The Navy dominates scifi but why? Frankly I'm sick of seeing the navy in outer space riding the cosmic oceans. The navy dominates scifi but I'm not just referring to stuff like 2000 Leagues Under the Sea or Seaquest DSV you got big navy ships in Buck Rogers, Confederation Navy from the Wing Commander, the Navy command structure in Star Trek. Almost every scifi got captains and petty officers and admirals and officer cadets and commodores and boats and sea dogs and pirates. Just check it! It's all in tv shows like andromeda, battlestar and straczynski's crusade (B5 maybe not so much but there is still a good chunk of Navy) and most scifi movies have the navy. Why oh Why I think its over done. Why were they still using Navy structure in DS9 since I thought it was supposed to be a SPACE STATION not a sea vessel. Look at space exploration in our real history! Whenever the Navy got involved they mostly flopped, losing out to the Soviets producing the first "flopnik" while Russia got to put the first man in space and the first satellite. Yes we beat the commies to the Moon with Apollo11. WHOOOoooOTT ! but as I read it most of the people in space didn't come from the USN but came from the Air Force or Marines Corps. Armstrong and Shepard are the two I can think of from the Navy but if you ask me I would read 9 out of 10 of people in space are not navy. Today the people in NASA also come from the Air Force or Corps or have PHDs with science and geology backgrounds and we have the private sector getting into space now that we have this space tourism thing starting. Russia's Navy recently wanted to get some money launching old Soviet navy rockets into space for private donors like Sagan's planetary exploration society. Once again a navy produced another flopnick, rocket goes boom! and the planetary society lost their space probe. IMHO what the whole mindset boils down to is Christopher Columbus (NASA named one of the Shuttles after him even though the Shuttle looks nothing like a ship). If Columbus had "discovered" America by going via hot air balloon or going across the pole on foot and sledge I think our whole perception of exploration would be different in scifi. Personally I'm sick of the navy in space
First of all, they never named a shuttle the Columbus. They call it Columbus, because he was an explorer, not because he was on a sea faring ship. I think your refering to one of the new CEV capsules. Secondly, who the heck cares if they use navy terms for spacecraft? Is it any better to use a ground based army rank system? Afterall, they are called spaceSHIPS! Space is a lot like an ocean. Should we call them space airplanes instead? That wouldn't make much sense either, would it? I'd hate to see what you'd say to the Air forces idea of bringing back airships, oops, I mean blimps, for ground support missions. Just because the ranks are the same doesn't mean its THE NAVY from the ocean. Its the same rank system. Besides, todays forces are multipurpose. The navy has its own air force for one thing. So do the marines, but heck, they aren't pilots, are they, they're jugheads with M-4's, right? Wrong! I'm sure a navy or marine pilot would be insulted if they thought it wasn't proper for them to fly planes because of it being in the wrong service for flying.
What eles would you call people in a starFLEET? Astronaut junior grade? Astronaut Senior grade? Astronaut command grade?
Last edited: