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Unforgivable Trek errors by writers..

If a 365 day year is 1000 stardates, then 100 is 36.5 days. About a month or 5 weeks.
 
According to Stardate Calculator which is used by Pocket Books to determine stardates for the novels, the episode The Jem'Hadar's stardate of 47987.5 is December 27, 2370, The Search's 48213.1 is March 19, 2371 and Caretaker's 48315.6 is April 26, 2371. So Voyager was lost the day before the four month anniversary of the Federation making contact with the Dominion, and five weeks after Sisko's mission to meet the Founders.
 
Voyager disappeared on 48307.5, but stardate calculations are pointless either way; we can only speculate that it really was a bit later as suggested by the raw numbers.
 
The Cardassian Union inexplicably being changed to the "Cardassian Empire." As if the galaxy doesn't have enough empires already.
Speaking of disappearing, whatever happened to the Borg baby in Collective? ...
Memory Alpha quotes Brannon Braga on this very matter:
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Collective_(episode)#Background_information
Brannon Braga said:
The baby was returned to its people, which you did not see depicted in an episode. We considered showing it on-screen, but decided it would be best to focus on the remaining Borg kids. They have given us some great story material so far.

Of course, because it's never stated on-screen, that can't actually be considered "cannnnon."

Kor
 
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Yeah, but Cochrane building a warp-drive spaceship in post-apocalyptic rural Montana would be like someone building the first iPad in Somalia in 2002. There were no facilities, and no transport system to get the components from existing facilities to the launch site.
Data said the silo was part of a missile complex, so the main base facilities would be a dozen odd miles away down a access road. If America wasn't apart of the war, then it wouldn't be "post-apocalyptic."
 
Janeway's line, "Of course, the whole bunch of them would be booted out of Starfleet today." about Kirk's generation of Starfleet officers in "Flashback" bugged me in 1996 and it still bugs me today. While it might've been intended as an affectionate jab, it came off as smug and condescending
Yes. I always had a problem with that line. I mean for Pete’s sake his crew saved earth I would think they’ll be living up to the finest tradition to Starfleet the 23rd or 24th century. And they did that while knowing possibly they could still be sent to jail.
 
She meant it endearingly. She's speaking of the past with rose-colored glasses, and a subordinate asks her how they could just get away with disobeying orders like that. Choices that could lead to major diplomatic incidents and war. It's an honest question. Janeway basically says "It was the good ol' days. Things are different now"
 
She got booted up to the Admirals' offices where she could fly a desk instead of a ship, and not do any more damage out in the field.

Kor

I say they put her in some psychiatric ward and replaced her with an android.
 
In terms of Starfleet's mission; exploration, first contact, establishing trade deals, charting unknown space, and all that goes with that, etc, is there any captain more successful than Janeway? It's no wonder she got promoted. Why would she be in jail?
 
Trek is littered with corrupt and incompetent Admirals so it fits starfleet MO.

Hence Kirk's reward for doing something good (saving Earth from the whale probe) was to undemote him from Admiral.

Kirk himself was the typical power-mad, incompetent Admiral in TMP, what with the way he booted Decker out of the big chair and took command himself despite being unfamiliar with the workings of the extensively upgraded ship.

Kor
 
Kirk himself was the typical power-mad, incompetent Admiral in TMP, what with the way he booted Decker out of the big chair and took command himself despite being unfamiliar with the workings of the extensively upgraded ship.

Kor

Yeah, but Kirk had a talent for... speaking to powerful entities and talking them out of killing him and his crew. I mean who would have thought about saying "Hey, I know the answer to your question but I won't tell it until you do as I say"?
to a powerful entity that could wipe him out in an instant!

Only Kirk.
 
Kirk himself was the typical power-mad, incompetent Admiral in TMP, what with the way he booted Decker out of the big chair and took command himself despite being unfamiliar with the workings of the extensively upgraded ship.

Kor
It's funny how in any other film Kirk's character would have been the villain of the film.
 
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