Sadly few doYes.
That man gets it.
Sadly few doYes.
That man gets it.
clearly Geordie doesn't know how hard so people work. he should watch a doc on the us navy. those sailors are very "good at working around the clock". I put it in quotations because even when you have to work on something fora long time you still get a break. Geordie knows that his team will get a break when there duty shift ends and the next shift will get to work.Geordi says "we'd have have to work round the clock for two days"![]()
If they can't do that then that is just bad. mean that is 250 people per shift if 4 rotations. considering the automation in the 24 century it shouldn't be hard.The 1701-D in the Federation Flagship, has 1000+ crew, but a change from 3 shifts to 4 shifts is impossible?
But Riker wasn't even doing his job in any sense of it. He didn't do what Jellico ordered him to do, he didn't support Jellico's orders to the rest of the crew or ensure they were implemented, and he also actively participated in/encouraged his junior officers to insubordinate behavior. The only "regular" Enterprise officer who acts like a professional in this episode is Data.
That is why Riker doesn't have the maturity to be captain. It's not the first time he acted like that. However, when he's in his comfort zone, he seems to be a competent first officer.
it was the Enterprise's crew job to follow Jellico's orders.
If Riker had the maturity to be the captain of his own ship, he would be the captain of his own ship. He's young, ambitious, a bit flamboyant, and dead serious in season 1 & 2, perhaps seasoned in season 3, then complacent and comfortable for the rest of the show
Geordi yes. He moves past it, & eventually becomes a magnificent component of the senior staff under Jellico, even factoring prominently in briefings that led to the final solution. Even his complaining wasn't truly out of line. He defends his work with the new captain, & at one point went to his direct superior and lodged a complaint, basically saying this is a pain for his people, and once he realized that a pain is what everybody got an equal share of, he dealt with it, & we hear nothing more of it. Kudos to him for rising above his personal feelings to get the job done in an unpleasant situation.Troi and LaForge, despite disliking Jellico and initially privately complaining, still did work well with him.
Then there's this:
Cardassian representative- "we have captured a Starfleet officer in our territory; Captain Picard"
Jellico- "I don't know what you're talking about"
Riker "Is he alive?!"
Troi however, I still take issue with, specifically that she further aided in corrupting the toxic relations Riker was having with Jellico. Ultimately, she suggested to him, in a professional capacity, that the captain was uncertain about what he was doing, with the Cardassian negotiations, by offhandedly contradicting Riker's comment that he was sure of himself
And a transfer to a desk job at the ass end of nowhere.I really wish this episode had ended with Riker getting a "This is why you suck" speech from Picard and Data remaining as first officer.
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