"Lack of change" means the same as "nothing was real", since he thinks ever last little thing would have to change every episode.
Of course, he didn't do that on BSG and no one cared.
Based just on the interviews I linked to, this is nothing but hyperbole. Based on the direction of the episodes Moore wrote on
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine it's hyperbole. Hell, based on the direction Moore took
Battlestar Galactica (as you indicate yourself) what you're saying is still hyperbole.
VOY's audience thought it was dumb how the VOY aliens kept showing up, but have no problem with the Cylons continuing to track the Galactica fleet. Double standard.
I've seen posters complain that the Hirogen re-appearing more than 35,000 light years from their position in "The Killing Game" (somehow ahead of Voyager), or Talaxians reappearing an even greater distance (also ahead of Voyager) in "Homestead" when Voyager had already traveled beyond the very fringes of their space. Yet I haven't seen posters make the same complaint that you indicate. If aliens had a reason to track Voyager (like the Kazon or the Hirogen until "The Killing Game") then it provides the perfect justification for a continuing antagonist that can be developed.
Okay, he couldn't stand that the Maquis and Fleeters could ever work together.
I've never seen him make this claim, certainly not to the extent you exaggerate it to be. But if I'm wrong, I'd be happy to see a link to an interview or something. I wasn't as active on the internet when Moore had his brief stint on Voyager as I am now, so there is undoubtedly a fair amount of behind the scenes material I've just never seen.
So Moore wanted the show to be a serialized mess wherein every single episode for 7 seasons straight led directly into the next with no break time or time jumps between episodes, and for the cast to be a bunch of weaklings who let every single last thing get to them. BSG did the reset button too, and no one cared there.
I think plenty of people complained when there was a lack of consequences for episodes like "A Measure of Salvation," actually. And, again, your exagerrating Moore's position to the extreme.
It's the same thing with the "Failed wormhole" stories. If VOY did them then the audience hates it because they knew they would fail, if they never did any of those stories then the audience just complains they should've run into a wormhole or something.
Actually, I think Voyager did a healthy number of these stories. Installments like "Ex Post Facto," are some of the better episodes of the series. I think
Farscape got just about the same mileage out of these kind of episodes. Pretty quickly, of course, they get tired, but not if you introduce consequences (which Voyager did beginning in season mid-season four).
I don't know about the rest of you but working on a show in the same style of Voyager & then saying you tried to make it anti-Trek IMO is saying the same thing. If you know both shows, how could your mind not first think he was talking about Voyager?
For two reasons. First, in the interview, Moore spends time describing how even
DS9 was a show that came with certain limitations due to the
Star Trek banner that he was able to surpass on
Galactica. He also mentions the other installments of the television wing of the franchise. It's clear he's talking about the franchise as a whole. Second, as a remake,
Battlestar Galactica came with a ready-made premise. It's not as if Moore created an original property that had a basic premise similar to
Star Trek: Voyager.
Moore never liked writing about aliens.
And he wanted to do Star Trek.
Boggles the mind.
Where are you getting that? Moore's well-known as "the Klingon guy." He obviously had no apprehension writing aliens. Now, an apprehension to writing endless alien-of-the-week stories where the aliens were no more than humans with funny noses? That seems perfectly understandable, in my opinion.