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Natter, Repair Dont Respond, and moved a few to headscratchers.


* Clara and Ashildr/Me seem to have been together long eough, learning to fly an unfamiliar layout of [=TARDIS=] console, finding the Doctor's [=TARDIS=], and making sure he's okay and gets back to it safely, that Clara is able to tell that she doesn't seem to be aging. That would make it at least a few ''years'' since she was extracted from her last moments! One can't help but wonder what adventures they've already had together.
** The Doctor ''did'' say he'd backed the new TARDIS up a bit before he picked up Clara, so presumably the ladies could do the same to get some practice in before they dropped the Doctor and his TARDIS off in Utah.
* The Doctor's TARDIS leaves Rigsy's artwork behind when he leaves Utah. Yet it's clearly possible for the police box to move ''with'' the artwork: we know you can't put one TARDIS into another without causing a RecursiveReality snafu, so one of the ladies must've flown it to Utah. And the Doctor himself still feels Clara's absence, so probably wouldn't choose to destroy Rigsy's beautiful tribute graffiti. But there's a third woman in his life, who understands he needs to move on: Sexy! The TARDIS herself has seen countless companions come and go, and knows that the only cure for missing one is to set aside mournful reminders and get him back to traveling and feeling his old self. Which rather implies that the new sonic screwdriver was ''her'' idea, not Clara's.
** The Recursive Reality snafu may only come up in one TARDIS materializes inside another. Not necessarily if an active TARDIS materializes '' '''around''' '' an inactive one. Also, the Recursive Reality came up once in "The Keepers of Traken" and was caused by The Master, who may have done it on purpose, and again in "Time/Space" when the TARDIS materialized inside itself, which The Doctor says it isn't supposed to do, ever.

to:

* Clara and Ashildr/Me seem to have been together long eough, enough, learning to fly an unfamiliar layout of [=TARDIS=] console, finding the Doctor's [=TARDIS=], and making sure he's okay and gets back to it safely, that Clara is able to tell that she doesn't seem to be aging. That would make it at least a few ''years'' since she was extracted from her last moments! moments. One can't help but wonder what adventures they've already had together.
** The Doctor ''did'' say he'd backed the new TARDIS up a bit before he picked up Clara, so presumably the ladies could do the same to get some practice in before they dropped the Doctor and his TARDIS off in Utah.
* The Doctor's TARDIS leaves Rigsy's artwork behind when he leaves Utah. Yet it's clearly possible for the police box to move ''with'' the artwork: we know you can't put one TARDIS into another without causing a RecursiveReality snafu, so one of the ladies must've flown it to Utah. And the Doctor himself still feels Clara's absence, so probably wouldn't choose to destroy Rigsy's beautiful tribute graffiti. But there's a third woman in his life, who understands he needs to move on: Sexy! The TARDIS herself has seen countless companions come and go, and knows that the only cure for missing one is to set aside mournful reminders and get him back to traveling and feeling his old self. Which rather implies that the new sonic screwdriver was ''her'' idea, not Clara's.
** The Recursive Reality snafu may only come up in one TARDIS materializes inside another. Not necessarily if an active TARDIS materializes '' '''around''' '' an inactive one. Also, the Recursive Reality came up once in "The Keepers of Traken" and was caused by The Master, who may have done it on purpose, and again in "Time/Space" when the TARDIS materialized inside itself, which The Doctor says it isn't supposed to do, ever.
together.



* Who's to say the exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council won't attempt to take revenge on the Doctor in the future?
** Who's to say that exiling them isn't something the Doctor did, because he knew he'd end up ''doing something much worse'' to them if he didn't get them out of his sight as quickly as possible?
* Back in The Woman Who Lived, The Doctor was adamant that Me shouldn't travel with him, as Immortals need to be grounded by contact with shorter lived beings who experience life more fully. Now Me's in a TARDIS, with a time-looped copy of Clara who's apparently not actually aging... and they're taking "the long way" back to Gallifrey. This could go horribly horribly wrong.
** Shorter-lived beings are better companions for immortals because their constant awareness of their own deaths' inevitability keeps them appreciative of life. Clara may be capable of ''existing'' in perpetuity, but she can't forget about her own mortality so long as she has no pulse and there's a triple zero on the back of her neck. Hopefully, that'll be enough to keep them ''both'' grounded; if not, they can always pick up another companion somewhere once Clara starts feeling the centuries build up.

to:

* Who's to say the exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council won't attempt to take revenge on the Doctor in the future?
**
future? Who's to say that exiling them isn't something the Doctor did, because he knew he'd end up ''doing something much worse'' to them if he didn't get them out of his sight as quickly as possible?
* Back in The Woman Who Lived, The Doctor was adamant that Me shouldn't travel with him, as Immortals need to be grounded by contact with shorter lived beings who experience life more fully. Now Me's in a TARDIS, with a time-looped copy of Clara who's apparently not actually aging... and they're taking "the long way" back to Gallifrey. This could go horribly horribly wrong.
** Shorter-lived beings are better companions for immortals because their constant awareness of their own deaths' inevitability keeps them appreciative of life. Clara may be capable of ''existing'' in perpetuity, but she can't forget about her own mortality so long as she has no pulse and there's a triple zero on the back of her neck. Hopefully, that'll be enough to keep them ''both'' grounded; if not, they can always pick up another companion somewhere once Clara starts feeling the centuries build up.



* If the Mire medical kits are so powerful that one was able to keep Ashildr alive until the ''End of the Universe'', why aren't the Mire invincible warriors who have conquered all of reality already? Alternatively, why hasn't the technology that makes living beings immortal been used by other races, who had all of the time in the Universe to figure it out?
** I think the implication is that the Mire tech only rendered Ashildr immortal because it's built as a healing unit for the Mire, and once adapted to humans is incredibly overpowered by comparison.
** The Doctor explicitly tells Ashildr in "The Woman Who Lived" that living life as an outlaw was dangerous because if she took enough damage she could still die. Her response is that she's just that good due to how long she's had to hone her skills. In the same episode, the second kit is used to save the life of Sam Swift, but the Doctor says its possible the way it was used there burned it out. Since we never see Sam again, we have to assume he was right on that count. Also, the Mire probably don't want to be immortal themselves. The tech was built to heal them in battle, much like the nanogenes from "The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances". Applied to its original species, it has limits. Applied to a species it was never designed for, under circumstances that it was never meant to be used under, the results are a bit different.
** The Mire are warriors who likely go into dangerous situations a lot more often than Ashildr/Me, meaning they get hurt beyond the abilities of the medkit to repair.
*** They're also regularly confronted by weapons that are fully capable of disintegrating a body instantly. Ashildr spent her first several centuries coping with only medieval-level weaponry, which gave her enough practice at tactics to be prepared when more physically-devastating weapons were invented on Earth. But even she probably avoids them a lot more than she used to.

to:

* If
On
the Mire medical kits are so powerful that one was able to keep Ashildr alive until the ''End of the Universe'', why aren't the Mire invincible warriors who have conquered all of reality already? Alternatively, why hasn't the technology that makes living beings immortal been used by other races, who had all of the time in the Universe to figure it out?
** I think the implication is that the Mire tech only rendered Ashildr immortal because it's built as a healing unit for the Mire, and once adapted to humans is incredibly overpowered by comparison.
** The Doctor explicitly tells Ashildr in "The Woman Who Lived" that living life as an outlaw was dangerous because if she took enough damage she could still die. Her response is that she's just that good due to how long she's had to hone her skills. In the same episode, the second kit is used to save the life of Sam Swift, but the Doctor says its possible the way it was used there burned it out. Since we never see Sam again, we have to assume he was right on that count. Also, the Mire probably don't want to be immortal themselves. The tech was built to heal them in battle, much like the nanogenes from "The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances". Applied to its original species, it has limits. Applied to a species it was never designed for, under circumstances that it was never meant to be used under, the results are a bit different.
** The Mire are warriors who likely go into dangerous situations a lot more often than Ashildr/Me, meaning they get hurt beyond the abilities of the medkit to repair.
*** They're also regularly confronted by weapons that are fully capable of disintegrating a body instantly. Ashildr spent her first several centuries coping with only medieval-level weaponry, which gave her enough practice at tactics to be prepared when more physically-devastating weapons were invented on Earth. But even she probably avoids them a lot more than she used to.
[[Headscratchers/DoctorWhoSeries9 headscratchers]] page.
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* The Doctor wishes the General good luck just before he shoots the man. He/she regenerates into a woman, and is relieved. Considering the War Doctor would've worked closely with the General, and the Time War probably cost the General a regeneration or two, Twelve probably ''knew'' that the General preferred being female, so was wishing him luck that his gender would change.
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*** They're also regularly confronted by weapons that are fully capable of disintegrating a body instantly. Ashildr spent her first several centuries coping with only medieval-level weaponry, which gave her enough practice at tactics to be prepared when more physically-devastating weapons were invented on Earth.

to:

*** They're also regularly confronted by weapons that are fully capable of disintegrating a body instantly. Ashildr spent her first several centuries coping with only medieval-level weaponry, which gave her enough practice at tactics to be prepared when more physically-devastating weapons were invented on Earth. But even she probably avoids them a lot more than she used to.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** The Mire are warriors who likely go into dangerous situations a lot more often than Ashildr/Me, meaning they get hurt beyond the abilities of the medkit to repair.

to:

** The Mire are warriors who likely go into dangerous situations a lot more often than Ashildr/Me, meaning they get hurt beyond the abilities of the medkit to repair.repair.
*** They're also regularly confronted by weapons that are fully capable of disintegrating a body instantly. Ashildr spent her first several centuries coping with only medieval-level weaponry, which gave her enough practice at tactics to be prepared when more physically-devastating weapons were invented on Earth.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** Who's to say that exiling them isn't something the Doctor did, because he knew he'd end up ''doing something much worse'' to them if he didn't get them out of his sight as quickly as possible?
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The Doctor's TARDIS leaves Rigsy's artwork behind when he leaves Utah. Yet it's clearly possible for the police box to move ''with'' the artwork: we know you can't put one TARDIS into another without causing a RecursiveReality snafu, so one of the ladies must've flown it to Utah. And the Doctor himself still feels Clara's absence, so probably wouldn't choose to destroy Rigsy's beautiful tribute graffiti. But there's a third woman in his life, who understands he needs to move on: Sexy! The TARDIS herself has seen countless companions come and go, and knows that the only cure for missing one is to set aside mournful reminders and get him back to traveling. Which rather implies that the new sonic screwdriver was ''her'' idea, not Clara's.

to:

* The Doctor's TARDIS leaves Rigsy's artwork behind when he leaves Utah. Yet it's clearly possible for the police box to move ''with'' the artwork: we know you can't put one TARDIS into another without causing a RecursiveReality snafu, so one of the ladies must've flown it to Utah. And the Doctor himself still feels Clara's absence, so probably wouldn't choose to destroy Rigsy's beautiful tribute graffiti. But there's a third woman in his life, who understands he needs to move on: Sexy! The TARDIS herself has seen countless companions come and go, and knows that the only cure for missing one is to set aside mournful reminders and get him back to traveling.traveling and feeling his old self. Which rather implies that the new sonic screwdriver was ''her'' idea, not Clara's.

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Changed: 277

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* Do [=TARDISes=] talk to each other? The Doctor has been back to Gallifrey several times in the series -- did Sexy tell other [=TARDISes=] how much fun it's been to steal a Time Lord and run away? Maybe the one he stole this time around saw it as a last chance for some fun?



** The Doctor explicitly tells Ashildr in "The Woman Who Lived" that living life as an outlaw was dangerous because if she took enough damage she could still die. Her response is that she's just that good due to how long she's had to hone her skills. In the same episode, the second kit is used to save the life of Sam Swift, but the Doctor says its possible the way it was used there burned it out. Since we never see Sam again, we have to assume he was right on that count. Also, the Mire probably don't want to be immortal themselves. The tech was built to heal them in battle, much like the nanogenes from "The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances". Applied to its original species, it has limits. Applied to a species it was never designed for, under circumstances that it was never meant to be used under, the results are a bit different.

to:

** The Doctor explicitly tells Ashildr in "The Woman Who Lived" that living life as an outlaw was dangerous because if she took enough damage she could still die. Her response is that she's just that good due to how long she's had to hone her skills. In the same episode, the second kit is used to save the life of Sam Swift, but the Doctor says its possible the way it was used there burned it out. Since we never see Sam again, we have to assume he was right on that count. Also, the Mire probably don't want to be immortal themselves. The tech was built to heal them in battle, much like the nanogenes from "The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances". Applied to its original species, it has limits. Applied to a species it was never designed for, under circumstances that it was never meant to be used under, the results are a bit different.different.
** The Mire are warriors who likely go into dangerous situations a lot more often than Ashildr/Me, meaning they get hurt beyond the abilities of the medkit to repair.

Changed: 430

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** The Recursive Reality snafu may only come up in one TARDIS materializes inside another. Not necessarily if an active TARDIS materializes '' '''around''' '' an inactive one. Also, the Recursive Reality came up once in "The Keepers of Traken" and was caused by The Master, who may have done it on purpose, and again in "Time/Space" when the TARDIS materialized inside itself, which The Doctor says it isn't supposed to do, ever.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** I think the implication is that the Mire tech only rendered Ashildr immortal because it's built as a healing unit for the Mire, and once adapted to humans is incredibly overpowered by comparison.

to:

** I think the implication is that the Mire tech only rendered Ashildr immortal because it's built as a healing unit for the Mire, and once adapted to humans is incredibly overpowered by comparison.comparison.
** The Doctor explicitly tells Ashildr in "The Woman Who Lived" that living life as an outlaw was dangerous because if she took enough damage she could still die. Her response is that she's just that good due to how long she's had to hone her skills. In the same episode, the second kit is used to save the life of Sam Swift, but the Doctor says its possible the way it was used there burned it out. Since we never see Sam again, we have to assume he was right on that count. Also, the Mire probably don't want to be immortal themselves. The tech was built to heal them in battle, much like the nanogenes from "The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances". Applied to its original species, it has limits. Applied to a species it was never designed for, under circumstances that it was never meant to be used under, the results are a bit different.

Added: 752

Changed: 214

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to:

** The Doctor ''did'' say he'd backed the new TARDIS up a bit before he picked up Clara, so presumably the ladies could do the same to get some practice in before they dropped the Doctor and his TARDIS off in Utah.
* The Doctor's TARDIS leaves Rigsy's artwork behind when he leaves Utah. Yet it's clearly possible for the police box to move ''with'' the artwork: we know you can't put one TARDIS into another without causing a RecursiveReality snafu, so one of the ladies must've flown it to Utah. And the Doctor himself still feels Clara's absence, so probably wouldn't choose to destroy Rigsy's beautiful tribute graffiti. But there's a third woman in his life, who understands he needs to move on: Sexy! The TARDIS herself has seen countless companions come and go, and knows that the only cure for missing one is to set aside mournful reminders and get him back to traveling. Which rather implies that the new sonic screwdriver was ''her'' idea, not Clara's.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None



to:

** Shorter-lived beings are better companions for immortals because their constant awareness of their own deaths' inevitability keeps them appreciative of life. Clara may be capable of ''existing'' in perpetuity, but she can't forget about her own mortality so long as she has no pulse and there's a triple zero on the back of her neck. Hopefully, that'll be enough to keep them ''both'' grounded; if not, they can always pick up another companion somewhere once Clara starts feeling the centuries build up.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* If the Mire medical kits are so powerful that one was able to keep Ashildr alive until the ''End of the Universe'', why aren't the Mire invincible warriors who have conquered all of the reality already? Alternatively, why haven't the technology that makes living beings immortal been used by other races, who had all of time in the Universe to figure it out?

to:

* If the Mire medical kits are so powerful that one was able to keep Ashildr alive until the ''End of the Universe'', why aren't the Mire invincible warriors who have conquered all of the reality already? Alternatively, why haven't hasn't the technology that makes living beings immortal been used by other races, who had all of the time in the Universe to figure it out?
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* As tragic as the Doctor's loss of [[spoiler: his memories of]] Clara may be, there's some Fridge Consolation in knowing that [[spoiler: he's get the chance to recognize her again one day, when ''the Curator'' meets her off-camera in "Day of the Doctor".]]

to:

* As tragic as the Doctor's loss of [[spoiler: his memories of]] Clara may be, there's some Fridge Consolation in knowing that [[spoiler: he's get he gets the chance to recognize her again one day, when ''the Curator'' meets her off-camera in "Day of the Doctor".]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* If the Mire medical kits are so powerful that one was able to keep Ashildr alive until the ''End of the Universe'', why aren't the Mire invincible warriors who have conquered all of the reality already? Alternatively, why haven't the technology that makes living beings immortal been used by other races, who had all of time in the Universe to figure it out?

to:

* If the Mire medical kits are so powerful that one was able to keep Ashildr alive until the ''End of the Universe'', why aren't the Mire invincible warriors who have conquered all of the reality already? Alternatively, why haven't the technology that makes living beings immortal been used by other races, who had all of time in the Universe to figure it out?out?
** I think the implication is that the Mire tech only rendered Ashildr immortal because it's built as a healing unit for the Mire, and once adapted to humans is incredibly overpowered by comparison.
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The Clara that told the Doctor which Tardis to take was definitely a splinter,otherwise she wouldn\'t have shown up when Clara jumped into the Doctor\'s time stream. Also, Tardises cannot travel back and forth along Gallifrey\'s timeline unless exceptions are being made because multiple Doctors are needed; his type 40 is not the same as the one Clara and Ashildr/Me are piloting.


* The brand new TARDIS has the classic interior, but the broken chameleon circuit and Clara is the one who pilots it. It looks like Clara from the prologue to "The Name of the Doctor" was not a splinter echo likes other Claras shown, but the original Clara who reset the exterior to its default shape and advised the First Doctor to steal "that one" because if would be more fun. By then the once brand new TARDIS was already quite ancient after untold number of years being used by Clara and Ashildr/Me and only after the Doctor tried to switch from the Police Box to another exterior did he notice that the Chameleon circuit was broken.

to:

* The brand new TARDIS has the classic interior, but the broken chameleon circuit and Clara is the one who pilots it. It looks like Clara from the prologue to "The Name of the Doctor" was not a splinter echo likes other Claras shown, but the original Clara who reset the exterior to its default shape and advised the First Doctor to steal "that one" because if would be more fun. By then the once brand new TARDIS was already quite ancient after untold number of years being used by Clara and Ashildr/Me and only after the Doctor tried to switch from the Police Box to another exterior did he notice that the Chameleon circuit was broken.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None



to:

* The brand new TARDIS has the classic interior, but the broken chameleon circuit and Clara is the one who pilots it. It looks like Clara from the prologue to "The Name of the Doctor" was not a splinter echo likes other Claras shown, but the original Clara who reset the exterior to its default shape and advised the First Doctor to steal "that one" because if would be more fun. By then the once brand new TARDIS was already quite ancient after untold number of years being used by Clara and Ashildr/Me and only after the Doctor tried to switch from the Police Box to another exterior did he notice that the Chameleon circuit was broken.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Back in The Woman Who Lived, The Doctor was adamant that Me shouldn't travel with him, as Immortals need to be grounded by contact with shorter lived beings who experience life more fully. Now Me's in a TARDIS, with a time-looped copy of Clara who's apparently not actually aging... and they're taking "the long way" back to Gallifrey. This could go horribly horribly wrong.

to:

* Back in The Woman Who Lived, The Doctor was adamant that Me shouldn't travel with him, as Immortals need to be grounded by contact with shorter lived beings who experience life more fully. Now Me's in a TARDIS, with a time-looped copy of Clara who's apparently not actually aging... and they're taking "the long way" back to Gallifrey. This could go horribly horribly wrong.wrong.

[[AC:FridgeLogic]]
* If the Mire medical kits are so powerful that one was able to keep Ashildr alive until the ''End of the Universe'', why aren't the Mire invincible warriors who have conquered all of the reality already? Alternatively, why haven't the technology that makes living beings immortal been used by other races, who had all of time in the Universe to figure it out?
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Who's to say the exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council won't attempt to take revenge on the Doctor in the future?

to:

* Who's to say the exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council won't attempt to take revenge on the Doctor in the future?future?
* Back in The Woman Who Lived, The Doctor was adamant that Me shouldn't travel with him, as Immortals need to be grounded by contact with shorter lived beings who experience life more fully. Now Me's in a TARDIS, with a time-looped copy of Clara who's apparently not actually aging... and they're taking "the long way" back to Gallifrey. This could go horribly horribly wrong.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Clara and Ashildr/Me seem to have been together long eough, learning to fly an unfamiliar model, finding the Doctor's [=TARDIS=] and making sure he's okay and gets back to it safely, that Clara is able to tell that she doesn't seem to be aging!

to:

* Clara and Ashildr/Me seem to have been together long eough, learning to fly an unfamiliar model, layout of [=TARDIS=] console, finding the Doctor's [=TARDIS=] [=TARDIS=], and making sure he's okay and gets back to it safely, that Clara is able to tell that she doesn't seem to be aging!
aging. That would make it at least a few ''years'' since she was extracted from her last moments! One can't help but wonder what adventures they've already had together.
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to:

* Clara and Ashildr/Me seem to have been together long eough, learning to fly an unfamiliar model, finding the Doctor's [=TARDIS=] and making sure he's okay and gets back to it safely, that Clara is able to tell that she doesn't seem to be aging!

Changed: 105

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* No wonder Type-40 [=TARDISes=] were retired. It doesn't take much to frazzle their Chameleon Circuits.
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* As tragic as the Doctor's loss of [[spoiler: his memories of]] Clara may be, there's some Fridge Consolation in knowing that [[spoiler: he's get the chance to remember who she is one day, when ''the Curator'' meets her off-camera in "Day of the Doctor".]]

to:

* As tragic as the Doctor's loss of [[spoiler: his memories of]] Clara may be, there's some Fridge Consolation in knowing that [[spoiler: he's get the chance to remember who she is recognize her again one day, when ''the Curator'' meets her off-camera in "Day of the Doctor".]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None



to:

* As tragic as the Doctor's loss of [[spoiler: his memories of]] Clara may be, there's some Fridge Consolation in knowing that [[spoiler: he's get the chance to remember who she is one day, when ''the Curator'' meets her off-camera in "Day of the Doctor".]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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to:

* A Fridge Moment of Awesome for the Simm-Master, who apparently ''did'' succeed in zapping Rassilon into his next regeneration. At least, that's the most logical reason in-Verse why Rassilon has become TheOtherDarrin.
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Making sure it makes sense.


* What makes exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council not to make revenge on Doctor in the future?

to:

* What makes Who's to say the exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council not won't attempt to make take revenge on the Doctor in the future?
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* What makes exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council to make revenge on Doctor?

to:

* What makes exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council not to make revenge on Doctor?Doctor in the future?
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* During Peter Davison's run, the Doctor was declared the President of Gallifrey. Peter Davison went on to have a daughter named Georgia, who David Tennant married -- so she could be considered the President's daughter and in a way the Doctor stole her....

to:

* During Peter Davison's run, the Doctor was declared the President of Gallifrey. Peter Davison went on to have a daughter named Georgia, who David Tennant married -- so she could be considered the President's daughter and in a way the Doctor stole her....her....

[[AC:FridgeHorror]]
* What makes exiled Rassilon and Time Lord High Council to make revenge on Doctor?
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[[AC:FridgeBrilliance]]
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* The [=TARDIS=] the Doctor and Clara stole has an old-style console room, much smaller than the console room of the Doctor's [=TARDIS=]. In a deleted scene from "Journey's End," we learned that a new [=TARDIS=] is grown, not manufactured. So, it makes sense that the Doctor's [=TARDIS=] is much larger because it's ''older'', and has thus been growing for longer.

to:

* The [=TARDIS=] the Doctor and Clara stole has an old-style console room, much smaller than the console room of the Doctor's [=TARDIS=]. In a deleted scene from "Journey's End," we learned that a new [=TARDIS=] is grown, not manufactured. So, it makes sense that the Doctor's [=TARDIS=] is much larger because it's ''older'', and has thus been growing for longer.longer.
* During Peter Davison's run, the Doctor was declared the President of Gallifrey. Peter Davison went on to have a daughter named Georgia, who David Tennant married -- so she could be considered the President's daughter and in a way the Doctor stole her....
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* The [=TARDIS=] the Doctor and Clara stole has an old-style console room, much smaller than the console room of the Doctor's [=TARDIS=]. In a deleted scene from "Journey's End," we learned that a new [=TARDIS=] is grown, not manufactured. So, it makes sense that the Doctor's [=TARDIS=] is much larger because it's ''older'', and has thus been growing for longer.

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