TUVOK: The Rumarie is an ancient pagan festival.
NEELIX: Full of barely clothed Vulcan men and women covered in slippery Rillan grease, chasing one another.
As you say in the review, the doctor's (or more precisely the writer's) attitude to mental health issues isn't exactly brilliant. Apparently, the "Maquis type" is just prone to violence and Suder isn't psychotic because it would have shown up on his genetic scan? Star Trek has never been brilliant with mental health and seems to prefer to just magic them away with technology like so many physical illnesses yet they also contradict this when it suits them (such as this episode) and give a character a mental illness that isn't explained, treatable or fully explored.
If I recall correctly, the doctor's (or is it the writer's) attitude improves in the episode "Repentence" with the prisoner Iko's story. Though again, it's dismissed with technology and the violent Iko is fixed by magic nano-probes. At this point in Voyager, pretty much everything is solved with nano-probes.
The episode gives Tim Russ something to get his teeth into. The ongoing irritation of Neelix, grating on him and imposing his over-bearing chirpiness onto his life leads to one of the greatest ever moments in Voyager. The Tuvok strangling Neelix fantasy scene. It felt so good to watch.
As you say in the review, the doctor's (or more precisely the writer's) attitude to mental health issues isn't exactly brilliant. Apparently, the "Maquis type" is just prone to violence and Suder isn't psychotic because it would have shown up on his genetic scan? Star Trek has never been brilliant with mental health and seems to prefer to just magic them away with technology like so many physical illnesses yet they also contradict this when it suits them (such as this episode) and give a character a mental illness that isn't explained, treatable or fully explored.
If I recall correctly, the doctor's (or is it the writer's) attitude improves in the episode "Repentence" with the prisoner Iko's story. Though again, it's dismissed with technology and the violent Iko is fixed by magic nano-probes. At this point in Voyager, pretty much everything is solved with nano-probes.
The episode gives Tim Russ something to get his teeth into. The ongoing irritation of Neelix, grating on him and imposing his over-bearing chirpiness onto his life leads to one of the greatest ever moments in Voyager. The Tuvok strangling Neelix fantasy scene. It felt so good to watch.
I can't immediately think of many other examples of what you're referring to here, but if is definitely buttressed in Extreme Risk.
Although in this instance, we can't attribute the lack of real engagement in B'Elanna's serious condition to the Doctor, it is more than a little disappointing that the writers didn't choose to proceed with any real treatment programme or even the suggestion of a consequence of this explicit exposure of her mindset needing to be addressed going forward. It pretty much seemed to be the equivalent of take an aspirin, without even the call me in the morning, and get back to work. All the revelatory exposition which was actually fascinating, IMO, was, even if not reset exactly, made to seem that it would just take care of itself somehow, Chakotay's throwaway line about figuring it out together notwithstanding.
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EMH: I kept a record of what I considered to be your most questionable command decisions. It's in my personal database. I hope you'll delete the file without reading it.
TUVOK: Precisely. Captain Janeway's methods are unorthodox. It is her strength as a leader, but unfortunately, it is also her greatest weakness.
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