A fair enough point. I think many people also see Luke's "I will not fight you father" strategy in the final scenes of ROTJ as further evidence of Yoda's pacifist teaching, ignoring the fact that this is something Luke apparently improvised himself (Obi-Wan wanted Luke to kill Vader, and Yoda wanted Luke to "conquer Vader and his Emperor"). Essentially the "Yoda pacifism" theory is based on two lines ("never for attack" and "wars not make one great") and the fact that he doesn't carry a lightsaber in ESB.The Guid wrote:Yoda wasn't using pacifistic rhetoric everyone. Pacifism involves not even defending yourself because war is evil. The fact is that Yoda only ever uses the force for knowledge or defence - the specifics of the actions do not matter - he is attacked first.
It does not matter that goes to Palpatine to attack him. He is defending the Jedi Order and the Republic which has been attacked. Palpatine even tried to have him killed. If someone sent someone to kill me and my family and would do so again I would consider it self defence to go to him and shoot him myself.
I don't agree with the people who says he's a pacifist. I'm merely saying that he seems more anti-war in ESB, when he was clearly quite "into it" (he expressed misgivings a few times, but otherwise he wholeheartedly supported the war) in Episodes II and III. Yoda is an effective killer, and he may have trained Luke that way. Luke's own pacifistic actions were his own. I agree that people get a false impression via selective thinking and then apply it to the prequels (ie: either they deny events happening, or berate the prequels for "betraying" the characters of the OT).
It's sort of like the argument that the Jedi aren't soldiers because of Mace Windu's line in AOTC ("we're keepers of the peace, not soldiers") and the fact that they don't wear uniforms (not Clone uniforms or Imperial uniforms), despite the fact that they act like soldiers in the last two movies.