Had Nog challenged the "captain" either with disagreement or rightful claim to command, he and Jake would have been spaced.
^
Maybe so and that would be a fine reason to not challenge the Captain. However, the episode needs to present Nog having that thought within itself in order for that to be a valid reason for why Nog didn't challenge the Captain. Or any other reason. Since the episode does not present within itself any thoughts from Nog about why he won't challenge the Captain, there is no valid canonical reason, therefore it's bad writing and there's no getting around that.
^
Maybe so and that would be a fine reason to not challenge the Captain. However, the episode needs to present Nog having that thought within itself in order for that to be a valid reason for why Nog didn't challenge the Captain. Or any other reason. Since the episode does not present within itself any thoughts from Nog about why he won't challenge the Captain, there is no valid canonical reason, therefore it's bad writing and there's no getting around that.
I thought the actor's presentation of Nog's hesitant and deferential manner in speaking to the Red Squad folks presented things nicely without some dialogue to hit me over the head with the fact that Nog didn't have the self-confidence (he was a recent graduate and still looked up to these guys) to challenge them.
Honestly, I don't see any weak writing here.
And those cadet actors were really really awful.
My impression is that when you are given a commission, it has to be at a rank approximately equal to your demonstrated level. That would explain why a Colonel in a Bajoran militia gets a commssion of captain.
The whole episode I was wondering why Nog didnt just take command of the ship being the only real commissioned officer and outranking a bunch of cadets. By that cadet's logic, if Worf came aboard instead of Nog, the cadet would still outrank Worf.
The whole episode I was wondering why Nog didnt just take command of the ship being the only real commissioned officer and outranking a bunch of cadets. By that cadet's logic, if Worf came aboard instead of Nog, the cadet would still outrank Worf.
how exactly would a cadet outrank a Lt Commander?
The whole episode I was wondering why Nog didnt just take command of the ship being the only real commissioned officer and outranking a bunch of cadets. By that cadet's logic, if Worf came aboard instead of Nog, the cadet would still outrank Worf.
Valiant was probably the worst DS9 episode Ron Moore ever wrote.
If the Captain leaves someone in charge of the bridge, that person retains command until he relinquishes it whatever the rank that person has.
That was my major problem with that episode--I don't know how Nog would've given in to a cadet. The only explanation I can think of (and I'm not sure)...was Nog's rank a field commission, or had he already graduated the Academy?
That is not true. A superior officer (at least in the modern US Navy) can assume command of the ship if necessary - but they must be of Command level rank.
That was my major problem with that episode--I don't know how Nog would've given in to a cadet. The only explanation I can think of (and I'm not sure)...was Nog's rank a field commission, or had he already graduated the Academy?
AFAIK, Nog's rank of Ensign was indeed bestowed upon him in the field.
Nog says "They made me an Ensign" and then "If only my classmates at the Academy could see me now", neither of which quite establishes that the commission wouldn't have come over the usual channels or would be "field" in the usual sense. Many a nation in war has hastened the commissionings of its young officers that way.
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