Even though the future of "Timeless" (Voyager) won't happen, since obviously Voyager never crashed, will Geordi - over the course of future TNG novels - still eventually become a Captain like he was in that episode?
KRAD said:
I disagree, and expressed my disagreement that La Forge should leave the engine room in A Time for War, a Time for Peace when Riker offers him the job of first officer on Titan, and La Forge turns it down (though he agonizes over the decision). It's Scotty, in part, who talks him out of it.
That's not what I said. Nor what I wrote. Read the relevant portions in ATFW,ATFP.C.E. Evans said:
KRAD said:
I disagree, and expressed my disagreement that La Forge should leave the engine room in A Time for War, a Time for Peace when Riker offers him the job of first officer on Titan, and La Forge turns it down (though he agonizes over the decision). It's Scotty, in part, who talks him out of it.
You just want to keep a nerd in his place, don'cha?
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Defcon said:
^ I agree with you, Geordi never seemed to be the guy wanting to sit in the center seat.
Technobuilder said:
Even if he stay's in Engineering and doesn't become second officer. He's been a Lt. Commander since 2366. It's 2380 in Resistance that's 14 years or so...The guy needs a promotion to Full Commander.
Christopher said:
Defcon said:
^ I agree with you, Geordi never seemed to be the guy wanting to sit in the center seat.
Except in "The Arsenal of Freedom." His subplot in that episode (from the first season, before the decision was made to move Geordi from conn to chief engineer) was all about learning what it took to be an effective commander.
Technobuilder said:
Even if he stay's in Engineering and doesn't become second officer. He's been a Lt. Commander since 2366. It's 2380 in Resistance that's 14 years or so...The guy needs a promotion to Full Commander.
Why does he "need" that? In general, why does anyone "need" to keep advancing arbitrarily just for the sake of advancement? That kind of thinking is what underlies the Peter Principle. If you're good at the job you're doing, where's the sense in getting promoted out of it? If you're happy where you are, where's the sense in craving more?
And really, the TOS movies created an unrealistic image of how promotion in a military organization works, what with half the cast ending up as captains and the other half as commanders. No service can function if it's that top-heavy, if the people making decisions outnumber the people actually doing the work.
Gomez was an ensign fresh out of the Academy in 2365. She didn't become a full commander until 2376. Eleven years is hardly "such a quick time."I mean seriously, GOMEZ is a Commander, if that jump in rank can be explained in such a quick time, why is it so hard to believe that Geordi would of been offered a promotion by now?
Christopher said:
... And really, the TOS movies created an unrealistic image of how promotion in a military organization works, what with half the cast ending up as captains and the other half as commanders. No service can function if it's that top-heavy, if the people making decisions outnumber the people actually doing the work.
od0_ital said:
Christopher said:
... And really, the TOS movies created an unrealistic image of how promotion in a military organization works, what with half the cast ending up as captains and the other half as commanders. No service can function if it's that top-heavy, if the people making decisions outnumber the people actually doing the work.
Seemed to me that in the movies, Kirk was the only one still makin' decisions, and every captain (Spock & Scotty) & commander (Uhura, Chekov, Sulu) under his command still had to do the work.
KRAD said:
It's Scotty, in part, who talks him out of it.
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