
Maybe so.
Clym said:
BSG's 'Pegasus' arc shows how the 'Equinox' story should have been handled....
You said that if Janeway wasn't a good captain, her crew would be dead. My point is that Janeway didn't have to be a good captain for that; she just had to have the writers on her side.exodus said:
I'm not sure what your exact point about the writers is,Brennyren said:
Y'know, I'm not saying Janeway is a bad captain, but the fact that the crew didn't end up dead doesn't do anything at all to prove that she isn't. It's easy to succeed when you have scriptwriters on your side. She could give the most ludicrous orders imaginable -- she could command Paris to fly the ship in figure-eights while the bridge crew danced the conga through the corridors dressed in tropical shirts and Carmen Miranda hats -- and if the writers (or the higher-ups) decreed that that was the exact strategy needed to confound the Borg, well, then it would be. The writers would write that it succeeded, and so it would. That wouldn't make Janeway a genius; it would just mean that the people in charge decided to let plausibility take a holiday.
I'm surprised so many people are willing to let Janeway off the hook for torturing a fellow Starfleet officer and risking killing him. Yes, I've heard the argument that she was just trying to scare him, but considering that she didn't actually have any control over what the baby space seals did, and that she was damned angry when Chakotay tried to protect Lessing, I'm not buying it.
The other thing that disturbed me about this episode was the high-handed way she treated Chakotay, by relieving him of duty when he said he wouldn't stand by quietly while she continued on this path. Lady, he's your XO -- it's his job to make sure you actually think about what you're doing. Later, when Tuvok expressed objections not unlike Chakotay's, she bullied him into acquiescence by saying she'd already relieved one officer of duty -- a clear threat.
I'm sorry, but this episode did not do Janeway any favors. I didn't think of her as being "more human"; I thought of her as being someone I was glad I didn't have to serve under.
Brennyren
I understood the point of the episode, thanks. It wasn't exactly subtle.however the point of the ep. was about obsession and how when a crew doesn't work togther despite their differences things fall apart.
In a thoroughly cliched fashion.The whole metaphor with Voyager plaque falling down and her and Chakotay rehanging it even stated that point.
It made her look like a petty tyrant. You tell me the episode Kirk did that and I'll award you an Internet cookie.The point of releaving Chakotay & threatening Tuvok(Her two closest friends)cemented the fact she was obsessed.
I understood all of that. (Once again, the episode wasn't even slightly subtle.) That doesn't mean I have to like what I saw.Janeway seeking revenge upon Ransom, was showing how a captain equal to him could wander down the same path. As the saying goes "The road to hell is paved with good intentions." Janeway had the right idea but her judgement was sending her down the wrong path.
You just whacked the smithereeens out of a straw man, at least as far as answering me is concerned. I never said Janeway was a bad captain. In fact, while she's made some decisions I question, I don't really think she is a bad captain. I generally think she did about as well as a captain could in her situation. I just don't think this episode painted her in a very good light.However, I don't understand why Janeway is getting flack for this while Sisko did it 3x. Once with Bernie Casey, again with Eddington and a 3rd time with Senator Veenak. Sisko poisoned a planet and covered up a murder. Janeway killed no one and yet she's seen as a bad captain.
stj said:
Just goes to show you that reactions differ. I thought the episode was very bad. I too thought that Ransom's obsession with Seven (appearing in his day dreamer gizmo no less) leading to his suddenly seeing the light of virtue and niceness was downright silly.
I thought the idea that the Equinox was simultaneously a floating wreck and able to escape Voyager was yet another example of a self-contradictory story premise. One half you might could swallow, but both? Naw.
By the way, the idea that murdering flying aliens would somehow make the ship fly faster was another of those loony Voyager premises, like aging backwards or reproducing by reviving corpses floating in space, that just don't bear thinking about.
No one except Janeway getting upset that the Equinox crew was murdering aliens is just false characterization. I don't understand why no one notices how callous Chakotay and Tuvok are about this. They'd have let Equinox off scott free. That's the outrage.
I'd also like to add to this, Voyager was under attack by the aliens when the Equinox got away. That's a legitmate excuse right there.DarthTom said:
stj said:
Just goes to show you that reactions differ. I thought the episode was very bad. I too thought that Ransom's obsession with Seven (appearing in his day dreamer gizmo no less) leading to his suddenly seeing the light of virtue and niceness was downright silly.
I thought the idea that the Equinox was simultaneously a floating wreck and able to escape Voyager was yet another example of a self-contradictory story premise. One half you might could swallow, but both? Naw.
By the way, the idea that murdering flying aliens would somehow make the ship fly faster was another of those loony Voyager premises, like aging backwards or reproducing by reviving corpses floating in space, that just don't bear thinking about.
No one except Janeway getting upset that the Equinox crew was murdering aliens is just false characterization. I don't understand why no one notices how callous Chakotay and Tuvok are about this. They'd have let Equinox off scott free. That's the outrage.
You make excellent points in terms of plot holes. Save the Tuvok/Chakotay observation. In real life don't forget we have real people in the military hierarchy willing to give the people who tortured a free pass. Overall: I guess I'm able to overlook them because of the messages involved and the more life like portrayal of a real ship's captain.
Just curious on the other series, you could find as many if not more plot holes .... and in ST Enterprise's case, they even break canon in doing so.
exodus said:
I'd also like to add to this, Voyager was under attack by the aliens when the Equinox got away. That's a legitmate excuse right there.
Faldor said:
overall I liked these episodes but there were some barmy moments like the voyagers writers room liked to through out,
wasnt there a line about Janeway should outrank Ransom for having a better ship? nothing about experience or how long one has been captain.
you cant really blame these episodes for the fact the characters were never used again but It would have been better to make that crew or atleast one of them a recurring villain.
oh and it had that really stupid line about "hey this planet looks just like that park on earth... you know the one near paramount studios where they'd do location shoots!"
always bugged me.
exodus said:
Does EVERY M-class planet have green grass and trees?
So you can't have an atmosphere like Earth but have say like orange colored trees?LightningStorm said:
exodus said:
Does EVERY M-class planet have green grass and trees?
Yes, that's part of what makes it M-Class. If the plant life grew up in or lived in a different environment (thereby making them some other color or configuration), then it'd not be M-class.
You learn something new every day.LightningStorm said:
They'd be flowers then... since Earth does have orange vegetation. However photosynthesis that causes the green in most vegetation is a product of the class-g sun (that is also required of an M-class planet), and the vegetation itself is what makes our atmosphere so oxygen rich. A sun that creates orange vegetation, wouldn't create flowers that give off oxygen, it'd be some other type of gas, therefore not creating an m-class atmosphere.
exodus said:
As far as using aliens to fly faster seeming loony, it is after all sci-fi. If you can except impossable technology like a transporter, why are aliens being used as fuel loony? Ever heard of "fossel fuel"?
stj said:
Chakotay's and Tuvok's nonreactions to murder, indeed, their insistence on protecting murderers is forced mischarcterization in the service of a plot. It also seems pretty repulsive in purely human terms.
stj said:
It's really all very far-fetched, not just in practical terms. The theoretical justification is rather vague too. But there is some real science with fiction added.
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