Ok, am I missing something or did holo-Janeway drop the ball on here completely? The Diviner demands the Protostar return within 1 day or he'll kill all the mining slaves. The crew treats this as their Kobayashi Maru and holo-Janeway agrees, saying that if they jump to the Federation and ask for help it's not enough time to save the miners, if they go back to the lying, slaving, murderous Diviner it's obviously a trap, and if they do nothing the miners will die. Let's break this down.
- Even if the Protostar ask the Federation for help, the Fed won't help. The civil war between Gwyn and her father is an internal Tars Lamora matter, and by the Prime Directive the Federation cannot get involved. All the Fed will do is take the Protostar back and put the kids in an orphanage or something. Why doesn't holo-Janeway say that?
- Real world countries, institutions, etc. have a policy not to negotiate with terrorists, and I'd imagine the same principles apply to the Federation--I think we've seen that before in Trek. Why didn't holo-Janeway immediately cite this, and stop the kids from going back
- Ironically the option that deep down everyone wants, to stay on the ship and do nothing, is probably the only correct one. While holo-Janeway may prefer that they return the Protostar to the Federation, legally as the kids aren't Federation citizens they have no obligation to. And as mentioned above, the Fed can't get involved in the Gwyn/Diviner dispute anyway per the Prime Directive. The ridiculous idea of sending the kids back to negotiate with a dangerous dictator should have been ruled out immediately. If the kids had already made up their minds on not returning the ship to the Federation, then Janeway should have protected the kids by advising them to do nothing.
Holo-Janeway says she has the crew's best interests at heart, but nothing in this episode reflected it, just more of her propaganda about Starfleet that ironically wouldn't apply because the real Starfleet almost definitely would not get involved.