Yes, because the Master isn't going to be able to take power from her with his mind-controlling cellphones and the technology of a billion-year-old civilization.
He'll lose his party's election.
Yes, because the Master isn't going to be able to take power from her with his mind-controlling cellphones and the technology of a billion-year-old civilization.
I'm pretty sure these were pirates.Philistine wrote: ↑Fri Feb 22, 2019 5:07 am The Sycorax were planet-consuming interstellar locusts. With one twist: their method of harvesting resources demanded that they target worlds which are inhabited by intelligent, technologically-advanced civilizations to extract and gather the resources for them. Which, come to think of it, makes them less "interstellar locusts" and more "interstellar serial killers." Ten sent them on their way without so much as a "Go forth and sin no more."
If you break a treaty, you should be jailed. She's the most loathsome form of leader. One who cannot be trusted.Then he destroyed PM Harriet Jones's political career out of petty spite, because she showed him up by making the correct call after he blew it.
True, it's not like they won't just go invade some other planet. He only shooed them away from this one.Philistine wrote: ↑Fri Feb 22, 2019 5:07 am The Sycorax were planet-consuming interstellar locusts. With one twist: their method of harvesting resources demanded that they target worlds which are inhabited by intelligent, technologically-advanced civilizations to extract and gather the resources for them. Which, come to think of it, makes them less "interstellar locusts" and more "interstellar serial killers." Ten sent them on their way without so much as a "Go forth and sin no more."
Then he destroyed PM Harriet Jones's political career out of petty spite, because she showed him up by making the correct call after he blew it.
The Doctor believes in not killing people if he doesn't have to. If we're getting to the point that he should start killing his opponents (versus them destroying themselves) then that's a substantial change to his character.
I think my issue with Harriet Jones' decisions can be summarized with the fact I'm looking at it from the perspective of international (interspacial?) relationships as well as what exactly Harriet Jones (as well as the Earth at large) "owe" the Doctor.TorroesPrime wrote: ↑Fri Feb 22, 2019 6:11 amWas she right in destroying the ship? This one is a bit more difficult to explain. If you have a weapon but don't use it, you might as well not have it. Saying you have a knife doesn't mean anything if you don't have it available to be used, or are not willing to actually use it. So using a weapon is needed in order to make its point. But the flip side is if you use that weapon too freely you risk having people attack you out of fear for using that weapon. So it's a fine line you have to walk. So should she have fired the weapon? Yes.
Does that mean she was right in destroying the retreating ship? No, I do not feel it does. I feel that a better application of the weapon would have been to damage, but not destroy the ship. Blow off a hunk of it, damage it's engines. Something of that nature. The proverbial "bloody nose".
I disagree. She achieved far more than simply alienating the Doctor.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Fri Feb 22, 2019 6:25 am So all she's achieved is alienating the Earth's closest (arguably ONLY) ally against alien invaders and using a weapon that wasn't useful against the Sycorax until they were walking out the door. It's hard for me to take her seriously as making a correct choice when her "heroic" deed is stabbing a defeated enemy in the back while claiming it makes her a badass.