Firstly, way to not even address the gaping logic flaw in your whole position that I pointed out in my last post.
They say they wanted to go home, and when they have chances to settle down on planets they reject them in favor of continuing to go back to the Alpha Quadrant.
Correct. That doesn't in any way mean "at any cost."
Last week, a co-worker invited some of us out to dinner after work. I was given an opportunity to stop and sit down for a while in a restaurant, get some nice food and chat with people. But I declined, because on that particular night, I really wanted to get home quickly. Does this mean I wanted to get home "as fast as possible, no matter the cost!"? If someone had walked in front of me as I was trying to get on the bus, would I have shoulder-tackled them into the bike rack to get them out of the way, so I could leap up the boarding stairs onto the bus (or not, if it had been one of them newfangled low-floor buses) while shouting "Out of my way! I must get home NOW, NO MATTER THE COST!"
One of the things said about VOY would be that they wouldn't be able to go to starbases (not FEDERATION Starbases, but ALL Starbases) for resupply.
What? No they didn't. It WAS, in fact, Federation starbases/stations. That was - quite specifically - the "thing they could not do" that was cited in promo spots, interviews with Rick Berman in Star Trek: The Magazine, etc. etc. when the show was about to air. The idea was that - unlike the three previous Trek shows - the at that point well-worn, traditional formula of "Oh, the ship is all fixed... guess they went to a starbase" doesn't work, since there AREN'T any. Instead, we would see them getting repairs wherever and however they could, including (but certainly not limited to) stopping at stations run by DQ races for repairs or parts (something we SAW them do every now and again, just not nearly often enough). Speaking of the fact that they didn't do that often enough...
And the hatedom complained that when VOY repaired major damages between episodes it was bad because they had no support to do so. Now, would they complain about that if having no support wasn't supposed to be an intrinsic part of VOY?
Dude... you've got it perfectly, spotlessly
backwards.
People did complain about Voyager taking heavy damage in an ep, limping off the screen trailing plasma and debris as the "Executive Producer..." text came up, then showing up in the next ep all shiny and fixed up. NO ONE complained about that
because "they are not supposed to ever find any help! How did they get repaired!?" NO ONE. Because it would be STUPID. They had to get repaired
somehow, or the show would end when the ship broke down! (And no, you are not going to get me to believe that anyone expected or hoped to see the ship just getting more and more busted, until it finally fell apart). The REASON we complained about that was precisely BECAUSE we didn't get to see or hear how they got these repairs! NO ONE wanted to see Voyager stick to the idea of getting no support ever, what we
wanted was to be given even a couple of throwaway lines here and there (a bit more than that, preferably, at least sometimes, but even JUST that would have been better) about how they restocked at such-and-such commerce hub, or were assisted with repairs by friendly species X, or
something. THAT is what people wanted (and didn't get) from Voyager, in terms of the "magic" between ep repairs/resupply.
Along a similar line: there is no way that the creators would ever have contemplated making "no support of any kind EVER" part of the requirements for writing an ep. Think about it: starships have to get repaired and resupplied
somehow, somewhere, eventually. There is NO way around that (unless the ship just never gets in any trouble or has any problems with supplies or power reserves, which obviously isn't the case with Voyager). Why would the show's creative team
build in a writing requirement that would make it IMPOSSIBLE to do so? After a certain point, ship repairs simply
cannot be accomplished by the crew, on their own, while they hang in space. Some repair jobs are just too big (to say nothing of parts, materials, energy reserves, etc). ALL SHIPS (real or fictional, space or sea) must eventually dock somewhere and get external assistance, or they will fall apart.
I criticize the Voyager writing team for a lot of things, but there is no way they would have been stupid enough to write that into the premise. To add a "writing clause" that says "No matter what you do, when writing an episode, you are NOT ALLOWED to have them do this one thing that every ship ever in the history of ever must sometimes do. Got it?" And even if they
had been that dumb, they would have very quickly realized that such a thing was a huge problem, and (as YOU YOURSELF suggested) "discarded" that part of it.
Which brings me back - once again - to my original point: a television show's premise is NOT that inflexible. The presence of the words "no support" does NOT literally mean "NO SUPPORT OF ANY KIND EVER." That part of the premise (and you STILL have not told us where this was supposedly written or stated) is
hyperbole. Dramatic wording. "Alone! In the DELTA QUADRANT! With no support and a 70,000 LIGHT YEAR journey before them!" That kind of thing.
Oh, and by the way: no matter how many times you dredge it up, the "Hatedom", as you describe it, remains a myth.