Spiderman Fanboy wrote:Even if there was no death star, the rebels would have rebelled against the Galactic Empire. Aren't they terrorists because of that?
Anakin Skywalker's redemption had nothing whatsoever to do with the death star, maybe. Padme was trying to redeem Darth Vader on Mustafar, and she had no idea about the death star. Also, Darth Vader didn't like the death star. Although, the idea of the unsuited Hayden Christensen version of Darth Vader destroying Alderaan in ANH, in the hypothethical that he would've killed Obi Wan on Mustafar and then killed Sidious and becoming the Emperor himself sounds sort of interesting.
Please explain your last sentence a little bit better for me, dude.
How many civilians of the Galactic Republic had died during the Clone Wars?
Also, the Naboo Crisis had given Sidious his political status as the Chancellor. Not starting the Clone Wars.
And, besides, the transformation of the Galactic Republic into the Galactic Empire was no more evil than, per se, a real world analogy of the President violating the US constitution and taking a title of nobility unto himself.
Good question to start with. Terrorism is, IIRC commonly defined as using intimidation and the fear of violence to further one's (typically political) ends. In the Rebel/Empire conflict, which party seemed most likely to try and intimidate the common man into supporting them? Which side committed very public atrocities with the stated intention of cowing people?
Where precisely did this thread about the Death Star specifically as a vehicle for Anakin's redemption come from? As far as I can see, no one but you has mentioned it. I'm not trying to be a jackass, I genuinely have no idea what you're arguing against.
You said that Tarkin may have been being 'sneaky and sarcastic' when he said he would destroy Alderran, because Dantooine would make a poor demonstration of the Death Star's power. I asked if you thought he destroyed Alderran (and it's peaceful, unarmed population) just to make a point to one person. I cannot think of any way to interpret that scene that doesn't make the Empire look
worse if Tarkin has motives beyond his stated one.
Yes, Palpatine engineered the Naboo invasion to become Chancellor, and later expanded on that success, engineering the Clone War to become Emperor. What part of this is difficult to understand?
If the President in your analogy brutally slaughtered all the people tasked with preventing that specific circumstance (and in the case of the US, that would be the entire government and military. Debatably the populace too.) THEN made himself a hereditary autocrat, THEN instituted slavery and nuked, say, Los Angeles you might have a point. I think. But you're already arguing that if the US government got a lot more evil and autocratic, then the Empire wouldn't be more evil than the US government, which is a pretty silly thing to say in any case.