While I won't argue that her intentions were good, I think it went rather better than it realistically should have.
While I won't argue that her intentions were good, I think it went rather better than it realistically should have.
I recall in "The Cloud", Neelix disagreed to how Janeway ran the ship.
Her reply was an offer to put him off the ship.
The Maquis members that were non-Starfleet took issue with Tuvok and intergrating into a Starfleet crew.
Chakotay's reply was punching one of them in the mouth.
Exactly what viewers are you referring to?I recall in "The Cloud", Neelix disagreed to how Janeway ran the ship.
Her reply was an offer to put him off the ship.
Neelix wanted to be let off during a dangerous mission then picked up again when it was over. Basically, he was just thinking of himself. Janeway was reminding him that he was there voluntarily and it was not a champagne cruise. If he didn't like it he was free to leave.
The Maquis members that were non-Starfleet took issue with Tuvok and intergrating into a Starfleet crew.
Chakotay's reply was punching one of them in the mouth.
Chakotay was making a point. Apparently not all the viewers got it...
While I won't argue that her intentions were good, I think it went rather better than it realistically should have.
They went better that they realistically should have according to our behaviors today. What folks tend to forget is that the Trek world is one where humans have evolved. In many ways they would not behave the same as we would.
While I won't argue that her intentions were good, I think it went rather better than it realistically should have.
They went better that they realistically should have according to our behaviors today. What folks tend to forget is that the Trek world is one where humans have evolved. In many ways they would not behave the same as we would.
You mean they'd behave more like sheep and people who secretly wanted to be in Starfleet the whole time?
The Maquis members that were non-Starfleet took issue with Tuvok and intergrating into a Starfleet crew.
Chakotay's reply was punching one of them in the mouth.
Chakotay was making a point. Apparently not all the viewers got it...
Who knew, all this time General Patton was an evolved human! 
Having the Maquis wearing Starfleet uniforms makes as much sense as having Minutemen wearing Redcoats. And Janeway pressing the Maquis into Starfleet service -- demanding concessions from them but offering no substantive concessions to them even though both crews needed the other -- is no better than the Royal Navy's old habit of pressing Americans into service on British ships.
I'd never thought of it that way.Humans in Star Trek are not more evolved than they are today. That's nothing more than a piece of propaganda that Picard and Co. liked to spout.
Humans in Star Trek are not more evolved than they are today. That's nothing more than a piece of propaganda that Picard and Co. liked to spout.
Actually, that was pretty much Gene Roddenberry's original premise based on his belief in secular humanism.
Humans in Star Trek are not more evolved than they are today. That's nothing more than a piece of propaganda that Picard and Co. liked to spout.
Actually, that was pretty much Gene Roddenberry's original premise based on his belief in secular humanism.
No, it wasn't. That was a revisionist piece of nonsense that Roddenberry began spouting when he created TNG and starting buying into his own hype. And it was nonsense on the show, too; the TNG crew were as ethnocentric and imperialistic as any modern American, they were just ethnocentric and imperialistic about different things.
Nothing in TOS suggests that humans are "more evolved." TOS suggests a better future, certainly, but at no point does it posit some fundamental change in human nature (which is itself a meaningless concept). TOS's attitude is best encompassed when Kirk says, "We're killers, but we won't kill today." Better choices, not better natures.
Actually, that was pretty much Gene Roddenberry's original premise based on his belief in secular humanism.
No, it wasn't. That was a revisionist piece of nonsense that Roddenberry began spouting when he created TNG and starting buying into his own hype. And it was nonsense on the show, too; the TNG crew were as ethnocentric and imperialistic as any modern American, they were just ethnocentric and imperialistic about different things.
Nothing in TOS suggests that humans are "more evolved." TOS suggests a better future, certainly, but at no point does it posit some fundamental change in human nature (which is itself a meaningless concept). TOS's attitude is best encompassed when Kirk says, "We're killers, but we won't kill today." Better choices, not better natures.
Exactly - humanity was able to make better choices to the point where there was no longer war on Earth (or within the Federation for that matter).
Secular humanism was associated with Trek long before TNG hit the airwaves. DS9 made a move away from it but it was still mentioned in Voyager. Two examples:
1) The conversation with Tom and the girl he met in "Future's End" when she comments about how he is concerned more for the big picture rather than his own petty concerns. His response was prett much "Well isn't everybody?"
2) Q wanted to mate with Janeway because he believed a half-human child would bring some of humanity's best traits to the continuom. She tells him that "sprinkling human dna" won't do the trick. These were traits passed on for centuries - notice she doesn't say "thousands of years".
After Gene Roddenberry died writers were no longer held to a strict secular humanism standard but some writers on Voyager still wrote those kinds of stories.
How? By keeping up hostilities and war that claimed millions of lives already? That's the wrong thing?
Apparently, proper human nature equates "Vicious Warmonger".
And frankly, TOS' idea that humans would act 100% the same in the 23rd Century that they do in the 20th century is dumber than any critique of the TNG future.
The Federation's decision to engage in an act of appeasement to the Cardassians and sell out its citizenry was a violation of Federation ideals and principles. A story about the Maquis reconciling themselves with the Federation and its values would have necessarily included a story about Janeway and the other Starfleet officers coming to realize that, frankly, the Federation had done the wrong thing.
Apparently, proper human nature equates "Vicious Warmonger".
And frankly, TOS' idea that humans would act 100% the same in the 23rd Century that they do in the 20th century is dumber than any critique of the TNG future.
People don't just fall apart and give up on every shred of morality just because they're in a rough situation, despite what NuBSG tells us.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.