Doctor confronts Dalek genocide plan
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Dalek reveals that their survival necessitates the deaths of the Thals, leading the Doctor to question their destructive motives and propose coexistence. The Dalek dismisses the Doctor's plea, asserting that only one race can prevail.
The Doctor demands to know the Daleks' plan, prompting them to reveal their intent to irradiate Skaro using a waste radiation ejector capsule, ensuring only Daleks can survive. The Doctor protests the genocidal nature of this plan, but the Dalek confirms their intention to proceed immediately.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Chillingly indifferent; its lack of empathy is not a flaw but a feature of its design. The Dalek’s 'emotional state' is one of absolute certainty in its mission, untouched by moral conflict or compassion.
The Dalek looms as the unyielding architect of genocide, its mechanical voice dripping with cold finality. It stands as the embodiment of Dalek supremacy, directing the conversation with clinical precision, revealing the plan to irradiate Skaro’s atmosphere while dismissing the Doctor’s moral appeals. Its physical dominance—towering over the restrained captives—reinforces its ideological authority. The Dalek’s dialogue is sparse but devastating, each word a hammer blow to the Doctor’s hopes for coexistence. Its declaration of 'Now' is the ultimate expression of its ruthless efficiency, leaving no room for negotiation or delay.
- • To execute the immediate irradiation of Skaro’s atmosphere to ensure Dalek survival and Thal extermination.
- • To crush the Doctor’s moral arguments with unassailable logic, reinforcing Dalek supremacy.
- • Coexistence with other species is impossible and undesirable; only Dalek survival matters.
- • Moral pleas are irrelevant—efficiency and dominance are the only valid metrics for action.
A volatile mix of horror, exasperation, and moral fury. The Doctor’s emotional state is one of rising panic—not for himself, but for the Thals and the irreversible damage about to be unleashed. His outrage is tinged with helplessness, as his usual tools (reason, diplomacy, technology) are rendered useless against the Dalek’s ideology.
The Doctor is physically restrained but intellectually and emotionally combative, his voice rising in horror and exasperation as the Dalek’s plan unfolds. His body language—struggling against his bonds, leaning forward as if to physically intervene—contrasts with his verbal appeals, which grow increasingly desperate. The Doctor’s dialogue shifts from reasoned argument ('Can't you use your brains for right?') to outright moral condemnation ('This senseless, evil killing'), revealing his frustration at the Dalek’s intransigence. His demand for a timeline ('When do you intend to put this into operation?') is a last-ditch effort to buy time, but the Dalek’s response ('Now') shatters any remaining hope.
- • To delay or halt the Daleks’ genocidal plan through moral or logical argument.
- • To extract information about the timeline of the irradiation, hoping to find a weakness or opportunity to intervene.
- • All life has inherent value, and coexistence is not only possible but necessary for survival.
- • The Daleks’ ideology is not just wrong but actively evil, and must be opposed at all costs.
Terrified and horrified, but her fear is secondary to her shared moral outrage with the Doctor. Susan’s emotional state is one of paralyzed witness—she cannot act, but her presence as a victim of the Daleks’ cruelty adds emotional weight to the Doctor’s pleas.
Susan is physically restrained alongside the Doctor, her silence speaking volumes. Her wide-eyed gaze and tense posture betray her fear and distress, though she does not speak. As the Dalek outlines its plan, Susan’s body language tightens—her fingers clutching at her bonds, her breath shallow. She is a passive but deeply affected witness to the Dalek’s genocidal declaration, her presence amplifying the stakes. While she does not engage in dialogue, her visible reaction underscores the moral weight of the moment and the Doctor’s urgency to act.
- • To survive the immediate threat and escape the Daleks’ control.
- • To support the Doctor’s efforts, even if only through her silent solidarity.
- • The Daleks’ actions are monstrous and must be stopped, but she lacks the Doctor’s experience or tools to intervene directly.
- • The Thals’ fate is deeply personal to her, as she has formed bonds with them during their shared struggles.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The ejector capsule is the Daleks’ instrument of mass destruction, central to their plan to irradiate Skaro. Referenced directly by the Dalek as the device that will 'subject [the oxygen distributors] to waste radiation,' the capsule is the tangible embodiment of the Daleks’ genocidal intent. Its activation is framed as immediate ('Now'), leaving no time for intervention. The Doctor’s lack of dialogue about the capsule itself—only his horrified reaction to its purpose—highlights its role as an inescapable force of annihilation. The capsule’s involvement in this event is purely functional but devastating, serving as the catalyst for the Thals’ doom and the Doctor’s moral crisis.
The oxygen distributors are the critical target of the Daleks’ genocidal plan, serving as the mechanism through which waste radiation will be dispersed into Skaro’s atmosphere. Mentioned by the Dalek as the 'oxygen distributors' that will be 'subjected to waste radiation by the ejector capsule,' these objects are not physically present in the Control Room but are the linchpin of the Daleks’ strategy. Their destruction is framed as inevitable, ensuring the Thals’ extermination while allowing the Daleks—adapted to radiation—to survive. The Doctor’s horrified reaction ('Nothing can live outside if you do that. Nothing.') underscores the oxygen distributors’ role as the silent victims of Dalek efficiency, their function twisted from life-giving to life-ending.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Dalek Control Room is the nerve center of Skaro’s genocide, a sterile and oppressive space where the Daleks’ ideology is enforced with clinical precision. In this event, the Control Room serves as the stage for the Daleks’ genocidal declaration, its humming consoles and flashing alarms underscoring the urgency and finality of their plan. The Doctor and Susan, restrained against the walls, are physically and psychologically dominated by the Daleks’ presence, their helplessness amplified by the room’s institutional authority. The location’s atmosphere is one of cold efficiency, where moral arguments are dismissed and lives are measured in seconds. The Control Room’s role in this event is twofold: it is both the command hub for the Daleks’ actions and the prison for their captives, symbolizing the irreconcilable conflict between ideology and morality.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Living Thals are the indirect but critical victims of this event, their fate sealed by the Daleks’ genocidal declaration. Though not physically present in the Control Room, their existence is the catalyst for the Daleks’ plan and the Doctor’s moral outrage. The Thals’ role in this event is as the silent, doomed beneficiaries of the Doctor’s intervention—his pleas for coexistence are made on their behalf, and his horror at the Daleks’ plan is a proxy for their impending suffering. The organization’s power dynamics in this moment are one of vulnerability: they are entirely at the mercy of the Daleks’ technology and the Doctor’s ability to intervene. Their goals, though unspoken, are survival and reclaiming their home, but these are directly threatened by the Daleks’ actions. The Thals’ influence mechanisms in this event are limited to their symbolic presence as the moral stakes of the conflict.
The Dalek Species is the driving force behind this event, its collective will manifested through Dalek 1’s declarations. The organization’s genocidal plan—irradiating Skaro’s atmosphere to exterminate the Thals—is revealed with chilling efficiency, framed as an inevitable outcome of Dalek supremacy. The Daleks’ active representation in this event is through Dalek 1’s dialogue and the Control Room’s operational readiness, where the ejector capsule stands as a symbol of their technological dominance. Their power dynamics are absolute: the Daleks dictate the terms of survival, dismissing the Doctor’s moral arguments as irrelevant. The organizational goals at this moment are clear: ensure Dalek survival at any cost, and eliminate the Thals as a competing species. Their influence mechanisms are twofold—technological (the ejector capsule) and ideological (the unassailable logic of their supremacy).
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Daleks' plan to irradiate Skaro (beat_83729ae0d05396e1) leads the Doctor to desperately attempt to stall them by revealing his ability to travel through space and time (beat_0e94cfd605f5115e), hoping to change their minds."
Doctor gambles TARDIS to stall Dalek radiation"The Daleks' plan to irradiate Skaro (beat_83729ae0d05396e1) leads the Doctor to desperately attempt to stall them by revealing his ability to travel through space and time (beat_0e94cfd605f5115e), hoping to change their minds."
Doctor’s bargain collapses under Dalek logic"The Daleks' plan to irradiate Skaro (beat_83729ae0d05396e1) leads the Doctor to desperately attempt to stall them by revealing his ability to travel through space and time (beat_0e94cfd605f5115e), hoping to change their minds."
Doctor bargains with Daleks as Thals attackThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR: You could live in the city and the others could. But why do you have to destroy? Can't you use your brains for right?"
"DALEK: Only one race can survive."
"DOCTOR: This senseless, evil killing."