I always found it odd that Maxwell's first officer and crew allowed him to attack the Cardassians.
Other than that, a very solid outing.
I always found it odd that Maxwell's first officer and crew allowed him to attack the Cardassians.
Other than that, a very solid outing.
The episode took great pains to demonstrate the loyalty of Maxwell's crews. Whether that's enough explanation is up to you.
So no one stopped O'Brien after he beamed aboard?
Or O'Brien simply used technical wizardry to enable himself to be beamed aboard.
TNG seems to be liberal with the placement of the dedication plaques. Sometimes they're on the bridge, sometimes in ready rooms (Phoenix), and sometimes in random corridors (Tsiolkovsky).
I always found it odd that Maxwell's first officer and crew allowed him to attack the Cardassians.
Other than that, a very solid outing.
The episode took great pains to demonstrate the loyalty of Maxwell's crews. Whether that's enough explanation is up to you.
Yeah, still I'm not sure how much that explains everything we see in the episode. Consider that the Nebula-class probably has half as many people on them as is on the enterprise (Memory Alpha says 750) that's a lot of officers who have to take Maxwell at his word that "something" is up and then assume thats enough to fire first on non-threatening vessels containing supposed allies.
His pulling a phaser as a reaction to somebody walking into his ready room was another detail that made it feel like he was the only one on the ship.
How much do crews know, anyway?
His pulling a phaser as a reaction to somebody walking into his ready room was another detail that made it feel like he was the only one on the ship.
Or then he would be prepared against his own crew finally deciding that enough is enough...
How much do crews know, anyway? Kirk's announcements never were particularly informative. "We appear to be fighting somebody" would be obvious to most, and "We are blowing up Cardassians" to the tactical teams at least. But "Where the heck are we?" would be unanswerable without tapping into the shipboard datanet. Whether Kirk's ship even had such a feature available to the crew, we don't know. Maxwell's ship no doubt had the same corridor and cabin LCARS panels as Picard's, but some data on those might be under lock and key even in routine operations, let alone when at alert.
Timo Saloniemi
When did Maxwell fire on "defenseless" vessels? He destroyed a transport that was in practice escorted by two top-of-the-line Cardassian warships (at too great a distance, though), and stopped but did not threaten to destroy another so that he could convince Picard.
Gul Macet believed the two parties were at open war now. Maxwell's officers might have been in agreement...
Timo Saloniemi
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.