Think of it the other way - Thrawn only fingered C'baoth for his darksider cloning project. Why is this? He knew of the original C'baoth had the same egomaniac personality. If it was as simple as throwing any Jedi's genome into the vat, why stick with the problematic C'baoth? Consider the fact that perhaps C'baoth was uniquely adaptive to the process, and his genome and flash-imprint would yield successful results where others perhaps did not. Consider that Palpatine never directly duplicated one of his fallen underlings to replace them, but he did duplicate C'baoth.Darth Hoth wrote:I guess I am still influenced by Thrawn's ideas on cloning...
I do think it is partially connected to genetics. What I mean is if you created millions of Anakin Skywalker clones, each individual clone would not be anywhere near as potentially powerful (if at all) as the original Anakin Skywalker. My personal theory is that the Force blocks out this kind of "cheating."Darth Hoth wrote:Would that perhaps mean that Force sensitivity would be only partially transferred to a clone? That could perhaps tie into the idea that Palpatine's clone bodies degenerated faster than his original body, even before the sabotage; it "used up" some Force reserve of the body more quickly or whatnots.
Furthermore, I have my own theory regarding Palpatine's bodies. I think he was maxing out his old body, given how intensely it decayed him (apart from the ROTS lightening/alchemical mask failure damage). But once he had essentially unlimited clone bodies, he really cut loose in his power use and burnt out each successive one much faster as he had no reason to preserve them. Essentially, I think the clones served as both a bridge to quasi-immortality and to remove some of the physical personal constraints on his use of the Force.