They still want to see the families their cause was fighting for the rights of, again.
But enough to risk a 1000 to 1 shot? With the very real possibility that they would be 90 or older when the ship finally made it back? I just don't buy into the notion that everyone would choose to do that.They still want to see the families their cause was fighting for the rights of, again.
If I had been there, I would probably have stayed on the ship. It doesn't matter if I had been Starfleet or Maquis.But enough to risk a 1000 to 1 shot? With the very real possibility that they would be 90 or older when the ship finally made it back? I just don't buy into the notion that everyone would choose to do that.
That's right!The Voyager sensors didn't detect the humans on the planet, or their three cities. And Voyager was ON the surface.
I doubt the Kazon or Vidiians would be able to detect them from orbit.
But enough to risk a 1000 to 1 shot? With the very real possibility that they would be 90 or older when the ship finally made it back? I just don't buy into the notion that everyone would choose to do that.
A bizarre cult would be highly interesting!I wonder now what a re-imagining of Voyager would have looked like (either more realistic, with people that only accept Janeway's mandate of leadership so far - after all she never was elected as a community leader for life, just as a ship's captain, in a Starfleet service people could resign from, but apparently not in the DQ), or more cynical, by showing the gradual transformation of a Starfleet crew into a cult with its own bizarre customs and beliefs.
Sure, I'm not complaining about Janeway being the natural leader at first. Of course, immediately after they got lost in the DQ, she would be the person leadership would naturally fall to.But sincerely, in the situation the crew on Voyager were, it was quite logic that they did see janeway as a sort of leader for a mission which was about to get them home.
I see your point.Sure, I'm not complaining about Janeway being the natural leader at first. Of course, immediately after they got lost in the DQ, she would be the person leadership would naturally fall to.
But as soon as it became clear that returning to the AQ could become a matter of years or possibly even a generational undertaking, with no real alternative to people (except for staying behind somewhere in the DQ), and the very first emergencies were resolved, I would expect people to start thinking critically about the whole situation. Not to reject Janeway as such, but to reflect the new reality that this isn't just a ship on an extended Starfleet mission anymore, but more than that, a living community for the foreseeable future that people couldn't realistically resign from, with a 'leader' that was never elected and now had to lead in many more aspects than she ever was mandated for.
For example, they could have opted to install a dual leadership over the years. A 'military' leader, which would still be Janeway, and a 'civilian'/community leader, which might be elected, much like you had on Battlestar Galactica. (Not saying that would necessarily have been a good idea, just that such alternatives were never even considered seems a bit weird to me).
I like the special force idea as a starting point, but I think as the series goes on, the lines should and would blur. Some maquis would join the "regular" crew because attrition would make them the best suited for the job. Others would form relationships with SF crew that would make then do the same, and frankly a couple of lower ranking SF crew may want to join with the force (I won't say join the Maquis, because that would have ideological motivations to it that no longer exist for this band of the Maquis, in absence of any Cardassian foe).When it comes to the Maquis, I've always thought that the maquis should have been organized as a special force on the ship, led by Chakotay. That would have been better than to force them into Starfleet as Janeway did.
That's another thing that feels odd about "THE 37's"... the Briori. They snatched humans from a planet over 70,000 light years away... were humans really that good to use as slave labor when there are dozens of other races just a stone's throw away from that planet?
I agree with those who see the empty cargo bay as hokey. I know what the writers were going for, but it just didn't come across very well to me. (I blame, partly, the UPN suits for this... this episode was filmed and feels more like a season finale than a season premiere. Had UPN not held over this episode and "PROJECTIONS", "ELOGIUM", and "TWISTED", the conversation might be slightly different.)
But enough to risk a 1000 to 1 shot? With the very real possibility that they would be 90 or older when the ship finally made it back? I just don't buy into the notion that everyone would choose to do that.
Yes. Even the Bajorans on DS9 weren't instantly all One Big Happy Family with the Starfleet crew.For me it was always strange that after the very first Voyager episode all Maquis already wore Starfleet uniforms and gave in.
There was more potential...
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