Deletion
Other types of deletion exists, primarily the act of deleting files on a computer. This article should cover the different types of deletion.
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Deletion was a term used by numerous types of Cybermen, most notably those from Pete's World, to refer to the act of killing all lifeforms that they deemed incompatible with cyber-conversion. Those deemed incompatible included "rogue elements" who refused cyber-conversion, (TV: Rise of the Cybermen) and "hostile elements" who threatened the Cybermen. (TV: Doomsday)
The primary instruments of deletion were projectile weaponry such as the Cyber wrist blaster or energy blasters, (TV: Army of Ghosts/Doomsday) and, at least with regards to the Cybermen of Cybus Industries, the Cyber-hands of Cyber-bodies, which were capable of transmitting a fatal electric shock to humans, (TV: Rise of the Cybermen/The Age of Steel)
Deletion was similar to the creed of extermination followed by the Daleks, who the Cybus Cybermen engaged during the Battle of Canary Wharf. Like the Daleks, it was known for the Cybermen to exclaim "Delete!" before attacking. (TV: Doomsday) The same phrase was exclaimed in the same manner by the Cybermen of the Cyber-Mainframe, (AUDIO: Master of Worlds) although they sometimes used the phrase "Engage!" instead. (AUDIO: Code Silver)
History[[edit] | [edit source]]
In "Pete's World", the first known victim of deletion was Dr Kendrick, a scientist in the employ of John Lumic, CEO of Cybus Industries and inventor of the Cybus Cybermen, that oversaw the creation and testing of a prototype Cyberman in 2007. When Kendrick informed Lumic that Geneva needed to be informed of its creation, Lumic gave his first Cyberman the order to kill him, which it promptly carried out.
Following the orders of John Lumic, a group of newly upgraded Cybermen "crash[ed]" the 40th birthday party of Jackie Tyler where he, speaking from Battersea Power Station, introduced them to the assembled guests, among them the President of Great Britain, before leaving the party in the "care" of the Cybermen. When the President refused the compulsory upgrade program, the Cybermen deemed him to be incompatible and so used their electrified Cyber-hands to "delete" him and the majority of the party guests. (TV: Rise of the Cybermen) As a result, according to Jake Simmonds, the government was "wiped out" by the deletions which left Lumic in charge. While Pete Tyler escaped with the Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler of N-Space, Jackie was captured and, eventually, upgraded into a Cyberman.
Mr Crane, originally Lumic's subordinate, was deleted by the Cybermen for making an attempt on Lumic's life. Elsewhere in London, Ricky Smith and Angela Price of the Preachers were separately deleted by the Cybermen. (TV: The Age of Steel)
Commandeering Torchwood Tower in N-Space, the Cybermen led by Cyber-Leader One used their Cyber wrist blasters to kill the two operators of the Ghost Shift, which the Cybermen then used to transport the full force of five million Cybermen from their parallel Earth to the Earth of N-Space. (TV: Army of Ghosts) Though the Cyber-Leader ordered the surrender of the human race, the Cybermen were engaged by human armed forces such as the British Army in London, leading to the deletion of soldiers at the hands of the Cybermen.
When Dalek Thay, a representative of the Cult of Skaro, denied the Cybermen's proposal for an alliance, Cyber-Units Ten-Six-Five and Ten-Six-Six decreed that "hostile elements will be deleted", proceeding to open fire upon the Dalek. However, it became apparent that their firepower had no effect on the Daleks, and the two Cybermen were immediately exterminated. Soon after, the Cybermen, in a collaboration with the Preachers and using energy blasters modified by the Tenth Doctor, were able to temporarily impair the Daleks' casings, but were still unable to kill them, even when they joined with both the Preachers and Torchwood One's soldiers in a combined assault upon the Cult of Skaro, that became known as the Battle of Canary Wharf. (TV: Doomsday)
Lisa Hallett, who was partially converted at the Torchwood Tower, attempted to delete the Torchwood Cardiff team. Ultimately, she only managed to electrocute Jack Harkness twice; as an immortal, Jack survived both of the successive, otherwise fatal injuries, noting that he was "not so easily deleted." (TV: Cyberwoman)
In 1851, survivors of the Battle of Canary Wharf, having found a human family with infostamps, deleted Caroline Lake. They then pursued and attempted to delete Jackson Lake, who assumed the identity of the Doctor. He was, however, defended by the Tenth Doctor, who asserted his identity to the Doctor before Jackson used an infostamp to destroy them. Jackson later determined that the Cybermen were responsible for the murder of the Reverend Aubrey Fairchild, whose body was found with burns to the forehead in an apparent electrocution. As it turned out, his deletion was executed to gather London workhouse managers, Misters Scoones, Cole, Fetch and Milligan, at his funeral where they could be converted into drones by the Cybermen. All the other men in attendance, including the Vicar, were deleted.
The four men were made to gather orphans to complete the CyberKing. They were then terminated by Mercy Hartigan, the Cybermen's human accomplice when they were of no further use. Mercy was intergrated into the CyberKing, using her newfound power to usurp and destroy the Cyber-Lord. When the children's work was done, the Cybermen ordered for their deletion, but they were saved by the Doctor, Jackson and Rosita. In a demonstration of the dreadnought's power, Mercy had the CyberKing fire indiscriminantly upon the city of London. Ultimately, however, the CyberKing was destroyed by the Doctor. (TV: The Next Doctor)
Within the underhenge in 102, a Cyber-Leader warned that the cracks in time would result in the deletion of "all universes". (TV: The Pandorica Opens)
In the far future, driven by Ashad's hatred of organic life, the Cybermen abandoned their goal of upgrading humanity in favour of genocide with Ashad's Cyberguards proclaiming that "All humans will be deleted". (TV: Ascension of the Cybermen)
Other types of deletion[[edit] | [edit source]]
Deletion also applied to computing.
History[[edit] | [edit source]]
After the defeat of the Slitheen family on 7 March 2006, Mickey Smith (TV: World War Three [+]Loading...["World War Three (TV story)"]) wrote on his website the morning after, confessing that he had "been in two minds" recently, finding himself doubting the evidence, facts, and secrets he uncovered, upon rewatching it, although he was reassured by the emails he received, even though he sometimes deleted them, knowing vaguely what was in them. (PROSE: Hoax This! [+]Loading...["Hoax This! (short story)"])
On Christmas Day in approximately the 2000s,[nb 1] President Barack Obama gave a speech at the White House regarding a "financial solution" to the recession. Following the creation of the "Master Race", Obama and every other human on the planet took the form of the Saxon Master, who subsequently declared the financial solution "deleted". (TV: The End of Time [+]Loading...["The End of Time (TV story)"])
Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- ↑ Both Planet of the Dead and The End of Time are referred to in dialogue as taking place after the end of Journey's End, which is set in either 2008, according to TV: The Fires of Pompeii, TV: The Waters of Mars, and AUDIO: SOS, or six weeks after the middle of May 2009, circa June, according to PROSE: Beautiful Chaos. However, the year of The End of Time is unspecified, as is whether or not it is intended to be the Christmas immediately after Journey's End.