Exactly. First of all, Young was completely inept at dealing with threats to the ship. When Destiny itself tested his mental state and ability to guide the ship through danger, Young failed miserably and descended into drunken self-medication.
And when the Lucian Alliance boarded Destiny, Young balked at killing them because Telford was with them. That mistake would have cost ALL of Destiny's crew their lives if Ginn hadn't defected and killed the Lucian leader.
Not to mention Young's well documented anger issues, which come up again and again.
Rush, on the other hand, was tasked with dealing with people who were so ignorant, they could not see major threats like the impending power loss. He was one of the most brilliant scientists in the world, yet at one point he was subject to the whim of Sgt. Grier, who held him at gunpoint because Grier (who knew nothing about the ship or its tech) didn't want him pressing buttons.
Rush also had to deal with Scott's idiocy, exemplified by the fact that Scott said, in the second episode, "It (life support) doesn't matter because you're going to figure out a way to get us home, right?"
And Rush said something very true: "That's the sort of thing they tell you to say in officer candidate school" but it has no bearing on whether the goal is even possible. No amount of morale boosting would have gotten that decrepit Stargate to dial back to Earth. It was not physically possible.
Young had some 40 military personnel that he personally commanded on that ship. Rush had no one. Yet the fact that there was any power struggle at all showed who was the smarter, more effective of the two. Granted, Rush was not great at dealing with people and didn't feel the need to explain himself often, but he never really acted out of self interest. He was always acting on behalf of the ship and crew.
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