumming around in the cargo bay, I can see why they might get cold feet at the last second, no matter how much they didn't like Voyager. Maybe Mortimer Harren was there, and realized he was alone because no one liked him, and he didn't like anyone else.

It would have been a pretty cool scene to have her talk to the disgruntled crewmen, I agree. But it probably would have had to be an episode unto itself, since the whole thing happened at the end.
 
I can't see why any Starfleet crew members would stay on the planet since they chose to work on a starship. As for the Marquis I'm not sure they would want to stay either, sure there were people that were unhappy about having a Starfleet captain but the Marquis are stubborn they were fighting because they were forced out of their homes so I can't imagine they'd give up on getting back there. Was the planet as advanced as 24th century earth? I got the impression that it wasn't so maybe that was a factor in peoples decision.
 
^The crew kept saying that the city on that planet reminded them so much of Earth so I'm going to say yes. Just because they don't have ships or warp drive doesn't mean they are incapable of other things like holodecks and replicators.
 
(shrugs) If some of the Maquis were as displeased with Janeway's command style as Seska but not as inclined towards violent solutions, I could see settling on the planet as a viable alternative, and the tech level of the civilization there might not be a huge factor.
 
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