... After all, if they were on the Cairo, than they should have come over to the Enterprise with him. Since they didn't we must assume they were in fact still on Earth or wherever Jellico called home.
... After all, if they were on the Cairo, than they should have come over to the Enterprise with him. Since they didn't we must assume they were in fact still on Earth or wherever Jellico called home.
Except that Jellico's assignment as Enterprise Captain was only ever intended to be short term, just until Picard returned. It probably wasn't worth the trouble of upheaval just for a few weeks.
I think families are ok, but only on ships of a certain size. Sisko had his kid with him, but that was a base, and he was a commander at first, not a captian. BUT he was in command....in any case, Jake might not have had anywhere else to go. !!! What if a captian had a child, no partner, and his/her child had no where or no one else?? Would Star Fleet make them seperate or not promote him? Doesn't that sound bad? Plus, some species might NEED their partners in order to function, like the Bynars for example. In the books, they come in pairs. Can't remember if they say that in the episode, I do know there was a whole lot of 'em.
We see that the only way that O'Brian got the promotion to Chief Warrant Officer was to accept the assignment at Deep Space 9
It might just be a fact of the uniform.
Indeed - this is exactly what happened with the USS Odyssey before it met its fate in the gamma quadrant. I think the show was careful to make a point of this so as to avoid making a shocking loss even more shocking, with the fans knowing that Galaxy-class ships tend to carry civilians, even children, on board. Kinda makes me wonder whether there were any kids on the USS Yamato...Wolf 359 happened under less than ideal circumstances--Starfleet was caught pretty much with its pants down and had to quickly assemble as many ships as possible to intercept the Borg before they entered Sector 001.
Had things been different--if they could have seen the Borg coming from a long distance and had more time to assemble a proper fleet--the Saratoga and other such ships would have ditched their passengers and other non-essential personnel at a nearby starbase or Federation member world before going into battle, IMO.
Kinda makes me wonder whether there were any kids on the USS Yamato...
I never cared for the idea of having families on the ships. I much prefer the military setting of TOS and the TOS films...
Or ordering the self destruct like Picard did in "Where Silence Has Lease?" I understand the reasons why he did it, but he was still deciding the fates of people explicity NOT under his command.
I think it depends on the ship and its current mission. Space travel is, of course, inherently dangerous--a civilian ship can run afoul of hostiles just as a Starfleet ship can. Starships assigned to exploration, scientific, or even routine domestic civil missions may have families onboard but I wouldn't expect them on ships assigned to missions where the chances of combat are certain.Indeed - this is exactly what happened with the USS Odyssey before it met its fate in the gamma quadrant. I think the show was careful to make a point of this so as to avoid making a shocking loss even more shocking, with the fans knowing that Galaxy-class ships tend to carry civilians, even children, on board. Kinda makes me wonder whether there were any kids on the USS Yamato...Wolf 359 happened under less than ideal circumstances--Starfleet was caught pretty much with its pants down and had to quickly assemble as many ships as possible to intercept the Borg before they entered Sector 001.
Had things been different--if they could have seen the Borg coming from a long distance and had more time to assemble a proper fleet--the Saratoga and other such ships would have ditched their passengers and other non-essential personnel at a nearby starbase or Federation member world before going into battle, IMO.
Probably a bad idea to have families there on starships first place, especially since starships must sometimes go into hazardous situations unexpectedly, ones that may even require the willing sacrifice of the ship and the crew. How could a captain be expected to do that knowing their spouse and kids were on board? I think it needlessly complicates the whole matter.
It was one of the stupidest conceits of TNG. Families - civilians, no less - aboard military vessels. Laughable!
I think having his family onboard would be ok as long as he could be objective. Nothing better than an evening "release" with the wife to get your mind cleared up!!![]()
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