No, she didn't. In both cases, she was gentle. In Yesterday's Enterprise, she acted as an advisor.
And she did not put the blame on anybody in redemption. Guinan did not have clear memories of Yesterday's Enterprise events.
I agree with you that she is rather abdicative of her own fault. In fact, it was Guinan's own indiscretion which caused Tasha to find out her alternate fate, in the first place, but she's not wrong in what she said. The ENT-C did need to go back, & Picard does bear sole responsibility for transferring her, which is the direct cause of this aberration. Tasha shouldn't have been there
The problem is that Guinan's "vague intuitions" about the alt-timeline are just that... vague. She doesn't really remember any of it well
She says "And I think you sent her there" She's working with a half-assed memory at best, but I doubt she could've forgotten her own involvement, & purposely withheld it, likely because it wouldn't have helped anything, & only served to dissuade Picard from heeding her warning
Hopefully we can imagine her being honorable enough to confess the whole story to him, in time. One thing is certain, by the time of "Time's Arrow" she's learned her lesson, & knows not to tinker with that stuff. In essence, she's a pretty poor temporal agent, or at least has inefficient tools for the trade
It's actually a slap in the face to Troi's character, that they needed Guinan at all. I mean who's the real counselor on board? A Bartender? I just think it became obvious that given Picard's character, it would be unlikely that he'd ever truly heed Troi's personal advice, beyond her position, which was subordinate
I agree with you that she is rather abdicative of her own fault. In fact, it was Guinan's own indiscretion which caused Tasha to find out her alternate fate, in the first place, but she's not wrong in what she said. The ENT-C did need to go back, & Picard does bear sole responsibility for transferring her, which is the direct cause of this aberration. Tasha shouldn't have been there
The problem is that Guinan's "vague intuitions" about the alt-timeline are just that... vague. She doesn't really remember any of it well
She says "And I think you sent her there" She's working with a half-assed memory at best, but I doubt she could've forgotten her own involvement, & purposely withheld it, likely because it wouldn't have helped anything, & only served to dissuade Picard from heeding her warning
Hopefully we can imagine her being honorable enough to confess the whole story to him, in time. One thing is certain, by the time of "Time's Arrow" she's learned her lesson, & knows not to tinker with that stuff. In essence, she's a pretty poor temporal agent, or at least has inefficient tools for the trade
Love the pic. It pretty much sums up what is irritating about her character. She's preachy exposition bartender person.
'Tis strange. Q is afraid of (at least averse to) Guinan and speaks to her as an equal, but the Borg basically wiped her race out? She's a bartender but she is free to interrupt Picard (at work running the ship) when the spirit moves her? Is it even plausible that she would still be tending bar on a fully militarized Enterprise? Since they were all eating/drinking the equivalent of MREs you would not think you'd need a bartender.
That's the benefit of the character, she can speak to Picard in ways no one else can, because she'd not one of his minions.
Yeah, but I think that Troi was planned out to be the one true adviser, at first, & they eventually realized that it wasn't enough, & brought in another character. After that, it was really rare for people to confide in Troi, unless it was some kind of official therapy. Prior, it was handled in a much more relaxed way, for her character. She was allowed to make observational commentary, at any timeIt's actually a slap in the face to Troi's character, that they needed Guinan at all. I mean who's the real counselor on board? A Bartender? I just think it became obvious that given Picard's character, it would be unlikely that he'd ever truly heed Troi's personal advice, beyond her position, which was subordinate
That's the benefit of the character, she can speak to Picard in ways no one else can, because she'd not one of his minions. She can give Will Riker a kick up the arse in BoBW too.
Troi's the counsellor, she deals with the mental health of the crew. Her role isn't as wide-ranging as giving the captain advice in the way Guinan does, and probably wouldn't feel it was her place anyway.
Probably why Picard values both of them in different ways.
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