Indeed, I was referring to this in my own post.Be annoyed I wasn't on the bigger, better alternate reality version![]()
Step 4: Fly the runabout through the Guardian and return to early 1999.
In the three seasons of TOS the Enterprise lost 49 crew members (37 during the series, 12 during the second pilot) under Kirk compared to 48 crew members of the Enterprise D for the first three seasons of TNG.I'd try to find a way back to my reality. I'm not even a red shirt, I'm an off screen expendable. Though Kirk is fantastic for the greater good, I'd say he probably lost the most personnel out of all of the series. Picard headed the flagship, Sisko fought in wars, and Janeway crossed the galaxy, yet they all did a better job than Kirk. He looses people during pit stops.
Depends on what reference you use for sizes - if I recall correctly, you take an entire starship through it somehow in Star Trek Online.Step 4: Fly the runabout through the Guardian and return to early 1999.
Won't fit.
In the three seasons of TOS the Enterprise lost 49 crew members (37 during the series, 12 during the second pilot) under Kirk compared to 48 crew members of the Enterprise D for the first three seasons of TNG.I'd try to find a way back to my reality. I'm not even a red shirt, I'm an off screen expendable. Though Kirk is fantastic for the greater good, I'd say he probably lost the most personnel out of all of the series. Picard headed the flagship, Sisko fought in wars, and Janeway crossed the galaxy, yet they all did a better job than Kirk. He looses people during pit stops.
I think the only real conclusion is that space is dangerous... and you shouldn't be on any starship if you are worried about that type of thing.![]()
Why?... did you add personnel lost in movies...
Um. Wat?And McCoy outranks no one,
Being from this century, Picard would treat you with contempt.Personally, I'd be annoyed that I wasn't on the Enterprise-D
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Being from this century, Picard would treat you with contempt.Personally, I'd be annoyed that I wasn't on the Enterprise-D
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Retracting my comment. McCoy cannot command per se, but he can remove anyone from command, which is both ironic and fun.
He can briefly order Sulu around in WHOM GODS DESTROY due to 3rd season writing, but that's as far as it goes.
Any officer can give orders to other officers or enlisted personnel of inferior rank - McCoy being a doctor doesn't negate his rank of Lt. Cmdr. The exception to that would be if the inferior officer in question "has the bridge" (or conn) or is following the direct orders of an officer who has/had the bridge - then the situation is trickier, because McCoy still outranks that officer but can only give them orders if it doesn't bear on command of the ship (he could order them to drop and give him 20, but couldn't order them to change the ship's course), UNLESS he utilizes his CMO's authority to relieve the officer of duty. In which case, command would fall to the next available officer in the chain of command, which almost certainly still isn't McCoy (unless he just relieved the last command officer on the ship) and still wouldn't allow him to issue orders to the new commanding officer regarding command. Although it might place an officer more sympathetic to McCoy's inclinations in command - but that still isn't the same thing: they still don't have to take his command orders, even if they follow his advice.Sulu is fourth in command. He's not behind McCoy in this respect. McCoy cannot command, only relieve others from it. Bones was telling Sulu how to do Sulu's job. I attribute this moment to third season carelessness.
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