Tuvok would stop it first.
No, Archer and Sisko get a pass because they saved billions of lives and Kirk gets a pass because he (presumably) improved the lives of the people he affected.If you’re referring to the stolen warp coil, I don’t think you’re being fair to Archer. He, as he said, had “no choice.” There were billions of lives at stake, so he did what he had to do, and he felt terrible about it.
Kirk mucked with the way of life on a number of worlds, but in each case he thought he was improving the way of life there, and the audience was meant to agree.
Even Sisko felt pretty bad about his involvement in the death of Vreenak, though he said, “I can live with it.”
Janeway has a habit of disregarding the rights of others when they get in the way of the interests of those she cares about (usually her crew), and does so without any sign of remorse.
Wait, the others get a pass because they felt bad?
Janeway simply disregarded the rights of others when it interfered with what she wanted.
I’m going through the series right now and the last episode I watched is YOH1, so here are a couple of examples from two of the last three episodes I’ve watched.
In The Raven, she is trying to negotiate a way through B’omar space. The B’omar are willing, but because of what sound like very legitimate national security considerations, the process of getting Voyager through their space will take a few weeks. Janeway considers that unacceptable because she has 130 people who are anxious to get home and in her mind that trumps the B’omar’s security considerations, so negotiations stall. Then Seven goes off half cocked into B’omar space and attacks B’omar ships; Janeway follows her with Voyager and also attacks B’omar ships who are doing absolutely nothing wrong.
In YOH1, the Krenim tell her that Voyager is violating Krenim space. She openly mocks them and tells them Krenim territorial claims are irrelevant unless they have the military capacity to threaten Voyager, so Voyager will continue to travel deeper into the disputed territory.
I can’t imagine Kirk, Picard, Sisko, or Archer acting like that.
Tuvok would stop it first.
Didn't Kirk turn against his own government, steal a starship, sabotage another starship, travel to a quarentined planet, blow up the first ship, kill a shipload of Klingons, cause a major intergalactic incident ("There will be no peace, as long as Kirk lives!") and get away with it?
Janeway forced her way through a few species' little local empires, but she meant no harm and caused as little trouble as possible.
A couple of key differences:Didn't Kirk turn against his own government, steal a starship, sabotage another starship, travel to a quarentined planet, blow up the first ship, kill a shipload of Klingons, cause a major intergalactic incident ("There will be no peace, as long as Kirk lives!") and get away with it?
No, Archer and Sisko get a pass because they saved billions of lives and Kirk gets a pass because he (presumably) improved the lives of the people he affected.Wait, the others get a pass because they felt bad?
Janeway simply disregarded the rights of others when it interfered with what she wanted.
I’m going through the series right now and the last episode I watched is YOH1, so here are a couple of examples from two of the last three episodes I’ve watched.
In The Raven, she is trying to negotiate a way through B’omar space. The B’omar are willing, but because of what sound like very legitimate national security considerations, the process of getting Voyager through their space will take a few weeks. Janeway considers that unacceptable because she has 130 people who are anxious to get home and in her mind that trumps the B’omar’s security considerations, so negotiations stall. Then Seven goes off half cocked into B’omar space and attacks B’omar ships; Janeway follows her with Voyager and also attacks B’omar ships who are doing absolutely nothing wrong.
In YOH1, the Krenim tell her that Voyager is violating Krenim space. She openly mocks them and tells them Krenim territorial claims are irrelevant unless they have the military capacity to threaten Voyager, so Voyager will continue to travel deeper into the disputed territory.
I can’t imagine Kirk, Picard, Sisko, or Archer acting like that.
Hmmm.
Well, in The Raven, Janeway wasn't thrilled with the route, but they were going to follow it. However, partway through, Seven went Borg, flipped out, and destroyed ships. She also had Tuvok with her. Janeway could either leave the two to rot or try and save them. She did the latter, and while she did attack ships, she did not kill anyone. She also left the B'omar well alone afterward. If anything, she was too soft on Seven for starting a damn war. If a regular crewman did that, there would be a Starfleet-issue boot planted up his backside so far it would have come out his mouth. And it wasn't the only time she was too soft on Seven for similar transgressions. That was more the problem for me than her deciding to rescue her people.
In the very beginning of YoH, they were actually in Zaal space, not Krenim space (allegedly, anyway, and the actions of the Krenim guy would seem to support this and the fact that Krenim space was greatly reduced at the time.) The Krenim were likely tooling around in someone else's territory and making "grandiose claims." Janeway simply told them where to shove it. The reason they found themselves a week into Krenim territory for the rest of the episode was because of Annorax's meddling, and the viewers are not told what happened in that timeline.
And honestly, Kirk acted like this all the time. All. The. Time.
Tuvok would stop it first.
Yeah, Tuvok would go Insurrection Alpha all over their butts. Then Janeway would join in and they'd walk around blowing off everyone's mutinous faces with their phaser rifles and wear awesome shades and...
...wait
sorry, my mind wandered.
Well, that depends on how you interpret the Prime Directive. The PD doesn't say they can't change anything. Hell, if that were the case, then Starfleet couldn't even be out in space to begin with. It says that you can't do anything to interfere in the natural development of a society and, in particular, a pre-warp society that has not yet ventured into space in any significant manner.Honestly, if they had wanted to adhere blindly to the PD and be perfectly rule-bound-Starfleet folks, they would have self-destructed the moment they got stuck out in the DQ. Their very presence out there was going to change things, no matter how much they tiptoed around.
This isn't a case of Voyager being sent back through time and having to avoid contact with anyone and everyone in order to not pollute the timeline. Even though the circumstances were strange, Voyager's presence in the Delta Quadrant was no more out of line with the PD than the Defiant's presence in the Gamma Quadrant. As long as they avoided contact with pre-warp species, and didn't share technology, I would think they would be okay, PD-wise.
Janeway says she wants Voyager to be a Starfleet ship, but is that really possible in their situation? Is she really just saying that the ship will adhere, as much as possible, to Starfleet principles? And, if so, is she the one to decide which principles?
Isn't that more or less what happened on the Equinox? Ransom decided what principles they would use and what they would ignore. Is that crew a "Starfleet crew" as well?
This is a question I've been pondering, so what do you think?
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