Great question, Star Fleet thought they were prepared for the Borg but like First Contact there's a sign of hubris.I've wondered for a while why could they not have Sisko's wife and son take a transport ship before going into battle at Wolf 359? Were they on such short notice that there were no ships available?
...Star Fleet thought they were prepared for the Borg but like First Contact there's a sign of hubris.
HANSON: The truth is, hell, we are not ready. We've known they were coming for over a year. We've thrown every resource we have into this, but still ...
Star Trek: Generations was a good example with the windows smashing on civilians when the saucer crashed on the planet.I just assumed they all got the call late and didn't have time to drop Jennifer and Jake off. The Enterprise didn't dump their civilians, and they had at least a couple of day's grace. If you're going to live on a Starship, you probably accept there's a possibility you won't be as safe as if you lived on Earth.
There are other civilians, and children seen in the Saratoga's escape pod. Plus it was a civilian woman Sisko stopped in the corridor to ask where Jennifer was.Families on board starships seemed to be unique to the Galaxy Class, except for this one incident. I figure that Jennifer was a civilian scientist working on board, and Jake was with them since they were both there. Remember that mirror-Jennifer was a scientist, so it's possible the regular one was as well.
How could we tell that there weren't families aboard every other starship, when we never really saw into any other starship?
Timo: families are seen on the E-D in GEN.
I interpreted it to mean that he had never had to deal with civilian families on board before
The design of the Galaxy class appeared to be conducive to families whereas the other ships were not.
In EaF, Picard seemed chagrined that there were families on board the Enterprise. I interpreted it to mean that he had never had to deal with civilian families on board before, despite his long career as an officer and captain. It is possible that the Stargazer was an exception in that it had no families, or that it was a Starfleet-wide policy implemented between the loss of the Stargazer and the loss of the Enterprise. The design of the Galaxy class appeared to be conducive to families whereas the other ships were not.
Star Trek: Generations was a good example with the windows smashing on civilians when the saucer crashed on the planet.
I hated those scenes. It's the future -- are you telling me by then they don't have glass that doesn't shatter into peices when it falls on you? That was so stupid. Look at what cars have had for I think at least a decade -- laminated windows (sorry, I don't know how long it's been used without looking into it), where it the glass gets punctured of ruptured because of body distress, the whole thing doesn't break into pieces all over the place. If I took a windowpane from today, the size of one of the peices that fell on and smashed to pieces on people in Generations, and let it fall on you from the same height in the same manner, what it's going to do is hurt your fucking head and break into a few big chunks, if at all. And don't get me started about the Bridge dome breaking open.
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