To be honest stop trying to debate him, make it for the audience...because as Mike, Connor and many older posters have said; only the retarded are left and they will never change their opinions about this matter.Max wrote:Is there a way to find out where someone is copying text from? There's no way that this is coming from a 23 year old who posts pictures of lolcats all day...
So play to the audience and reveal how much a fool he is.
Have him show two things.Let's just toss out all novelizations, fan fiction, apocrypha, and other such bullshit, shall we?
1. That Novelizations aren't an admission of losing. They are considered below the movies in terms of canon for Star Wars. If he cannot show this then he's lost anything of real ground because he is then going "My rules!!!!", which in any debate is all but conceding your position is higher.
2. Have him demonstrate what you've said is Fan fiction and/or apocrypha. Again not demonstrating this and using broad strokes is appealing to an audience. But this isn't two people speaking, this is written word where one can force the other to pony up. Burden of Proof is and should be enacted to get him to admit his weaker position or demonstrate that he is all bluster.
Again, have him demonstrate this. Enough with broad strokes have him put something of substance or keep needling him. He's the one who should be proving to everyone why ST has better ethics(or whatever, he cannot even demonstrate that). Not just brushing it away.And by famous, I meant obviously that those ethics were common with academics, not popcorn sucking zombies.
Heere again he is brushing away what he should be proving. He's doing nothing intelligent and the fact he posts lolcats is easy to see. Long winded diatribes are no sign of intelligence. Here, he should be proving, if he had any, why the Maquis are what he says they are. Instead you can easily demonstrate that for a fact the Federation ABANDONED their own citizens to a hostile power and in fact cooperate with the hostile power against said citizens. That is a gross and disgusting thought. Something one can easily show for the audience.The Maquis do not show a "failing" in humans, but rather a condition of human life. The Maquis plot had a complex socio-cultural message. You could write an essay on the topic, and I think that's really my point. The Maquis, compared to say the Rebel Alliance, brought a lot of threading, layering, and nuance to Star Trek's plot. The Rebels in Star Wars, are merely the "good guys" fighting against the "bad guys." Their reasons were obvious. You didn't have to think about it. It was a convenient and necessary plot device.
Here demonstrate the Maquis are in fact Federation citizens abandoned by their government and then chased down by the self same government to appease a hostile power.As you stated-- the Maquis had multiple rivals-- the Federation, the Cardassian government, the Cardassian colonists, and ultimately the Dominion. The Maquis origins come from the already messy regional politics, and reaches further into the individual cultural differences between Bajor, the Federation, and Cardassia.
Again he needs to demonstrate this. Giving broad and loud strokes are for presidential debates and bad court room drama.As for Yoda's realization, this doesn't change the dualistic nature of Star Wars' most fundamental premise-- the good vs. evil dichotomy. This broken philosophy confines the story and the audience into rote archetypes. Will the hero turn evil? Who will win-- good or bad? It's as hackneyed as He-Man and Skeletor.
Again it's not apocrypha and the fact he acknowledges as such is demonstrating his level of knowledge of what is and is not canon. It's lower then movies or novels, but it does have an existence in canon.Now even though I said I wanted to cast aside all apocrypha, I think the only good example of Star Wars breaking out of this psychotic pattern was in the Jedi Outcast games. Kyle Katarn was able to use both "good" and "evil" Jedi powers, thus enabling him to defeat Desann. His padawans, Jaden and Rosh both flirt with the dark side, enabling them to also utilize both powers. But even in this instance, there is that cliched moment of choice where Jaden must choose to be good or evil. The only thing missing was Bob Barker asking what the actual retail price was.
Again, make him pony up that. He's been leading you around. Force him to either demonstrate proof or make concessions.Max wrote:I thought the novelization was canon, so wouldn't that be legit as part of an argument?