Naah. You are simply dead wrong.
Naked Sophistry + Self-Important Rudeness = Playing by Yourself, Donald.
Naah. You are simply dead wrong.
It’s pretty clear that the Enterprises down the line are the flagship, from NX-01 to E-E. Again, you could choose to write a story and technically make it work....and I could write one in which a Flying Spaghetti Monster is the true overlord of the Federation, and given that no-one in-universe said that it isn’t, it’d technically work....but that’s head canon.From a strictly canonical perspective, the Enterprise E was never stated to be the flagship on screen. The only Enterprises which were are the D and the Kelvin Timeline's 1701.
It’s pretty clear that the Enterprises down the line are the flagship, from NX-01 to E-E. Again, you could choose to write a story and technically make it work....and I could write one in which a Flying Spaghetti Monster is the true overlord of the Federation, and given that no-one in-universe said that it isn’t, it’d technically work....but that’s head canon.
If Kelvin’s Enterprise, meaning Kirk’s, is, and Picard’s is, and Archer’s kinda is, and all Enterprises are The ship of the Starfleet line, becoming *bigger and stronger, and the E-E carries the E-D’s crew, who weren’t transferred to another Galaxy, like Kirk & Co. all were together in the Prime and Kelvin Timelines...then, it’s a pretty obvious conclusion to draw, unless you’re a specific type of fan with a specific ax to grind.
*TPTB designer it longer if not internally larger to maintain the idea of Enterprises getting larger and more powerful, despite the Atkins body and Voyager necklessness.
I never got the impression from TOS the Enterprise was meant to be the flagship. I know everyone has since retconned it as that, including Trek XI, but in the show itself? There was no indication that it was the flagship or indeed anything special, beyond is status as a starship. The idea that the Enterprise holds some sort of special significance to Starfleet didn't start until TMP, and even then it wasn't the flagship. That did not start until TNG.It’s pretty clear that the Enterprises down the line are the flagship, from NX-01 to E-E.
Look, there's no shame in being wrong. It's just so darn difficult to convince anybody of "right" in an utterly fictional, indeed sciencefictional context where things like common sense and everyday expectations are expressly invalid arguments.
Your angle here is that X applies to all hero ships because it is known to apply to one of them. Is that an easy or a difficult position to defend? Even the answer to that is surprisingly dependent on the greater context of this being science fiction.
In the real world, one might go for consistency: if being a hero ship is common to all these ships, perhaps X is, too? Not so in fiction. That X has been specifically pointed out to apply to the E-D means it's worth pointing out - that is, it's a distinction the writers want to make. They never made that distinction as regards any of the other hero ships.
So we're left looking at things that might contribute to X and hint at X being present. What does a Flagship of the Federation do? Supposedly, she shows the flag a lot. Did any ship other than the E-D do that? Argument may ensue - but in TOS, this only happened once, in "Amok Time", and Kirk himself argued his ship would be ill suited for the job. There's also the diplomatic angle, and Kirk chauffeured dignitaries often enough. But his ship was not supposed to get involved, and indeed conflict arose whenever Kirk felt she needed to.
We may also choose to insert real world considerations here, although probably at our peril. ITRW, flagships are ships aboard which flag officers command major operations and large numbers of ships. Kirk's ships never had flag officers aboard, except for the one time when Kirk himself was given a birthday cruise aboard a ship that explicitly was not his; the one time a flag passenger tried to take over; and the one time a Talosian illusion of a flag officer apparently literally broke his flag in the briefing room. No commanding of other ships took place, either - whereas the sister ship Lexington indeed did this stuff, with a flag officer aboard.
On the other hand, Picard's TNG ship never hosted admirals who would have taken a command role, either (when Adm. Pressman tried to do that, he got busted; Jameson got killed for a much lesser command ambition of an away mission). Commanding of a task force happened once on Picard's shift (we saw the other ships in "Redemption") and supposedly once on Jellico's (we did not see any in "Chain of Command"). But other ships in TNG were explicitly called flagships and credited with task force or fleet command. Picard's movie ship was outright rejected as a task force command vessel until Picard forced the issue.
We're really left grasping at straws, then. Are the hero ships the biggest ones around, by design? Even the E-D fails there, with equally large Nebulas swarming around her. The E-E is actually quite a bit smaller than her predecessor, and potentially a demotion to Picard for having lost the previous ship. Do the hero ships get the top assignments? Kirk just stumbled on stuff, or mopped up after Starfleet's first choice fumbled.
Sure, an argument can be scraped together from these bits and pieces - either way. But the default position is that the E-D was singled out with a flagship role, while no such thing popped up in connection with any of the other ships. Sweeping the crumbles into a pile resembling an argument can be done in support of the default position, or against it. The pile just looks better surrounding the pillar of what was actually established. IMO.
Timo Saloniemi
I never got the impression from TOS the Enterprise was meant to be the flagship. I know everyone has since retconned it as that, including Trek XI, but in the show itself? There was no indication that it was the flagship or indeed anything special, beyond is status as a starship. The idea that the Enterprise holds some sort of special significance to Starfleet didn't start until TMP, and even then it wasn't the flagship. That did not start until TNG.
At the very least, I should think if the Enterprise was the flagship in TOS it would have been one of the Constitutions to be commanded by a Commodore or a more senior Captain. Kirk's one of the younger Captains we see and TOS and you think he would have been selected over all the others to command the flagship?
Or in the cases of the Abrams-Enterprise "a flagship," Pike referred to it as the newest flagship. I took that to mean one of many flagships.The Kelvin enterprise and the D were clearly chosen as the flagship
Or in the cases of the Abrams-Enterprise "a flagship," Pike referred to it as the newest flagship. I took that to mean one of many flagships.
Perhaps all starships in the Abrams-universe are flagships?
Unless a flag officer were aboard.There's no point referring to some little Oberth class science/scout ship as a flagship in any sense of the word.
From an in universe standpoint the Galaxy Class is supposed to be insanely expensive so was it odd to see so many on the front line in the Dominion war?
It took a suicide strike to take the odessy out and that likely didn't have any war time upgrades.
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