timepiececlock: (Itachi WTF? face)
[personal profile] timepiececlock
WHY? WHY? Why is that necessary?




*Warning: loss of soul or heart attack is not my responsibility.


EDIT: It's like some sick masochistic urge. I keep going back to the link, watching for a few seconds, then shrieking like a ten year old girl and exiting out the window in a hurry. Make it go AWAY! It's too horrible.

EDIT 2: I wish my parents weren't visiting relatives in Northern California right now. I think I need a hug. From my mom.
ext_10182: Anzo-Berrega Desert (Default)
From: [identity profile] rashaka.livejournal.com
I think that arrogance has been there from the beginning. He simply wasn't in a situation to make the choice before the Time War.

But didn't you say that he was faced with the decision before with the Daleks and thought he didn't have the right to commit genocide?

Arrogance seems to be his most Gallifreyan trait apart from his brains -- the presumption that they know what's best for the universe, and that they therein have the right to decide for everyone, is quite ingrained in their culture. In that sense, he is a product of his society, even if he disagreed with their isolationist tendencies in interference.

Definitely.
mswyrr: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mswyrr
But didn't you say that he was faced with the decision before with the Daleks and thought he didn't have the right to commit genocide?

Point. *contemplates* So what makes the two situations different? Well, in Genesis of The Daleks, it wasn't a decision between allowing the universe to be destroyed or committing genocide. It was a choice between leaving the future alone, or stepping in to change it. And the future, as he knew it, wasn't so bad. The Daleks were manageable, as far as he could see.

He even tells Sarah, when she calls him on flinching from his purpose, that peace treaties and alliances have been formed between species that otherwise might have fought each other, because of Dalek aggression.

So, the existence of the universe had to hang in the balance for him to go as far as he did later.
mswyrr: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mswyrr
...there's also the fact that Four changes his mind later, and goes back to blow them all to smithereens, but he ends up being stopped by circumstance... and later says something to justify his original choice. It's wonky. It read like the story/writer dithering about whether they really wanted to make the Doctor culpable for something like that. Because of the use of deux ex machina at the very end, I count his first decision as the "real" decision.

...perhaps I shouldn't, though.

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