....
3- Making Admiral Necheyev angry
I think Admiral Necheyev was born angry?? her e-mail signature probably says
Link![]()
Or maybe she just knew Picard all too well?
Typical Picard First Contact

Worst Federation Captain ever!
....
3- Making Admiral Necheyev angry
I think Admiral Necheyev was born angry?? her e-mail signature probably says
Link![]()
Picking a relatively young, inexperienced Alaskan as his second-in-command.![]()
All of the above plus the Klingon mediation, ticking off Q. etc.
Summed up. Just breathing for him was a mistake.
Worst Federation Captain ever.
surely thats Archer!?
All of the above plus the Klingon mediation, ticking off Q. etc.
Summed up. Just breathing for him was a mistake.
Worst Federation Captain ever.
surely thats Archer!?
Nah, I believe that honor belongs to the hapless captain of the USS Grissom in 'The Search for Spock'.
Hands down, it has to be in Nemesis when Picard allows Data to reassemble B-4 and then to make matters worse allows Data to down load his own memory into the other android. Data is second officer on the Federation's flagship. His memory certainly contains classified material! Worf should have said one word to stop his Captain, "Lore!"
This absolute travesty of writing makes Picard look like a fool who doesn't have any knowledge of mission security or of his own ship's logs!![]()
surely thats Archer!?
Nah, I believe that honor belongs to the hapless captain of the USS Grissom in 'The Search for Spock'.
You're both forgetting about Harriman.
Hands down, it has to be in Nemesis when Picard allows Data to reassemble B-4 and then to make matters worse allows Data to down load his own memory into the other android. Data is second officer on the Federation's flagship. His memory certainly contains classified material! Worf should have said one word to stop his Captain, "Lore!"
This absolute travesty of writing makes Picard look like a fool who doesn't have any knowledge of mission security or of his own ship's logs!![]()
Couldn't have said it better myself...
It does grow extremely annoying, though. In a real-world conversation, you would probably have gotten a fat lip already, and IMHO deservedly so. After all, it is self-evident that we all are here because we care about this particular fictional realm and its fictional characters, and you are repeatedly attacking one of these characters we care about.
The current sombrero craze is annoying, too, but at least it's not a direct attack against anything in particular. You are deliberately harming real people here.
Timo Saloniemi
Much appreciated.
Amidst all of this, I've lost track: in your opinion, what was the absolute worst Picard decision? I'm having difficulty finding a favorite, as none of the decisions seems to meet all the criteria of a) having been a bad decision at the time, b) having major and lasting consequences, and c) having been avoidable. Thus, many rank among the "unbrilliant" - not good decisions, but largely neutral, and thus realistic rather than "heroic".
Timo Saloniemi
I think the ticking off of Q fails criterion a): it wasn't a bad idea at the time.
Picard had confronted Q several times before "Q Who?", and had learned that the deity was not one to hold grudges, nor one to cause permanent damage to those he toyed with. And Q had appeared pleased when first Picard, then Riker resisted his offers, goadings and persuasions. Picard thought he had Q's number - and it wasn't a bad assumption.
Arrogant or incompetent actions are precisely why we court martial military people. It goes to accountability. If through preventable acts or decisions that present knowledge allows the commander to make the correct judgment, that the commander does not correctly act or decide to make the judgment; then as a result of the commander's failure to act or decide, we can charge that the life, property and interests placed in the commander's care, he jeopardizes and/or destroys through his neglect. He is accountable for such crimes-criminally so.As for arrogant actions killing people, that shouldn't feature too prominently in the decisions made by such crucial people as frontline starship captains. It's their job to take risks that occasionally get people killed, so that they can pursue the missions and policies entrusted in them. Securing freedom of operations for Starfleet, rather than becoming subservient to Q's limitations, would be Picard's mission.
Picard allows himself to be taken alive by supertechnology barbarians
Preemptive suicide is utter fantasy in the real militaries, and typically in the intelligence communities as well.
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