Sorry dude, but if you don't apply science to the fiction then it's just pure fiction. The new Doctor Who seems to have a huge problem with this.
Star Trek TNG, the lord-god of all scifi, had NASA consultants on staff to make sure that the nuts and bolts of most of the plots were at least scientifically possible.
Now later spin-offs, particularly voyager... not so much and you'll notice their ratings suffered as a result.
2. Well yeah but that's my point. The way the 50th episode describes it, the planet is destroyed, but The Doctor knows it wasn't purely because of "The Moment" So how is bringing the planet back after the war any more positive than that adventure, in which essentially the planet was brought back after the war (the hard way). My point is, the planet wasn't destroyed, at least not by the logic of this new plan, and so what? The time Lords are still gonna be ---Deutsche Frankfurters---. I guess what I'm trying to say is that they made this big deal about "saving" the planet, when it's in exactly the same state as it already was. The Master shoved the time lords back into the time lock... that lock didn't disappear and thus all of Galifrey is already in a time lock.
I guess I'm a bit lost on how the planet was "destroyed" It was my understanding via the explanation at The End of Time that it wasn't, it was merely locked in space-time, at the moment before it's destruction which was as good as being destroyed. So isn't that how it is now? I mean they mention something about not including the daleks allowing them to destroy each other in the cross-fire... is that the difference?
3. Nope sorry, science fiction has to be based on science, not on magic and hoodoo nonsense... unless you are a Star Wars fan that is. Truth be told it's ok if the science doesn't exactly pan out, so long as it sounds like it will. In other words, when in doubt use complicated technical jargon.