In Season One they may have attempted to follow that book.
Then the dug a hole, tossed the bible in.
Pissed on it and filled up the hole.
Maquis tensions were resolved by the the second episode.
But what about To Tuvok with Love?
That was because they sucked at their job, not because they were ideologically repulsive.
Imagine if they had left Tuvok to die in that fire?
Wouldn't that have showed janeway what the servant class really thought of her from steerage?
I often wonder if that line in Life Line about Janeway dealing with the Maquis was written by Picardo, or added by the producers when they were shining up his stories and working it into continuity.
And the Doctor was as Human as he was going to get in the Viking episode.
You know what they also said before the show started...
"We have a leading man, a great leading man, a romantic counter part for Janeway, and his name is Tom Paris."
Here's a pdf of the bible.
http://www.google.co.nz/url?q=http:...sQFjAE&usg=AFQjCNFlduf0s0a_9Ag8_Wo5QTlNzm6b_w
Then the dug a hole, tossed the bible in.
Pissed on it and filled up the hole.
Maquis tensions were resolved by the the second episode.
But what about To Tuvok with Love?
That was because they sucked at their job, not because they were ideologically repulsive.
Imagine if they had left Tuvok to die in that fire?
Wouldn't that have showed janeway what the servant class really thought of her from steerage?
I often wonder if that line in Life Line about Janeway dealing with the Maquis was written by Picardo, or added by the producers when they were shining up his stories and working it into continuity.
And the Doctor was as Human as he was going to get in the Viking episode.
You know what they also said before the show started...
"We have a leading man, a great leading man, a romantic counter part for Janeway, and his name is Tom Paris."
Here's a pdf of the bible.
http://www.google.co.nz/url?q=http:...sQFjAE&usg=AFQjCNFlduf0s0a_9Ag8_Wo5QTlNzm6b_w