One nitpick I do have to disagree with calling Commodores Stone (played by Percy Rodriguez) and Commodore Jose Mendez WASP's...Stone was hardly a WASP and Commodore Mendez was supposed to be of latino descent.
Commodore Stone, commanding Starbase 11
Commodore Mendez, later in command of Starbase 11
Both were former starship captains.
Fortunately, I don't have to cop to Mendez, because I didn't mention him.
I'd written the other five, labeled them WASPs, then remembered,
Didn't Stone say he was a starship captain, too? Great! There's another one. I added him to the list, and forgot to remove WASPs, since it was no longer applicable. That's a good catch, but it was a simple editorial oversight.
[I've been
terrible with the little things in this thread.]
I can add Mendez, though, and change "WASPs" to "red-blooded males." So much for the idea that we see "very few" starship captains in
TOS. Seven of them, and fully a third of the
active starship commanders, are shown on screen.
And still, we see
no females in that role.
pookha said:
So considering the evidence of Number One ...
Even if we grant that Number One was the permanent X-O (and I've not meant to deny that she could have been, but instead presented reasons from
within the canon why she
may well not have been—none of which have been refuted), permanent
X-O of a starship does not equate to permanent
command of a starship. Pike was gone. Number One was their most experienced officer. Yet she doesn't succeed Pike as captain of the
Enterprise. Instead, a much younger Kirk gets the slot. [We can assume this because in "Mirror, Mirror," a parallel universe, Kirk succeeds to the slot via assassination of Pike. One may assume that he directly succeeds Pike in the main universe via more mundane means.]
...and that Janet Lester appears to be a loon who killed her own people to lure Kirk and said Kirk wanted to kill her I could see that there were female captains about.
That makes her a homicidal maniac, not a liar with her
every breath. Clearly she could operate sophisticated equipment and concoct elaborate plans. You're making assumptions that allow you to come to the more palatable, rather than the more likely, conclusion.
I tend to create scenarios employing only the canon ... but as some of you had gone outside it to the costume department (

) and Roddenberry's
possible use of British naval ranks which
may extend back to the
Enterprise era, I felt justified in easily countering those with the story creator's
stated admission that the very comment most in dispute here was meant as
I've interpreted it.
One last time: I
don't believe this Old Boys' Club excluded women from command entirely, or even much. Starbases ... outposts ... transports ... freighters ... scouts ... gunboats ... destroyers ... frigates ... light cruisers. There's little or no evidence to indicate women
didn't hold those commands in the
TOS era, though there's definitely a dearth confirming it. As three posters have pointed out, the highest-ranked female officer we see
in this entire period is a lieutenant commander wearing red (and
perhaps one other sporting gold, if another poster's memory serves him well), so it's obviously
quite rare for a woman to reach into the higher ranks.
But, like it or not, it's apparent to me both from the canon and the creator's own assertion that, in the
TOS era, starships were the
last bastion of prestige and achievement unjustly denied them.
Your mileage may vary.