• @aeronmelon
    link
    1621 days ago

    Rewatching TNG as an adult, Troi’s empathic skills are actually useful. We, the viewer, may already be aware, but she clues Picard and the rest of the crew in on things they need to know at that moment.

    As for her abilities as a therapist, I think Starfleet failed to train her for “frontier/first contact” situations properly. On most any other ship in the fleet, she would be fine. On the Enterprise she had to wing her way through events and problems that have never been experienced before by any member of Starfleet.

    And for the record, she did help Barclay get better at interacting with other people. I appreciate that we get to see more of them in Voyager.

    • Flying SquidM
      link
      1820 days ago

      She helped get Barclay better because the writers decided she did, not through any therapeutic techniques that would have actually worked.

      • @aeronmelon
        link
        520 days ago

        Yeah, because she was written by science fiction writers. The enterprise saved the day because the writers decided it did.

        Things got more realistic during their scenes in Voyager, thankfully.

        • Flying SquidM
          link
          420 days ago

          Right, but what I am saying is they could have easily just talked to some actual social workers to find out what would have actually worked with someone like Barclay instead of just deciding it. It’s kind of a shitty way to treat mental illness as a subject.

          • @aeronmelon
            link
            220 days ago

            Just like they could have easily talked to a real fucking Native American.

            But I don’t think this one was an unforced error. That was all most well-intended Americans (yeah, I really do have to qualify it that way) knew at the time. It was progressive then, but insulting today.

            Otherwise, you can chalk it up as yet another Berman Conflict™.

            • Flying SquidM
              link
              320 days ago

              In that case, they were fooled by a con man.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamake_Highwater

              So I don’t think that’s applicable here. They thought they had consulted someone properly in that case but they were wrong through no fault of their own. With Troi, all they had to do is find one of the millions of social workers in the U.S. or just the thousands in Los Angeles and talked to them.

    • NegativeNullOPM
      link
      1021 days ago

      I tease in this meme, but yes, I agree with you.

      • @aeronmelon
        link
        1020 days ago

        I know. That’s why I love this community. We argue over meaningless lore details while upvoting each other.