
Forced to watch endless Voyager reruns I predict that her head will explode "Scanners like" but not before she begs to be killed, while admitting all of her guilt.

Moderator: Vympel
Ever deciding to enter Starfleet Academy? Hell, that's more of a fuckup on Starfleet's part . . . I mean, graduating her as an officer in Starfleet, that's gotta be the worst fuckup in Starfleet's history . . . after coming into being, of course.Eleas wrote:I saw, to my horror, that thread of Picard being court-martialed. Horror, because any sane person could see that there were other far more fitting candidates for trials. Such as a certain gravel-voiced crone from a spoon-shaped starship.
My question, in any case, is this: what was the most stupid/illegal/hypocritical/immoral thing Admiral Kathryn Janeway has done?
Grand Admiral Thrawn wrote:Charges:
Treason
Time:During the events nicknamed "Scorpion"
Specific charge: alliance with a enemy
Captain Janeway willfully made an alliance with the Borg. She agreed to trade modified nanoprobes that were deadly against the Borg's enemy; Species 8472 for passage through their space. In doing so, she gave a crucial weapon to them, which would crush 8472 quickly.
See above - no genocide.Abaiding Genocide
Time: Scorpion I&II
Specific Charge: Helping with the inslavement/destruction of a species.
Captain Janeway helped the Borg gain a way to defeat 8472 (see above) She did this knowing full well that it was all but certain the Borg would assimilate or completly wipe them all out.
Hmm yes its pretty evident that she is guilty here.Violation of the Prime Directive
Time: Killing Game
Specific Charge: Giving Technology
Captain Janeway gave holodeck technology to the Hirogen. This violates the Prime Directive. Many a times she had refused to give technology to different species, quoting the PD. Also, this race was hostile, and had captured Voyager
Again Guilty.Time: Killing Game
Specific Charge: Allowing technology to fall into other species hands.
The Hirogen had captured Voyager in a battle. She did not self-destuct the ship, allowing it to fall into their hands.
Hmm she did try to self destruct the vessel so its more Incompetence ni that she risked it even knowing it was probably a trap however civilian lives where on the line.Time: Basics
Specific Charge: Allowing technology to fall into other species hands
Janeway sent Voyager to help Seska, a traitor and her son despite the large chance of a trap. Voyager is attacked multiple times, yet she continues until Voyager is captured outright. This allows all her technology to fall into Kazon hands.
Guilty as charged.Gross Incompetence
Time: Killing Game:
Specific Charge: Allowing ship to fall into enemy hands.
The Hirogen captured Voyager (see above) Janeway did not destroy Voyager, and allowed her to be given into enemy hands.
NOTE: Commendations to Ensign Harry Kim, and Voyager's Emergency Medical Hologram for their efforts to recapture Voyager.
Again this one is close, SF does like its civilians.Time: Basics
Specific Charge: Sending her ship to find a traitor
Janeway sent Voyager to help Seska, a traitor and her son despite the large chance of a trap. Voyager is attacked multiple times, yet she continues until Voyager is captured outright.
NOTE: Commendations to Lt. Tom Paris and EMH for their efforts to retake Voyager. Commendation Posthumously to Ensign Suder for his efforts to retake the ship, and he died heroically saving the 150 lives on Voyager from being stranded on a planet helpless.
Guilty Guilty Guilty.Attempted Murder
Time: Equinox
Specific Charge: Attempting to murder
Captain Janeway interogated a captured crewman from a different ship. Janeway leaves her in an unprotected cargo bay, where alien lifeforms would kill her. Chakotay disobeys orders and saves her.
NOTE: Commander Chakotay shall not be charged with violation of direct orders. The orders he was given went against everything Starfleet and the UFP stand for.
TheDarkling wrote:Grand Admiral Thrawn wrote:Charges:
Treason
Time:During the events nicknamed "Scorpion"
Specific charge: alliance with a enemy
Captain Janeway willfully made an alliance with the Borg. She agreed to trade modified nanoprobes that were deadly against the Borg's enemy; Species 8472 for passage through their space. In doing so, she gave a crucial weapon to them, which would crush 8472 quickly.
The Borg never got the weapon however see was still going to give it to them (although you could say she was bluffing).
See above - no genocide.Abaiding Genocide
Time: Scorpion I&II
Specific Charge: Helping with the inslavement/destruction of a species.
Captain Janeway helped the Borg gain a way to defeat 8472 (see above) She did this knowing full well that it was all but certain the Borg would assimilate or completly wipe them all out.
Hmm yes its pretty evident that she is guilty here.Violation of the Prime Directive
Time: Killing Game
Specific Charge: Giving Technology
Captain Janeway gave holodeck technology to the Hirogen. This violates the Prime Directive. Many a times she had refused to give technology to different species, quoting the PD. Also, this race was hostile, and had captured Voyager
Again Guilty.Time: Killing Game
Specific Charge: Allowing technology to fall into other species hands.
The Hirogen had captured Voyager in a battle. She did not self-destuct the ship, allowing it to fall into their hands.
Hmm she did try to self destruct the vessel so its more Incompetence ni that she risked it even knowing it was probably a trap however civilian lives where on the line.Time: Basics
Specific Charge: Allowing technology to fall into other species hands
Janeway sent Voyager to help Seska, a traitor and her son despite the large chance of a trap. Voyager is attacked multiple times, yet she continues until Voyager is captured outright. This allows all her technology to fall into Kazon hands.
She may get away with that one.
Guilty as charged.Gross Incompetence
Time: Killing Game:
Specific Charge: Allowing ship to fall into enemy hands.
The Hirogen captured Voyager (see above) Janeway did not destroy Voyager, and allowed her to be given into enemy hands.
NOTE: Commendations to Ensign Harry Kim, and Voyager's Emergency Medical Hologram for their efforts to recapture Voyager.
Again this one is close, SF does like its civilians.Time: Basics
Specific Charge: Sending her ship to find a traitor
Janeway sent Voyager to help Seska, a traitor and her son despite the large chance of a trap. Voyager is attacked multiple times, yet she continues until Voyager is captured outright.
NOTE: Commendations to Lt. Tom Paris and EMH for their efforts to retake Voyager. Commendation Posthumously to Ensign Suder for his efforts to retake the ship, and he died heroically saving the 150 lives on Voyager from being stranded on a planet helpless.
Also Suder was an interesting character, on Voyager, what the hell was going on there?
Guilty Guilty Guilty.Attempted Murder
Time: Equinox
Specific Charge: Attempting to murder
Captain Janeway interogated a captured crewman from a different ship. Janeway leaves her in an unprotected cargo bay, where alien lifeforms would kill her. Chakotay disobeys orders and saves her.
NOTE: Commander Chakotay shall not be charged with violation of direct orders. The orders he was given went against everything Starfleet and the UFP stand for.
It is the judgement of this court that without chance of parole or reprieve you be taken from this place to the dilithium mine of the penal asteriod Rura Penta their to spend the rest of your natural life........ either that of be forced to eat Nellix's food both are fine.
Janeway's biggest fuckup was not being near a console when first dragged across the galaxy by the caretaker array.Stormbringer wrote:Janeway's biggest fuckup was being born. The dumbest thing her family did was NOT smothering her in her crib. The mere idea that she would up in a military uniform, even if it is the Hippies in space defense force, boggles the mind.
But by that time she was already in uniform and in command no less. How many red shirts had she lead, blissfully unaware, to their horribly pointless deaths? How many away teams has she accidentally gotten wiped out? How many alien species has her moronic posturing pissed off? No far better she was killed as an infant. Just point her towards a transporter pad, if skilled operaters have that many accidents how likely is a kid's survival?Janeway's biggest fuckup was not being near a console when first dragged across the galaxy by the caretaker array.
Well, that's simply the wacky way things are done in Starfleet.Dennis Toy wrote:And speaking of engineering...why is the self destruct routed through one processor instead of redundantly being controlled by all the processors, and even if you destroyed all the processors, the Self-Destruct should be connected to a manual control, maybe a 5-minute set countdown closed-system independent of the ships system. You could set it from the bridge or engineering. Starfleet need some real Engineers.
what like Troi's screwwy command testPatrick Degan wrote:Well, that's simply the wacky way things are done in Starfleet.Dennis Toy wrote:And speaking of engineering...why is the self destruct routed through one processor instead of redundantly being controlled by all the processors, and even if you destroyed all the processors, the Self-Destruct should be connected to a manual control, maybe a 5-minute set countdown closed-system independent of the ships system. You could set it from the bridge or engineering. Starfleet need some real Engineers.
I'd imagine that the unsanctioned aiding of somebody while putting one's own crew in danger and making a new enemy would be a court-martiable offense in the U.S. navy.Zoink wrote:Somewhere in TNG it says that the primary role of a captain to protect the lives of her crew and ship. We know that orders supercede this. However, Janeway was under no order to save the Ocampa, was Janeway *allowed* to strand herself, crew, and ship in the Delta quadrant? Are U.S. naval captains given similar freedom in risking their ships?