DarthTom said:
.....not following the Federation's rules?
.
.
.
Why does Sisko get a free ride and not Janeway with many fans?
Particularly as James Kirk makes them both look scrupulous by contrast.

DarthTom said:
.....not following the Federation's rules?
.
.
.
Why does Sisko get a free ride and not Janeway with many fans?
greenmystik said:
I personally think there shouldn't have been a voyager series. Who would really strand there crew on the other side of the galaxy for the sake of a planet that wasn't that advanced in the first place. I think Janeway could have used Caretaker to get back and Starfleet wouldn't have done anything to her.
Then you completely missed the entire point of the episode. The ep. has little to do with making dead friends happy, they're dead how can they still be happy?PKTrekGirl said:
I think the biggest beef with Endgame was that, after 7 years of running all over the dangerous DQ while defending and fiercely clinging to Federation principles...Janeway completely ABANDONS one of the most MASSIVE of those principles - the TPD - just to make a couple of dead friends happy. This was NOT consistent with her core beliefs, as illustrated numerous times throughout the series.
Picard also held up the Prime Directive more diligently because he was the number one ambassidor for the Federation. He captained the Enterprise, the flagship of the Federation. He had to be the best they had to offer because he represented them.Red Ranger said:
People,
Frankly, I agree with the poster who pointed out that a lot of people criticize Janeway more than Sisko because she's a woman and not a man. And to you Picard haters out there, I say, "fie." Sure, he upheld the Prime Directive more diligently than some other captains, but it wasn't always easy. In fact, I think one of his more creative applications of the PD was in the ep "Symbiosis." He made a hard choice, denying one side technology that would have eased their suffering short-term, but would benefit that society long-term by helping them break their addiction to the drug/medicine.
Red Ranger
Red Ranger said:
People,
Frankly, I agree with the poster who pointed out that a lot of people criticize Janeway more than Sisko because she's a woman and not a man. And to you Picard haters out there, I say, "fie." Sure, he upheld the Prime Directive more diligently than some other captains, but it wasn't always easy. In fact, I think one of his more creative applications of the PD was in the ep "Symbiosis." He made a hard choice, denying one side technology that would have eased their suffering short-term, but would benefit that society long-term by helping them break their addiction to the drug/medicine.
Red Ranger
DarthTom said:
By its logic, the US wouldn't help the people in Africa get clean water with technology because they lack the technical expertise themselves to do so.
DonIago said:
Just out of curiosity, why do people persist in exaggerating about this? Sisko did not destroy the biosphere. He _did_ make it toxic to humans, but unless I'm recalling incorrectly there's nothing to indicate that other species couldn't continue to exist quite happily on that planet. Cardassians for instance.
I believe it's even said later in the episode that the Cardassian and Human colonists who had their atmospheres poisoned would be relocating to each others' planets. While what Sisko did could certainly be construed as an act of terrorism/biological warfare, let's not overstate what he did.
Anwar said:
No, the end of the episode said that the Cardassian colonists Eddington displaced resettled on the planet Sisko poisoned, and the Maquis colonists went to the Cardassian ones.
The planet was rendered uninhabitable to humans, not all humanoids.
intrinsical said:
Anwar is correct, Marquis and Cardassian colonists swapped planets. Sisko made a risky but calculated move. It got the job done and no one died.
DarthTom said:
intrinsical said:
Anwar is correct, Marquis and Cardassian colonists swapped planets. Sisko made a risky but calculated move. It got the job done and no one died.
No one died either when Janeway threatened the crewman yet she often gets criticized for that decision.
Well, it's not like she could get advice from any other high ranking officers being lost in the Delta Quad.Seven Of Five said:
What annoys me about Janeway is her inconsistent characterisation. Going against Starfleet regulations is something you would expect her to do in the situation she and the crew were in. What you don't expect is her flip-flopping either way, or at least with no discussion about the trouble she has with these kinds of decisions to validate her change in attitude every so often.
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