He's already in charge of people's lives in DS9, though. A commission wouldn't change that. Especially not one from after the war when he's already slated for the academy, anyway.
Is he? I mean I'm not an expert enough on the show to know, but while I'm sure he's in charge of people where work is concerned, is he ordering people into life & death circumstances, or are his actions in the line of duty, directly responsible for deciding if people live or die?He's already in charge of people's lives in DS9, though.
Is he? I mean I'm not an expert enough on the show to know, but while I'm sure he's in charge of people where work is concerned, is he ordering people into life & death circumstances, or are his actions in the line of duty, directly responsible for deciding if people live or die?
Ok, but even as a transporter chief, who just mans a console, he's responsible for the safety of people, getting them back on a millisecond's notice etc... Hell, even I am responsible for the safety of people, & all I do is count scalpels & hemostats all day. (kind of an understatement lol)He may not be typically selected as a mission leader, but he's still a dept. head. Anything goes wrong (like, say, an attack, boarders, etc, which was not exactly uncommon) he's still responsible for his people's lives. Not to mention that as head of engineering, his battle decisions about what to do and in what order mean that the lives of everyone on board are automatically in his hands in any engineering emergency (which were also not uncommon).
That's the problem. Neither do I lolI'm pretty sure he still wound up giving orders on a hairy away mission or two, anyway, though. I don't recall specific episodes off the top of my head, so maybe I'm wrong,
An instructor in what really? I mean sure he's knowledgeable, & could probably teach, but does that seem to fit his aptitudes? Life is about knowing where you fit, & frankly, any of us could find ourselves in a life or death decision. The object is to weigh where you best fit against your comfort levels & aspirationsbut even if so, the undeniable fact is that he easily could wind up in such situations at any point during DS9. And he very obviously would not wind up in such situations as a planetside instructor.
I don't have to speculate that he wouldn't want a commission. He outright tells people such. My speculation is about why, which he's also mentioned on occasion, albeit in a less than meaningful way. I'm just trying to find some deeper meaning in there... if possibleSo if this was really something he felt so strongly about and was a primary motivation for him, then it makes little sense for him to accept the DS9 position and even less sense to speculate that he definitely wouldn't accept any commission that might be offered at series' end.
That's the problem. Neither do I lol
An instructor in what really? I mean sure he's knowledgeable, & could probably teach, but does that seem to fit his aptitudes? Life is about knowing where you fit, & frankly, any of us could find ourselves in a life or death decision. The object is to weigh where you best fit against your comfort levels & aspirations
I don't have to speculate that he wouldn't want a commission. He outright tells people such. My speculation is about why, which he's also mentioned on occasion, albeit in a less than meaningful way. I'm just trying to find some deeper meaning in there... if possible
Actually, I'd think DS9 would be a far better fit for him, with his new family, than serving on the Enterprise, even if it's not some humdrum Earthbound job. It's still settled in somewhere, & until the war, a pretty homey place to be. Again, it's about weighing where you'd be of the most value, against your comfort level. He's in Starfleet, which makes him a serviceman, & if he valued that, he'd maybe think "Where would my service be best put to use?" & then weigh it against how compromised as a person he might feel
Look, I know I'm really off in the bramble on this one lol, but O'Brien is easily the most relatable character in all of Star Trek... to me. So I wax philosophic a bit more I guess![]()
In Past Tense O'Brien indicates he's been offered a commission in the past which he turned down, preferring an enlisted man's life over that of an officer's.
Can you imagine how Q might've ended up if he'd pissed off Kira? He'd be a bloody smear along the Promenade.I’ve always detested Q’s line to O’B...”weren’t you one of the little people?”.
Asshole.
Q was lucky to be punched only once.
Um, Empok Nor?Is he? I mean I'm not an expert enough on the show to know, but while I'm sure he's in charge of people where work is concerned, is he ordering people into life & death circumstances, or are his actions in the line of duty, directly responsible for deciding if people live or die?
See, that's my point. Even in that very dire circumstance, he is not a person who's job it is to command people into death or order them to kill. Death & killing happens, because while they were on a salvage mission things went bad. Shit happens. I could be in a kill or be killed situation tomorrow. I don't know, but it isn't something I deliberately task myself with as a vocation. It's still not the same as Troi's bridge officer exam, that has her order someone to die, or Picard ordering Worf to fire on someone, to kill them.Um, Empok Nor?
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