10 Weirdest Decisions In Star Trek History

A look back at some of the most questionable choices made by Star Trek characters.

Star Trek a family trip through borg space
CBS

Starfleet officers, especially Captains, have a reputation in the galaxy for making split-second decisions under extremely stressful conditions, but they're not perfect. Every now and then they make the wrong call, usually because they didn't stop for a moment to think it through enough.

However, sometimes the correct choice seems so obvious that we're left wondering how anyone could screw it up. Occasionally Starfleet will do things so unjustifiable, and just down-right weird that there's really no excuse.

This list will be looking at some of the strangest decisions that Starfleet officers have ever made, and discussing what they could've done differently. From overly complicated plans, to actions with unforeseen consequences, to personal choices that just don't make sense, there's no shortage of questionable actions taken by Starfleet's finest. Most of the entries on this list came from a Reddit thread which you can check out here.

10. Janeway Not Promoting Harry Kim

Star Trek a family trip through borg space
CBS Media Ventures

Harry Kim remained an Ensign throughout Voyager's entire seven-year journey trapped in the Delta Quadrant. This wasn't brought up often, but, in the episode Nightingale, Kim said that he understood that Voyager was in a unique situation stranded thousands of lightyears from home, and that there wasn't much room for promotion on the ship.

Despite this though, in the same time-period Tuvok was promoted to a Lieutenant Commander in the episode Revulsion, and Tom Paris, a literal ex-convict, was reinstated as a Lieutenant after getting stranded with the crew in Caretaker, then demoted to an Ensign in Thirty Days, and eventually promoted back to a Lieutenant in Unimatrix Zero (not to mention the fact that he was seen wearing the pips of a junior grade lieutenant in the episode Faces, which could imply that yet another demotion and promotion happened off camera).

Beyond that, Harry's low rank didn't actually make that much sense. He was the head operations officer aboard Voyager, a fairly important job that oversees a huge number of people and projects. Janeway could've easily given him a customary promotion as appreciation for everything he sacrificed to keep the crew alive, and not much about the ship's command structure would've had to change.

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Marcia Fry is a writer for WhatCulture and an amateur filmmaker.