I voted 1-Horrible because I did not like how by the end of the episode, it was evident that VOY had completely thrown away it's own official premise.
Namely:
Pulled to the far side of the Galaxy, where the Federation is 75 years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.
What's the point of
having a premise if it's going to be thrown away by the end of the first episode, like they did in Caretaker.
The situation and characters established in the first few episodes
are the premise! No matter what the PR said, no matter even what the TV Guide description said, the official premise is what is
on the TV screen. Don't they call it canon? If you have to read producer interviews or listen to podcasts to understand the show, then either the writing or the viewing is incompetent. In the case of Voyager, the characters of Kes and Neelix proved in the first episode that Voyager is not about Starfleet/Maquis conflict.
It seems the real point to the Maquis was first to have a bunch of characters on board who wouldn't be real unhappy at not going to jail back home. Thus, most characters would be upbeat and the series wouldn't wallow in homesickness. The 37s completed the process.
Also---A real live Cardassian was something Starfleet and Maquis could disagree about. Writing Seska off the ship was removing the source of conflict. So the Maquis premise wasn't dumped in Caretaker, but later.
For whining about the Maquis to be anything other than childishness you have to make a case that the Maquis/Starfleet conflict had some sort of outstanding dramatic truth. To ignore telling that story would then be dishonest. Except the Maquis are even sillier than Klingons!
PS Dropped the rating to 8 because Banjo Man was only a comfortable figure to young TV producers raised on reruns of Fifties and early Sixties sitcoms!