DaveJB wrote:Spiderman Fanboy wrote:They would have to blow up more planets in order to cow the population back in line? How many? And on what sort of scale? A few planets? Dozens of planets? Maybe even hundreds of planets? I want to know the scale of the Empire's possible evilness.
That's a complete red herring. We don't need to speculate on what would have happened after ROTJ had the Emperor lived and the DS2 not been destroyed (though for what it's worth, the Mon Calamari homeworld and every other world that either had openly aligned itself with the Rebels, or which Rebel leaders just happened to come from, would very quickly have gone kablooie), we can observe from the Empire's actions when it DID exist and conclude that it was evil.
Just to give you an example of how people who WERE loyal to the Empire were treated, Bevel Lemelisk (the head designer of the Death Star) got executed, resurrected and then executed again a dozen or so times in-between the destruction of the first Death Star and him coming up with a Death Star II design that Palpatine was happy with. Qwi Xux (who was the superlaser's main designer) was put in a training program with ten other young geniuses from her race, and told that only one would pass, and that everyone else would not only die, so would their
entire hometowns. And Captain Needa was not only force-choked to death, his entire family - none of whom had ever spoken a single bad word about the Empire - were all executed, just because he allowed the Millennium Falcon to escape in the asteroid field. All of these examples were personally authorised by Palpatine and/or Darth Vader.
So, with all that in mind, how the hell do you think the Empire treated those who showed even the slightest sign of disloyalty?
I, for one, do not base my opinions about "who are the good guys" and "who's the bad guys", on popular culture, the opinions of the fans, or even what the book/movie itself tells me who are the good guys or the bad guys. I interpret a storyline in a very non-biased way. I interpret it however I view the story and the events that happen within it.
Just because Darth Vader is a villian of pop culture and Luke Skywalker is a hero of pop culture, that doesn't mean anything either way to me.
I like indulging in hypotheticals, partially because hypothetical help me understand the non-hypothethicals, what really happened within the story, much better.
In the EU Essential Guide to Warfare, it was mentioned that the death star was preparing to go into hyperspace to destroy the mon calamari planet and chandrila, mon mothma's home planet. WOW! That would be awesome. The death star going into hyperspace. The death star in ANH went into hyperspace, but that happened behind the scenes. How else did it get to Yavin 4?
Anyways, the Empire destroying Chandrila and Mon Calamari would be very evil war crimes, definitely, because of the millions/billions civilians on there, not to mention destroying entire ecoystems. However, that's the purpose that the death star was built for. They were keeping terrorists, ie, people who were using violence for political reasons, in line. Ahh, they would blow up rebel worlds? Right. They wouldn't blow up peaceful non rebel words. Joseph Stalin was a paranoid schizophrenic, who killed millions of people just out of his paranoia of them, even if they were peaceful, in good standing, and law abiding citizens that had no connections to any rebel groups at all.
I think this whole discussion doesn't justify involve if the Empire/Sith is good or evil or not, but it also involves, "were the rebels/jedi really the good guys" or not. This thread is a discussion about all of those things.
And killing Captain Needa and his entire famiyl was definitely evil, OK, we can agree on that one. The Empire/Sith did many morally bankrupt things. But that doesn't justify the rebels. They were responding very harshly to terrorists (people