Gramzamber wrote:
I was more referring to the Doctor's moronic recounting of previous human/Silurian encounters as "hurf hurf humans attacked and killed" along with his general pissyness about guns, yes.
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I already pretty much agreed that it was a bit lopsided in the retelling.
The pissyness about guns is easily enough to explain as he had his plan to disable the Silurians and used them to exchange hostages. When the Silurians stopped his first plan, he still managed to capture a Silurian for that purpose. Letting some human use weapons (assuming Ambrose didn't get herself hurt because I don't see the non captured Silurians getting into point blank range shouting kill me) would be detrimental to that plan as he loses his hostages.
I see this as more of a "I can do a better job than you and you are going to make things worse" (which lets face it, he still did by capturing alive a hostage) rather than a hurf hurf humans can't defend themselves Mmmkay. The first attitude is arrogant and as I said before, it would have been prudent to let them have weapons in case all the Doctor's plans failed, however its not the stupid and morally indefensible attitude you painted. I will even point out several times in NuWho where he didn't exactly object to humans using guns when... wait for it, he wasn't trying to capture the enemy alive.
Gramzamber wrote:
He could, you know, not tell the psycho racist military whackjob that humans exterminated her kind in every other encounter, and phrase it in such a way where the humans are 100% at fault for picking on poor innocent Silurians.
They kind of had him surrounded with guns. I know sometimes the Doctor pisses people off regardless but sometimes discretion is the better part of valor here. Come on, if a terrorist had a gun to your head and starts ranting about the evil decadent West and firing questions at you, most people won't go with the internet tough guy route, and say either what the other guy wants to hear or less provocative.
No, the leader who couldn't control his own damn military was willing to sit down and talk.
Meanwhile the military was marching to war regardless of the fate of the one on the surface. The general lady repeatedly tried to execute the humans, refused to negociate, murdered the scientist guy (her own people) and was ready to stage a coup.
The negociations were essentially between two civilians with no political clout and a head of state with no ability to control his people.
You do realise that military plotted their coup behind the Doctor's back right? That in the previous encounter between the Civilian leader and the military general the Elder Silurian had prevailed. As of the moment the Doctor was opening negotiations the Silurians were being represented by their highest authority.
Like I said before, if the Doctor somehow knew she was plotting a coup people would be pointing out the huge plot hole of why he didn't do anything about it. Of course if he didn't know anything about it people would be pointing out an apparent plot hole of why he negotiated through a leader which can't control his military when it was going to be sabotaged anyway. What do you guys expect the Doctor to have the God Emperor of Dune's prescient ability or something?
I do remember the family of blood, however most of those were imprisonment, and the mother was pretty much executed in a black hole (albeit the death will seem to drag out).
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