True, I suppose I overstated it a bit. But Picard never learned his lesson by dying!
Except in "Tapestry," sort of...
Anyway, I think that's a distinction that the Q would consider trivial.
True, I suppose I overstated it a bit. But Picard never learned his lesson by dying!
But would Picard have listened to Lady Q? Probably not. But it's never ended badly for him because, well, just because that's the way the stories have been constructed. Whereas Peter David constructed this one so that it did turn out badly for Janeway.
Actually, Picard's failure to listen to Q did turn out badly in "Q Who?", to the tune of eighteen killed or assimilated crewmembers. His overconfidence left him unprepared for the threat the Borg posed, which was the very point of Q's lesson. Also, Picard's resistance to Q's worldview turned out fairly badly for him in "Tapestry," and it wasn't until he admitted that Q had a point that he was able to restore his life. And in "All Good Things...", he also had to get over his kneejerk resistance to Q and recognize and accept the help Q was offering him. Same with Q&A. Really, it's a recurring thread that Q, for all his annoying behavior, often has a valid point that Picard is slow to appreciate.
Janeway wouldn't!True, I suppose I overstated it a bit. But Picard never learned his lesson by dying!
Except in "Tapestry," sort of...
Anyway, I think that's a distinction that the Q would consider trivial.
Perhaps it would be safe to say that overconfidence is one of the pitfalls of being a starship captain?
I think it's more a matter of a pitfall of ours as non-starship captains and not having that burden on our shoulders. I'm betting (if they were real people) that they'd all think that each other are not at all overconfident, but simply doing their job.
I mean really... if we could actually be in their shoes would we REALLY do something different? Or is it that outside viewpoint and hindsight that is making us say "well, this and this and this, so I'd have done this instead" when in reality (lol "reality") they didn't know any of that at the time.
I question whether there's really such a distinction between "heroic" and "meaningless" deaths. I don't think any death is something that should be glorified.
(BTW You have to love the fact that every time a male says something negative about Janeway he automatically becomes a sexist.)
Kimc, you have no basis to be calling Defcon a sexist and promoter of double-standards and impunging his motivations when he hasn't said anything of the sort in this thread (or anywhere else that I know of).
One of the problems with Janeway in the TNG-R is that where such an attitude should have dissipated, or at least become less pronounced when she got her crew back home, the fiction has, if anything, taken as standard the Janeway of "Equinox" and "Friendship One", and exacerbated it. I finally got around to rewatching Nemesis the other day, and remarked that Janeway, in her cameo, actually looked happy. Before Dishonor's Janeway, however, is a bitter, joyless woman who seems more alone now then she did in her 'command bubble' on Voyager.
Janeway (mostly later-season Janeway) and Archer both rubbed me the wrong way. It was more about the crappy plots of convenience than anything else. They had their moments, but I found them both to be really empty plot-movers rather than people. In that way, I never formed any real bond with them.
I also disagree that Tasha's death was meaningless. Armus's killing of her was meaningless, an act of arbitary cruelty, but the same could be said for the actions of a lot of villains, conquerors, etc.
(BTW You have to love the fact that every time a male says something negative about Janeway he automatically becomes a sexist.)
Yes, that was bullshit. Kimc, you have no basis to be calling Defcon a sexist and promoter of double-standards and impunging his motivations when he hasn't said anything of the sort in this thread (or anywhere else that I know of). If he thinks Janeway was overconfident he is perfectly entitled to think so; it isn't exactly a radical hypothesis based on what we saw on the show. Frankly, I would expect better of someone in green than to be making baseless accusations about another poster, and then demanding they defend themselves from that accusation.
Personally, I don't think Janeway was overconfident, or at least not anymore so than the other captains we've seen (confidence, of course, being a requirement of command). I agree that Janeway took decisions rather unilaterally, but I see that as stemming from her powerful desire to protect her people rather than overconfidence. And by that I don't just mean that she trusted herself the most to make the necessary decisions (although that's partly the case), but also that by claiming decision-making power for herself, she subconsciously seeks to spare her subordinates from having to take responsibility for those decisions. After all, it was Janeway's choice to protect the Ocampa (a decision I agree with, by the way) that stranded the crews; she, more than any other C.O., is hyper-aware of the burden of command. If she felt guilty, if she tortured herself over what she had done to her people (and I surely think she did), then as part of protecting her people she would want to take it all on herself; if she and only she has to make the hard decisions, then the rest of the crew won't have to live with the guilt that she does, with the psychological consequences of command choices. It's worth keeping in mind, when thinking about Janeway's frequent tendency to 'go at it alone', that she is one of the most isolated characters of the Trek series, that her guilt occasionally manifests as a kind of self-flagellation; she takes all the deicisons onto herself, but she also wants to take all the punishment onto herself. So I think, rather than being sourced in a superiority complex, her unilaterism comes from something like an inferioty complex (a penitence complex?).
One of the problems with Janeway in the TNG-R is that where such an attitude should have dissipated, or at least become less pronounced when she got her crew back home, the fiction has, if anything, taken as standard the Janeway of "Equinox" and "Friendship One", and exacerbated it. I finally got around to rewatching Nemesis the other day, and remarked that Janeway, in her cameo, actually looked happy. Before Dishonor's Janeway, however, is a bitter, joyless woman who seems more alone now then she did in her 'command bubble' on Voyager.
But kimc and I have settled the "sexist" issue via PM as far as I'm concerned, so we hopefully can drop this off-topic part of the discussion.
Interesting interpretation and most likely a valid one. Like I said above I was more of a casual viewer of Voyager and quite frankly the crew never really worked as well for me as those of the other series, so it's certainly possible that I "overlooked" the psychological parts of the equitation and only saw her unilateral decisions and misinterpreted them as over-confidence.
But does that change the fact that this would still mean that in the end she became a victim of her own weakness?
I'm not sure if her cameo in Nemesis was significant enough to judge her feelings, so ignoring that for the moment: maybe she had a problem with letting go of her "I have to do everything alone" attitude after living with it for a decade. And her being an Admiral and basically having to work even more by herself and having the responsibility for even more people might not have been helpful in changing it.
And, of course, post-series Janeway has an option Captain Janeway never had: if she's unhappy with her job, she's perfectly free to quit and try something in civilian life. In the Delta Quadrant, there was no escaping her responsibilities.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
I suppose not. But then, all characters are flawed; otherwise they wouldn't be particularly interesting characters. Does it mean Janeway deserved to die for exhibiting this weakness?
Even had the outcome not been the death of the Praetor (or was it a senator? I don't recall)
Does she really had that choice? She was a character very much into Starfleet from the get go, and after being stranded in the Delta Quadrant for a decade basically all she has in life anymore is Starfleet, since all her non-Starfleet contacts, like her fiance, have moved on to live their lifes. So I'm not really so sure she would be a woman who would just let Starfleet be Starfleet, even if she isn't 100% happy there anymore.
I'm not sure if deserving is the right word, but I think it's something she has to accept for her way of conducting things. So I wouldn't go as far as to say she deserved it, but I stand by my comments above that it's something that fits her character in my opinion.
Regarding Sisko... It astounds me that everyone overlooks the single most egregious act that is "unbecoming a Starfleet Captain." That took place in In the Pale Moonlight.
And in Hollow Men, his role in the event *is* revealed, to senior members of Starfleet Command. And they don't do anything.
Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges
I didn't overlook it, actually, I deliberately decided not to bring it up. Partly because I still haven't been able to come to a decision about that episode (not a comfortable state of affairs for a person of my, er, 'critical' temperament), but partly because I think ItPM was a different breed of situation to that we've been discussing her. Sisko in "For the Uniform", Janeway in "Equinox" and 'Airlock' Archer all exhibited a kind of righteous, vengeful outrage that blinded them to the ethical considerations of their own actions. This time, in contrast, Sisko was perfectly aware of what he was doing, continously questioning himself and his motives; his anger was mostly directed at Garak and himself, the perpetrators rather than the victims. I've always thought that episode spoke less to Sisko as a character in the way that "For the Uniform" and "Equinox" speaks to the character's motives, then it did about war as a state of being, and the effect that has on even good people. The incidents we've been dealing with are deeply personal, whereas ItPM could have happened to most any character (it isn't difficult to see Kira or Bashir making those same choices, for instance, while one couldn't imagine Chakotay doing what Janeway did in "Equinox", or the rest of the Defiant crew [perhaps excluding Worf] in "For the Uniform").
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
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