^ Is there any way this could not be an "angry fanboy" reaction to Janeway giving Picard orders in a TNG film? I mean, Janeway showed up as an admiral in "Endgame" but I don't recall seeing the "contain her as an admiral" theory until after the movie. Just wondering...
Whether it’s the individual making the comment or not, it is in general, a fanboy comment. I think that a lot of fanboy dislike of Janeway is based in a kind of fear that they are always going to have to answer to their mom (which could actually be true). Women are not always the mom or the girlfriend. So is Guy making this fanboy comment because he is, or does he truly dislike the character I don’t know? But I am very reasonably sure that a great deal of the dislike of the character is based in her gender and not in the character herself.
I saw “Nemesis” about the second day it was out. It was a matinée so the theater was filled with people of all ages. When we got to the famous scene where Admiral Janeway gives Picard his orders (which alone tells most of us she has a certain amount power), and out in the darkness came an adolescent male voice. “How come
SHE gets to be an admiral before Picard?” And he did put a great deal of emphasis the word
SHE. To this day I wish I had also called out in the dark “Because
SHE said yes!”
We only see what we want to see in the Endgame scenes, you can see a wonderful world all you want but the fact is we can say it was a horrible world and be just as right. Admiral Janeway did what she did, the Temporal Integrity Commission didn’t come after her, and Captain Janeway was given a promotion. And people get promoted because they do things right, when they cease to do things right they no longer get promoted. It is a common and documented principle. People hardly ever get kicked upstairs, no matter how much you would like to believe it.
As for deaths, one could easily say by your standards that Jake Sisko killed Jadiza Dax. But the truth is we always have choices, we are responsible for ourselves no matter what time line we are in. I don’t believe in predestination and that is the only way your scenario works. When Admiral Janeway changed time, everyone got a second chance and their lives still depended on their individual choices. One could frankly make the argument that Jadiza traded her life for a short time of happiness with Worf, and just maybe it was for her the better way to live even if shorter.
Brit
By the way the principle I spoke of is "The Peter Principle"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Principle