bilateralrope wrote: ↑2021-09-21 03:32am
How much were the clones designed to work with the Jedi ?
The extermination of the Jedi was the plan from the start. So the clones needed to draw the Jedi into fighting alongside them so that they would be surrounded when Order 66 was declared.
Which also gets into the one thing the biochips allow that indoctrination does not: The biochips can mean that the clones like the Jedi and still reliably carry out Order 66. So no risk of the Jedi sensing an emotion that makes them suspicious.
Ah, but I think the clones being hateful, irredeemable war criminals would be EXACTLY what draws the Jedi in. The Jedi are not generals, they are peacekeepers. If the clones are easygoing guys who try to do the right thing even if it costs them, then what is the impetus for the Jedi to take command? The clones will fight a good war on their own. The Jedi have no special abilities that makes it NECESSARY for them to be generals, in a perfect galaxy they would take part in the war only by individual choice, and probably by going off to do their own missions, not leading clunky armies.
Instead, they're offered a choice. If they don't take the helm of this army of professional killers, then men like Tarkin will, men who will unleash the clones completely. The good are forced to do bad things because if they don't, then someone without morals will. The Jedi believe they can do better, so it is their moral responsibility to take command even though they would prefer to do their own thing. This ensures that it isn't just a handful of Jedi who prefer to lead men--it guilts all of them into leaving their comfort zone. It forces the Council to demand all Jedi lead armies, to try and limit the horror.
And when the Jedi grow accustomed to sensing nothing but malice surrounding them at all times, what will it do to them? Turn them dark? Mission accomplished. Drive them insane? Good, you can execute them earlier. Or just numb them to the tremendous evil surrounding them? Also good, helps keep Sidious and the Dark Jedi hidden.
Darth Yan wrote: ↑2021-09-21 03:36am
Except you're basing it on a flawed premise.
1.) Certain Jedi are stated to have strong relationships with their clones in the movies and EU (Ki Adi Mundi and Bacara, Obi Wan and Cody, Ahsoka and Rex, Plo Koon and his clones, Yoda and his clones) so you're already using your own head canon and assuming how certain things MUST be that way.
We really only see things from the perspective of the Jedi and a small handful of clones. It is entirely possible that those men are not representative of the rest of the army. Bringing up Bacara is a little strange since essentially the only time we see him is gunning down Mundi without hesitation. Plo Koon might have fallen to the Dark Side based on later episodes of the Clone Wars, and a dark Jedi would probably be well appreciated by the troopers. And the show is also pretty fucking stupid, so I think it's pretty reasonable to not hold to what it thinks would happen. They really had a tendency to take an interesting setup and turn it into the exact same thing as we always get. How does a space invasion of an entire hostile WORLD work? Huh, EXACTLY like D-day except smaller.
2.) Also you ignore that the Jedi are a lot more than "insufferable". Many (Plo Koon, Yoda, Obi Wan) are fairly easy going and humble rather than insufferable assholes.
That's a bit of a good point, but try to view it from the clones' side. Episode 1, when Yoda and a couple of clones crash land and have to fight off a large number of droids. Yoda explains to the clones that they are very different in the Force, treating them like children. That would piss me the hell OFF. Obviously they know they're all different! They all gave each other names, which makes no sense if you can't tell each other apart! Yoda is imparting a lesson in wisdom that is obvious to these clones, if anything he should be learning from them. The well-meaning attitude just makes it worse.
3.) Certain Jedi (Yoda, Mace Windu, Kenobi, Plo Koon, Obi Wan Kenobi) also show actual tactical ability and competence without just going to the dark side so again you're injecting your headcanon.
You assume things MUST be a certain way.
Mace Windu practiced Vaapad and famously skirted the dark side, so I would expect him to be one who could become a soldier without becoming a Dark Jedi. Probably one of the survivors, for a couple of reasons. He might be popular enough among enough of his men to get forewarning before the execution, or he might be on the no-kill list of Dark Jedi. Probably not intentionally for the second one, since he is a Council Master and so probably too dangerous to be left alive, like Plo Koon.
When Star Wars gives us rules for what the Dark Side is, and then shows a Jedi doing those things, but doesn't give them yellow eyes or play the Imperial March or make his face visibly shadowed, do we have to say "well gee, that sure was evil, but if I don't hear that Emperor throat singing then I guess it was righteous!" Dropping a building full of slavers who might surrender and be prosecuted under Republic legal systems into a volcano to die a horrible death is
evil. It is the practical decision, obviously, but being a Jedi does not mean making practical decisions. That is how the horror of war turns them dark.
You think that the clones are mindless robots who would just choose to follow orders rather than thinking feeling creatures capable of evolving and reacting to stimuli and positive experience (Generals who treat them like people rather than cheap cannon fodder), and that Jedi are just arrogant insufferable assholes with no clue what they're doing.
Yes, I do think that, because that is what the fuck HUMANS DO! I keep going back to the Nazi example, but don't call Godwin's Law on me because Star Wars is pretty obviously about Nazis. There were heroes in Germany who sheltered Jews and disobeyed the Reich, but they were a minority. Most of the Heer did exactly that: when they were ordered through the proper channels, by the supreme command of the Reich, they went out and shot the Jews. They did what they knew was wrong, in a manner we would call robotic. They did not do it because they were mind controlled, but because we all have within us the potential to commit horror if properly prompted.
Heck as Bilateralrope pointed out the clones would have alerted the Jedi if they hated them. The Jedi would have been on guard and that is the last thing Palpy wanted.
A moment of hate after years of camaraderie would stand out, yes. But if the Jedi had only known hate for the years of commanding an army they felt morally obligated to lead, they probably would have just gotten used to the new status quo. When the time came for the clones to kill them all, there would have been nothing different from normal. The Jedi would have been used to the clones hating them and assumed it was for all the obvious reasons: the clones want to commit war crimes, the Jedi won't let them.
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