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Captian Janeway had no right

The problem is from the standpoint of most females that like Voyager, Kathryn Janeway is a hero. She did all the things we have never been allowed to do. She captained a ship, she gave men orders and they followed them. You have no idea how refreshing that can be.

What a lot of us on this side of the gender line see is men being uncomfortable with a female in control (that was made clear to me by various posts indicating a big dislike for the Borg Queen). I'm not saying you are sexists, what I am saying is she makes you uncomfortable because you are not used to seeing a woman with that kind of power. People dislike being uncomfortable, it sets their teeth on edge and they want to make the one responsible go away, that's being human.

All the Trek captains are meant to be heroes, Kathryn Janeway is no different than Kirk, Picard, or Sisko in that respect. It's ok to dislike her, it's not ok to bash the character because in doing so you are bashing her fans. Fans that like her for the very same reasons you do not.

Brit
 
The problem is from the standpoint of most females that like Voyager, Kathryn Janeway is a hero. She did all the things we have never been allowed to do. She captained a ship, she gave men orders and they followed them. You have no idea how refreshing that can be.

What a lot of us on this side of the gender line see is men being uncomfortable with a female in control (that was made clear to me by various posts indicating a big dislike for the Borg Queen). I'm not saying you are sexists, what I am saying is she makes you uncomfortable because you are not used to seeing a woman with that kind of power. People dislike being uncomfortable, it sets their teeth on edge and they want to make the one responsible go away, that's being human.

All the Trek captains are meant to be heroes, Kathryn Janeway is no different than Kirk, Picard, or Sisko in that respect. It's ok to dislike her, it's not ok to bash the character because in doing so you are bashing her fans. Fans that like her for the very same reasons you do not.

Brit

I'm sorry - I am not living in the 19th Century. I have no problem with women in power. Star Trek has portrayed female characters of strength for DECADES. Kira Nerys, Jadzia Dax, Beverley Crusher....UHURA.

Janeway just didn't suddenly come along and make me feel emasculated because "oh no, the girl captain is telling all the men what to do". That's just rubbish, and the fact that I am one of the men in this thread being labeled as such, is offensive.

My problem has nothing to do with her being female - my problem is with a writing staff who continually portrayed her in an inconsistent manner, and provided her with a plethora of 'tough decisions' and through bad writing and a lack of in-universe consideration for characterisation and continuity, resulted in her making bad/immoral choices on a variety of occasions.

I am all for having a female captain (if anything, I thought it took Star Trek long enough to do it in 1995 - it's something that should've been considered for TNG). I am all for presenting a female character of strength, authority and determination. To a greater or lesser extent, Kathryn Janeway (and would also argue B'Elanna Torres) are excellent female role models who embody not only positive qualities for female audiences, but for audiences in general.

My criticism is that Janeway wasn't well written (arguably, the entire show had this weakness), and as the first female captain and star of the show, this was potentially disastrous as the last thing I wanted critics of the show to see was the first female captain lead role making BAD decisions.

I also feel Jonathan Archer suffered the same sort of problems re: inconsistent characterisation, but fortunately, it wasn't as a bad (I suppose because the show was only 4 seasons long) and that didn't result in him making anywhere near as many questionable calls.
 
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What a lot of us on this side of the gender line see is men being uncomfortable with a female in control (that was made clear to me by various posts indicating a big dislike for the Borg Queen). I'm not saying you are sexists, what I am saying is she makes you uncomfortable because you are not used to seeing a woman with that kind of power.

Baloney. Currently my favorite "Trekverse" so to speak is TrekLit, and my favorite Captains are Ezri Dax and Kira Nerys, and the President of the Federation is female as well. You can't claim dislike of a particular female Captain to be indictive of a general dislike of female Captains (or Admirals for that matter) without something to back it up.

Regarding the Borg Queen, I'm one that dislikes her in canon Trek because I dislike the concept of the Borg needing a "Queen" or having a "voice." I've come to really appreciate it thanks to TrekLit, though. But it'd be even worse if there was a "Borg King" because at least in nature you have insects that operate at the command of/in service of a "Queen."

All the Trek captains are meant to be heroes, Kathryn Janeway is no different than Kirk, Picard, or Sisko in that respect. It's ok to dislike her, it's not ok to bash the character because in doing so you are bashing her fans. Fans that like her for the very same reasons you do not.

Brit

How is criticizing particular choices or pointing out character flaws "bashing?"

and... you like Captain Janeway because she's sometimes-poorly-written? :wtf:
 
Janeway is an interesting monster, Archer was just a moron.

How is criticizing particular choices or pointing out character flaws "bashing?"
Gushers have no respect for criticism, well thought out or otherwise.
 
The problem is from the standpoint of most females that like Voyager, Kathryn Janeway is a hero. She did all the things we have never been allowed to do. She captained a ship, she gave men orders and they followed them. You have no idea how refreshing that can be.

What a lot of us on this side of the gender line see is men being uncomfortable with a female in control (that was made clear to me by various posts indicating a big dislike for the Borg Queen). I'm not saying you are sexists, what I am saying is she makes you uncomfortable because you are not used to seeing a woman with that kind of power. People dislike being uncomfortable, it sets their teeth on edge and they want to make the one responsible go away, that's being human.

All the Trek captains are meant to be heroes, Kathryn Janeway is no different than Kirk, Picard, or Sisko in that respect. It's ok to dislike her, it's not ok to bash the character because in doing so you are bashing her fans. Fans that like her for the very same reasons you do not.

Brit

I'm sorry, but it's idiotic to think that a man who doesn't like Janeway is uncomfortable with a woman in power. Hell, a female Captain was one of the reasons I was excited about Voyager going into it!

Not to say that there aren't people like that somewhere, but far less numerous than you might think, I believe.

Janeway is an interesting monster, Archer was just a moron.

Not sure 'monster' is the right word, but it's not a comparison without some truth to it, esp. when it comes to Archer. :lol: (or at least interesting because of radical inconsistency).
 
Not to say that there aren't people like that somewhere, but far less numerous than you might think, I believe.
I would be shocked if there were any STAR TREK fans who felt that way. A fundamental component of ST is the virtue of equality and a resistance to prejudice.

If there were ST fans that felt that way about female characters, then I would ask them: "what the hell are you doing watching this show?"
 
Not to say that there aren't people like that somewhere, but far less numerous than you might think, I believe.
I would be shocked if there were any STAR TREK fans who felt that way. A fundamental component of ST is the virtue of equality and a resistance to prejudice.

If there were ST fans that felt that way about female characters, then I would ask them: "what the hell are you doing watching this show?"

Well, I would be aghast, myself, but you can't exactly preclude the possibility. There are some strange people out there.
 
I tend to believe that it is the people that are happy about there being no gays in Star Trek and preach on about how there never should be gays on Star Trek, are the ones that know well enough to shut the hell up about their similar views towards women's rights as people and property.

Like how they first used to use the HipC test to test for aids retroactively to establish virus vectors since 99 percent of the people with aids in the beginning had contracted hip C.

I was thinking about "Voy: scientific method" and "TNG: Where Silence has lease" (and every third episode of TOS) where the captain is offered safe passage for more crew than is a being asked to sacrifice itself for the greater good (Spock in Wrath of Khan? Deanna ordering holo Geordi to kill himself in Thine Own Self.) in an outright exchange of some life for some other life.

ALZEN: Consider what's in the best interests of your crew. We will be continuing our research. If you make no further attempts to interfere, I assure you that the fatality rate will be minimal, though there may be some deformities. And I would be willing to share our final data with you.
JANEWAY: You can't possibly expect me to accept that.
ALZEN: If you don't, then the entire experiment and its subjects will be terminated.

and

PICARD: We cannot allow you to do that! We will fight you.
NAGILUM [on viewscreen]: To understand death, I must amass information on every aspect of it. Every kind of dying. The experiments shouldn't take more than a third of your crew, maybe half.

Janeway and Picard both chose to kill themselves and their crews (even though Picards was 6 times larger and included many many children and civilians, meanwhile Voyager was all but a prison transport.) and skuttle their ships rather than be the playthings of technologically superior beings (Q vs Everyone?) because the needs of th many do not outweigh the needs of the few.

The words "Third" from Picard's deal is what stuck in my craw, since the aspects of Tuvok and Tuvix and Neelix are themselves also a triumvirate. Janeway saw the fatality ratio of 2:1 to be acceptable but 152: "minimal" as an insult. the girl just can't decide if she's a hard ass or a willow reed.
 
Well, two are still more than one...

Maybe the stakes are different when it's actually central characters who are the "few" or "many", since Kirk himself went for the "needs of the one" outweighing the rest...
 
I am going to say the needs of the many do not outweigh the needs of the few. It's a dangerous philosophy than can be used to justify horrible things sometimes.
 
Captian Janeway had no right to force treatment onto B’Elanna Torres in "Nothing Human" against her wishes. Even if you ignore the whole moral and ethical issues surrounding Crell's work there was still the issue of the patients wishes.

Before you hit me with the Torres was needed argument what about when Janeway let the doc stay behind on that planet to sing when he was the only Doctor she had...

Does anybody know if this could be done by a commanding officer in the US military?

Treatment can, and is, forced on military personnel. Your freedoms are different in the US military.

~String
 
The problem is from the standpoint of most females that like Voyager, Kathryn Janeway is a hero. She did all the things we have never been allowed to do. She captained a ship, she gave men orders and they followed them. You have no idea how refreshing that can be.

What a lot of us on this side of the gender line see is men being uncomfortable with a female in control (that was made clear to me by various posts indicating a big dislike for the Borg Queen). I'm not saying you are sexists, what I am saying is she makes you uncomfortable because you are not used to seeing a woman with that kind of power. People dislike being uncomfortable, it sets their teeth on edge and they want to make the one responsible go away, that's being human.

All the Trek captains are meant to be heroes, Kathryn Janeway is no different than Kirk, Picard, or Sisko in that respect. It's ok to dislike her, it's not ok to bash the character because in doing so you are bashing her fans. Fans that like her for the very same reasons you do not.

Brit

I'm sorry - I am not living in the 19th Century. I have no problem with women in power. Star Trek has portrayed female characters of strength for DECADES. Kira Nerys, Jadzia Dax, Beverley Crusher....UHURA.

Janeway just didn't suddenly come along and make me feel emasculated because "oh no, the girl captain is telling all the men what to do". That's just rubbish, and the fact that I am one of the men in this thread being labeled as such, is offensive.

My problem has nothing to do with her being female - my problem is with a writing staff who continually portrayed her in an inconsistent manner, and provided her with a plethora of 'tough decisions' and through bad writing and a lack of in-universe consideration for characterisation and continuity, resulted in her making bad/immoral choices on a variety of occasions.

I am all for having a female captain (if anything, I thought it took Star Trek long enough to do it in 1995 - it's something that should've been considered for TNG). I am all for presenting a female character of strength, authority and determination. To a greater or lesser extent, Kathryn Janeway (and would also argue B'Elanna Torres) are excellent female role models who embody not only positive qualities for female audiences, but for audiences in general.

My criticism is that Janeway wasn't well written (arguably, the entire show had this weakness), and as the first female captain and star of the show, this was potentially disastrous as the last thing I wanted critics of the show to see was the first female captain lead role making BAD decisions.

I also feel Jonathan Archer suffered the same sort of problems re: inconsistent characterisation, but fortunately, it wasn't as a bad (I suppose because the show was only 4 seasons long) and that didn't result in him making anywhere near as many questionable calls.

I was going to post my opinion on why I disliked the Janeway character but this pretty much says everything I wanted to say.
 
All other things being equal (ie no mitigating circumstances that might dictate otherwise), the perspective of the person whose life is being decided is more valid than the perspective of people whose lives are not. Arbitrary perhaps, but just.

And you still haven't established that Tuvok and Neelix's lives were not at stake.

Nor can I, using your requirements for establishing "life at stake." We know, however, that Tuvix's life is at stake and he will die. We do not know if Tuvok or Neelix's lives are at stake. One is a certainty, the others are uncertain.

No. The criteria for "life" is notoriously difficult to define, as is the criteria for "consciousness," and that's not even begining to scratch the surface of the "value" we should and should not place on each.

My assumption that Tuvix knows the status of Tuvok's and Neelix's consciounesses extancy is just as likely as yours that he doesn't. Recall, after all, that as Tuvok is Vulcan there is cultural proof of a manipulable consciousness - and Tuvix would have that knowledge.

Assumption, not fact.

That may be what you're discussing, but it's not what I am. I'm well aware that Tuvok and Neelix could be "brought back" (though I contend they're returning from death or at least non-existence and may be considered copies rather than the original) - but I don't believe it's valid to take an innocent life to "bring back" others if the innocent is unwilling.

And Janeway obviously thought otherwise, using different criteria.

Our definition of "dead" has changed before and will change again. Rather than belaboring this point, why not just accept that in the Star Trek universe, death - actual nonexistence - can be beaten or at least altered by certain highly advanced civilizations (such as the Q).

I've already accepted such. Now, what I want to know is how that expanded definition of "death" fits into the moral question of what to do with Tuvix.

Obviously. But babies, young children, the mentally ill, the mentally retarded, and the comatose don't have their existence depending on the unwilling death of another being...

If a living being desired life, and such could be established by killing a baby, mentally retarded person, or a comatose person, is it okay to strangle a baby? How does one decide?

- and moreover, there is proof of their existence. Would you also condone killing a healthy person who had no desire to die if it meant that two comatose people would be awakened?

Depends.

Perhaps I did. It's neither justified, nor unjustified, as it wasn't a choice I made, but an accomplished fact that I resulted from the death of a previous "me." That doesn't give you the right to kill me in order to restore "him," nor if it were possible should that be allowed.

You still resulted from the destruction of your prior self. Your assuming that Tuvix's "choice" to remain alive trumps Tuvok and Neelix's "non-choice" to remain Tuvix.

Perhaps the person who existed prior to transport was "murdered" - but the "copy" considers him/herself the same person, as does the rest of society.

Much like Tuvok and Neelix did after being restored.

Moreover, it was a choice made by that person, and if not (emergency transport) then that "original" person is lost.

So what? The person retains the memories and personality of the "original" and is considered to be the "original" by society. And I'm still waiting for you define the nature of existence that we might establish whether the person after the transport can be considered the "same" or not.

The "salamander" might have objected, and you may have a point - good thing that episode never happened.

You still haven't addressed my point. Was the salamander "murdered?" Was the caveman "murdered" after Riker was restored?

I don't need to define "dead," "alive," and "murdered" because my argument doesn't actually hinge on Tuvok or Neelix being dead...

You claim that they "don't exist" anymore, or that they're "dead;" therefore, it's cool to not bring them back in order to perserve Tuvix. Or, at least, that's the way I've been reading it. Clarify as you see fit.

What, pray tell, makes Janeway's decision "right" from a military perspective as opposed to a farming community?

In the military, the needs of the many do, in fact, outweigh the needs of the few. In an organization that's often called upon to destry large amounts of life, the focus is on reducing the amount of harm as much as possible; therefore, two > one.

What other considerations or factors could be more important in the case of an innocent man (that is, not responsible for his existence or for the deaths/apparent deaths of Tuvok and Neelix) who has no desire or intent to harm others than his own right to life?

The fact that Tuvok and Neelix have prior established relationships and family? The fact that two able-bodied crewmembers are better than one? Saving two lives as opposed to one? Whether these factors "matter" to you is entirely subjective.

I'm sure there were Japanese citizens who "desired life" before an atomic bomb was dropped on them, but it was decided that ending WWII was more important than their "desires."

If VOY was being attacked by a ship whose crew was largely comprised of conscripts who "desired life" and had no "choice" but to be where they were, would Janeway be "justified" in destroying the attacking ship? My point is, depending on your point of view and your specific circumstances, an individual's "rights" and "desires" may or may not matter, especially in the military where "individuals" are often considered less important than the group.

What makes killing one innocent person to bring back two other innocent people in any way jusified?

Depends on your perspective.

Tuvix exists and has a right to life. This is known.

"Rights" are established by the society in which one lives. There is no inherent "right to life" as far as objective, inherent, universal "truths" go. In this particular context, it's debatable whether Tuvix had a "right to life" which was more important than Tuvok and Neelix.

The status of Tuvok and Neelix are unknown.

It is known is that they can be reconstituted. Whether the resulting individuals have a "right to life" that trumps Tuvix is up for interpretation.

In Vulcans at least, the "consciousness" appears to be a discrete physical entity of some sort (the katra) which can be transferred or perhaps copied and, when restored, is culturally considred a restored, reconstituted being. It would be fair to say Tuvok's katra combined with the Talaxian equivalent, Trill-symbiosis style. The difference between Tuvix and Spock's situation though is that Spock-McCoy wanted to dissolve the bond.

"Consciousness," which we STILL have not been able to define, exists in any number of ways on "Star Trek," as do physical bodies.

Well obviously it can't. You were the one that used the phrase "perspective of the universe" though, so I assumed you were doing what Guy was accusing me of doing.

In that there are no "moral truths" inherent in the universe, yes. It doesn't follow that that means the universe can "decide" things.
 
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Because possibly she c/w-ouldn't admit that she was doing a wrong or being selfish and human. If only she'd said "Dude, I am so sorry" while she murdered him, maybe we'd accept that she was a brave little soldier suffering through something impossible.

She looked like she was going to blow chunks three seconds after pushing the button. Is your objection that she didn't break down infront of her crew?

Guy said:
For the for thirty5 minutes we were told to considered that there was no right answer, and then two seconds after Janeway makes this uncertain decision, her resolution becomes the right thing to do because everyone is happy that Neelix and Tuvok are back because THE ENDS JUSTIFY THE MEANS.

I don't see that it was framed as the "right thing to do." We never saw the reactions from the crew, just the reactions from Kes and whoever it was that was in sick bay at the time. For all we know, the lower decks thought she was a megaevilbitch. One of the reason I enjoyed this episode was because it was one of the few that left the final descision up to the viewer rather than just the usual, "Janeway is always right."

I am going to say the needs of the many do not outweigh the needs of the few. It's a dangerous philosophy than can be used to justify horrible things sometimes.

So can the idea that killing two can justify perserving one. Any moral philosophy can be used to justify any act providing that the person doing the justifying subscribes to different values then the dissenters.

Janeway and Picard both chose to kill themselves and their crews (even though Picards was 6 times larger and included many many children and civilians, meanwhile Voyager was all but a prison transport.) and skuttle their ships rather than be the playthings of technologically superior beings (Q vs Everyone?) because the needs of th many do not outweigh the needs of the few.

The words "Third" from Picard's deal is what stuck in my craw, since the aspects of Tuvok and Tuvix and Neelix are themselves also a triumvirate. Janeway saw the fatality ratio of 2:1 to be acceptable but 152: "minimal" as an insult. the girl just can't decide if she's a hard ass or a willow reed.

Janeway had no way of knowing what the aliens would consider "minimal," or even whether or not they were lying. Oh, and she had needles in her brain at the time. There was also the whole issue of torturing and maiming, which may or may not be acceptable depending on your point of view.

I don't disagree with your assesment, but I'm not sure "Scientific Method" is the best example.

Kestrel said:
How is criticizing particular choices or pointing out character flaws "bashing?"

and... you like Captain Janeway because she's sometimes-poorly-written?

Actually, I like her precisely because I think she's a crackpot. :) Granted, like Guy correctly pointed out, the writers wanted a "hero," but Janeway, by the very nature of her circumstances and her character, was never going to be a "hero" for everybody. I'm content with Janeway as a flawed captain, and wished the muck-a-mucks would've run with that idea and portrayed her as a person who screwed up by stranding her crew in the DQ and then had to work for seven years to overcome her shortcommings and earn the respect of those she commanded. Instead, we got, "Janeway was always right!" I love Janeway and think she was entirely too complex for such a simplistic approach. They tried too hard to force her into the Picard mold of "perfect, heroic captain." And I can certainly see why you have your issues with her.

If they made her more vulnerable (like Picard when he realized he was being a douche in "First Contact") and acknowledged and worked with her occasional irrationality, I think VOY would've been much more powerful.
 
Because possibly she c/w-ouldn't admit that she was doing a wrong or being selfish and human. If only she'd said "Dude, I am so sorry" while she murdered him, maybe we'd accept that she was a brave little soldier suffering through something impossible.

She looked like she was going to blow chunks three seconds after pushing the button. Is your objection that she didn't break down infront of her crew?

Well I'd never respect her if she got all blubbery over a single murder. The beast, a political character, the president in the comics Transmetropolitan said "The sad thing is that my job is to make sure that %51 of the population is warm, fed, clothed and educated. The other %49 percent can go fuck themselves." Janeway made it clear the whole way through that she didn't know what to do and was willing to go either way depending on the testimony of one little blonde Ocampa: All she needed to say to appease me was "Raw deal, bye bye." The popular choice is often the wrong choice which is exactly the system Janeway used to figure out who to murder or who to leave murdered. So if the sexy little elf wanted to murder that spotty orange pointy eared Vulaxian then she should have asked for the bollocky hyprospray herself rather than lady Macbething Janeway into being her patsy.

For gods sake the previous week she murdered a clown!!

That's a pattern!

Guy said:
For the first thirty5 minutes we were told to considered that there was no right answer, and then two seconds after Janeway makes this uncertain decision, her resolution becomes the right thing to do because everyone is happy that Neelix and Tuvok are back because THE ENDS JUSTIFY THE MEANS.

I don't see that it was framed as the "right thing to do." We never saw the reactions from the crew, just the reactions from Kes and whoever it was that was in sick bay at the time. For all we know, the lower decks thought she was a megaevilbitch. One of the reason I enjoyed this episode was because it was one of the few that left the final descision up to the viewer rather than just the usual, "Janeway is always right."

If Janeway wasn't right, then 40 minutes of television was stollen from us by the reset button because Tuvix should have been a two parter.

So can the idea that killing two can justify perserving one. Any moral philosophy can be used to justify any act providing that the person doing the justifying subscribes to different values then the dissenters.

If you have conviction and a method of dealing with the consequences, then you can justify anything. As suggested above, it's amazing that Kathy's exit Strategy was for Berman to shut the story down 40 minutes early. At the very least I would have had liked to have seen the the video messages that Tuvix sent to Tuvok and Neelix to be shown where he verbally cornholed them for not being more vocal when their internal monologue assured him that their "living" situation was five by five.

Janeway and Picard both chose to kill themselves and their crews (even though Picards was 6 times larger and included many many children and civilians, meanwhile Voyager was all but a prison transport.) and skuttle their ships rather than be the playthings of technologically superior beings (Q vs Everyone?) because the needs of th many do not outweigh the needs of the few.

The words "Third" from Picard's deal is what stuck in my craw, since the aspects of Tuvok and Tuvix and Neelix are themselves also a triumvirate. Janeway saw the fatality ratio of 2:1 to be acceptable but 152: "minimal" as an insult. the girl just can't decide if she's a hard ass or a willow reed.
Janeway had no way of knowing what the aliens would consider "minimal," or even whether or not they were lying. Oh, and she had needles in her brain at the time. There was also the whole issue of torturing and maiming, which may or may not be acceptable depending on your point of view.

I don't disagree with your assesment, but I'm not sure "Scientific Method" is the best example.

That wasn't my point. She obviously couldn't make deals with these people (or the Hirogens for that matter but she fed them the technology they needed to murder themselves as a species as a fine joke) but Janeway decided that killing her crew was better than slavery as medical experiments and that murdering her crew was in fact how to save them, death was their only escape, and considering the tiny odds that even some of them would survive, Janeways was truly foolishly gambling that all of them would live as slaves or some of them would die free, and forgetting about the 1/2 a percent chance if they were really lucky and even a life boat or two escaped the pull of those stars when she'd finished daredevilling, ergo the needs of the few out the needs of the many because Janeway is batshit. Well as said, the brain surgery didn't help, but she would have come to this conclusion anyway since it's exactly what kirk did with Gary Seven in the second pilot back in '67. Pride goeth before the autodestruct.

UM? Why didn't the the mad scientist doctors circle around the long way and then cut voyager off at the pass a few hours later? See! Surviving jumping into a sun only prolonged their suffering from the invisible needles and vice grippy head gear and didn't stop the bad guys for longer than a couple hours if the reset button hadn't kicked in.
 
Janeway made it clear the whole way through that she didn't know what to do and was willing to go either way depending on the testimony of one little blonde Ocampa: All she needed to say to appease me was "Raw deal, bye bye."

That was a bit of silliness, wasn't it? It would have been mitigated if we at least got to see KJ agonizing in her quarters over what course of action to take, or if she actually blew chunks. I can also see your point about her commiting to being a b!tch in this instance. I also agree with your two-parter idea and a video from Tuvix to Neelix and Tuvok. This is an episode that definately could have used a bit more punch, but that was the way with VOY.

The popular choice is often the wrong choice which is exactly the system Janeway used to figure out who to murder or who to leave murdered. So if the sexy little elf wanted to murder that spotty orange pointy eared Vulaxian then she should have asked for the bollocky hyprospray herself rather than lady Macbething Janeway into being her patsy.

You think Janeway would've actually let Kes go through with it, or would she have done the, "I'm the captain, it's my responsibility," sketch?

For gods sake the previous week she murdered a clown!!

That's a pattern!

Heh.

If Janeway wasn't right, then 40 minutes of television was stollen from us by the reset button because Tuvix should have been a two parter.

I think it was supposed to be left open-ended, but I don't disagree that it could've been a bit more in-depth.

If you have conviction and a method of dealing with the consequences, then you can justify anything. As suggested above, it's amazing that Kathy's exit Strategy was for Berman to shut the story down 40 minutes early. At the very least I would have had liked to have seen the the video messages that Tuvix sent to Tuvok and Neelix to be shown where he verbally cornholed them for not being more vocal when their internal monologue assured him that their "living" situation was five by five.

That would've been awesome, actually. Pity you weren't on the writer's payroll.

Janeways was truly foolishly gambling that all of them would live as slaves or some of them would die free, and forgetting about the 1/2 a percent chance if they were really lucky and even a life boat or two escaped the pull of those stars when she'd finished daredevilling, ergo the needs of the few out the needs of the many because Janeway is batshit.

That as valid interpretation as any, but I've always considered "Janeway's wild ride" as a "needs of the many to not live as test subjects outweighs the needs of the few to "maybe survive," but there's no real way to know exactly what was going on in her needle-pierced brain.

And yes, I think KJ was batsh!t. I may be a Janeway fan, but I'm not a Janeway apologist.

Guy said:
UM? Why didn't the the mad scientist doctors circle around the long way and then cut voyager off at the pass a few hours later? See! Surviving jumping into a sun only prolonged their suffering from the invisible needles and vice grippy head gear and didn't stop the bad guys for longer than a couple hours if the reset button hadn't kicked in.

I assume they, much like myself, thought Janeway was batsh!t at that point and wanted as much to do with her as I want to do with the homeless bum in the bus station who mutters to himself. KJ got lucky in that the aliens either didn't have the capability or the desire to cut her off with bigger, better ships and blow her out of the sky.
 
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