Spoiler
Make of that what you will.
Moderator: Vympel
Yeah, that's canon now thanks to that comic, but it's just so stupid, and inconsistent with the portrayl of Order 66 elsewhere...
Such a backup plan makes excellent sense in view of Palps's planning process, yeah.Reyvan wrote: ↑2020-05-10 12:52am I would guess that Palpatine didn't require the order to come from the Supreme Chancellor. The army was ordered 10 years before the Clone Wars. By the time the war started, Palpatine was in office past the end of his term. He might have allowed for the army to be triggered by anyone, just in case he wasn't in office by the time it was time for Order 66.
Sorry for the slow reply. Things are nuts.FaxModem1 wrote: ↑2020-04-25 02:41pm And how many times did the US forces just frag their Commander or someone in their platoon? Especially if it was someone they respected and admired?
See, you have this disconnect about what someone does to an 'enemy', and what someone does to someone you consider in your unit and friend. This is why firing squads are supposed to have one blank in among them, and were comprised of people who weren't in that unit. Because such actions destroyed morale and would be refused otherwise.
If they were so okay with fragging people they were friendly with, they would have had multiple cases of friendly fire, which would kind of put a hindrance to their whole effectiveness as soldiers. This is why they had that whole professionalism thing that required them training for years before deploying.
No problem about the slow reply. World outside is weird.Gandalf wrote: ↑2020-05-11 06:00pmSorry for the slow reply. Things are nuts.FaxModem1 wrote: ↑2020-04-25 02:41pm And how many times did the US forces just frag their Commander or someone in their platoon? Especially if it was someone they respected and admired?
See, you have this disconnect about what someone does to an 'enemy', and what someone does to someone you consider in your unit and friend. This is why firing squads are supposed to have one blank in among them, and were comprised of people who weren't in that unit. Because such actions destroyed morale and would be refused otherwise.
If they were so okay with fragging people they were friendly with, they would have had multiple cases of friendly fire, which would kind of put a hindrance to their whole effectiveness as soldiers. This is why they had that whole professionalism thing that required them training for years before deploying.
I thought fraggings represented a massive breakdown of order and morale? If so, their relevance is not readily apparent.
I get your point, even though I disagree. I wasn't really thinking of morale breakdown based killings, but ones where a superior orders someone to do a monstrous thing and people go "okay."FaxModem1 wrote: ↑No problem about the slow reply. World outside is weird.
That's my point. Clone morale would have to be in the toilet for them to be okay with fragging every Jedi they saw. Being able to do that requires interference of some kind.
This is because morale for clones was never bad enough to warrant shooting their commander. The Jedi were working to keep their clones alive, and were their biggest proponents, excepting for Pong Krell. Shooting their commander like that would have been really out of character, and unwarranted, and thinking that the Clones would do so without a cause aside from some guy calling in on a hologram saying to do it is unrealistic unless there's an outside component, like the biochips.
Without them, the Clones, in all other instances, pretty much act like human soldiers, even if it's firing coldly at the enemy. A person they would tag friend, and would have tagged friend and comrade in arms for years, like the Jedi, would be VERY hard to kill in their psyches, due to all the history they share.
Again, it comes down to the tribal mindset. This is why armies wear uniforms, after all. Shooting someone who is against you, on the opposite side, brings that about and becomes standard, pretty much okay in someone's mind. Shooting someone who has fought on your side would be a step too far for most people, simply due to the fact that you know them better. This is because, unless they're like Pong Krell and disregarding you to dangerous degrees, they'll be your surrogate family and look after you. Your Sergeant who is in the trenches with you, or your officer, and trust them to hell and back. They will be listened to much more than some politician who is giving orders about executing a random order. Cases of them just going, "Okay, I have no problems with killing the guy who just saved my life twenty minutes ago. Orders are orders." is almost alien in outlook.Gandalf wrote: ↑2020-05-13 11:22pmI get your point, even though I disagree. I wasn't really thinking of morale breakdown based killings, but ones where a superior orders someone to do a monstrous thing and people go "okay."FaxModem1 wrote: ↑No problem about the slow reply. World outside is weird.
That's my point. Clone morale would have to be in the toilet for them to be okay with fragging every Jedi they saw. Being able to do that requires interference of some kind.
This is because morale for clones was never bad enough to warrant shooting their commander. The Jedi were working to keep their clones alive, and were their biggest proponents, excepting for Pong Krell. Shooting their commander like that would have been really out of character, and unwarranted, and thinking that the Clones would do so without a cause aside from some guy calling in on a hologram saying to do it is unrealistic unless there's an outside component, like the biochips.
Without them, the Clones, in all other instances, pretty much act like human soldiers, even if it's firing coldly at the enemy. A person they would tag friend, and would have tagged friend and comrade in arms for years, like the Jedi, would be VERY hard to kill in their psyches, due to all the history they share.
Well, I'm probably a bad example, as I was enlisted, and grew up a lot and had a much different world view than what I had back when AOTC came out, and was starting to understand the Clones when I was enlisted, which was when ROTS came out.I posed the question above, but I guess it got lost in the quoting of it all; there's the better part of a decade between when we first see Order 66, and when the chips thing came out. Did you consider it a plot hole in that time?
In that period the space SS became a loveable marketing juggernaut, so I get the need to externalise their atrocities and keep them marketable, but I also find it really fucked up.
That is why the biochip was necessary to explain why they so readily executed Order 66.Lord Revan wrote: ↑2020-05-14 11:29am Yeah the thing to remember is that even before the Biochip arc EU went out of its way to show that the clones either had or were developing unique personalities and were capable of thinking for themselves. There in lies the issue with Order 66 just being an order that's not enforced by external factors.
My issue isn't that the clones obeyed but rather how casually and easily they did it. In current EU I know of exactly 2 clone troopers who hesitated Rex and Jessie, every other clone seemed utterly unintrested on order to kill all your generals, that's not sign of professionalism but more sign of mind control (generals are kind of important after all so killing them is quite a big deal). The ease and casual nature in which Order 66 was executed is at odds with most depiction of how clones behave.
It's hardly a plot hole. It's Rex using his brain like he's supposed to and interpreting Lord Sidious's orders properly and competently (in the framework imposed by the brain chip). In many military traditions, orders are supposed to be executed as per commander's intent (the commander here being Sidious), not literally and technically.amigocabal wrote: ↑2020-05-20 10:30am
That is why the biochip was necessary to explain why they so readily executed Order 66.
Still, it seems Order 66 should not have applied to Ahsoka. Remember this scene from RoboCop?
If I had been on the Clone Wars writing team, I would have added a short scene where Ahsoka is officially reinstated into the Jedi Order, the morning that Order 66 went in to effect (possibly by direct communication with a Jedi Master), with Rex and Jessie witnessing it, thus filling in this apparent plot hole.
Yeah Ahsoka isn't technically member of the Jedi order, but she's a Jedi in everything but name, Sidious wouldn't want to let her live as she could rebuild the order and without the flaws of the old order leaving less to exploit for the Sith.chimericoncogene wrote: ↑2020-05-20 11:55amIt's hardly a plot hole. It's Rex using his brain like he's supposed to and interpreting Lord Sidious's orders properly and competently (in the framework imposed by the brain chip). In many military traditions, orders are supposed to be executed as per commander's intent (the commander here being Sidious), not literally and technically.amigocabal wrote: ↑2020-05-20 10:30am
That is why the biochip was necessary to explain why they so readily executed Order 66.
Still, it seems Order 66 should not have applied to Ahsoka. Remember this scene from RoboCop?
If I had been on the Clone Wars writing team, I would have added a short scene where Ahsoka is officially reinstated into the Jedi Order, the morning that Order 66 went in to effect (possibly by direct communication with a Jedi Master), with Rex and Jessie witnessing it, thus filling in this apparent plot hole.
The Jedi Knights are to be executed for treason against the Republic, and the Jedi Order destroyed. Ahsoka isn't technically a Jedi, but sure as hell acts like one, and if she got to train someone, she could recreate the order. Ahsoka was still talking about helping everyone, and was, as per her smuggler friends, acting like a Jedi should.
If you had a orders to kill all Sith and destroy the Sith Order, would you not kill Darth Maul six months after he jumped ship from Palps (technically ejected from the Order of the Sith Lords) and was still talking about bringing about the fall of the Jedi Order and instating Sith Rule to the galaxy - typical Sith values?
(On the other hand, if Ahsoka had, say, joined the Dark Side and became a bounty hunter who constantly expressed her hatred of the Jedi Order and desire to destroy it... well, then Rex and Jesse might have had good reason to let her go; just as you might let Maul go if he became a criminal who hated the Sith Lords and was merely interested in power and credits - remember, your orders are to destroy the Sith, not the dark side)
If you're still worried about the plot hole, what Jesse says leaves room for the interpretation that Ahsoka was specifically marked for death by Darth Sidious ("by special order of Lord Sidious"). Also, they tried to use the plot hole specifically to get out, and it didn't work. There's no hole.
Yeah the whole point of Ahsoka's arc in season 6 and 7 is that she's become disillusioned with the Order and doesn't really want to rejoin until the Order shows they're worthy of her respect. That said Ahsoka did still have the values of the jedi.And Ahsoka going back would have made no sense in terms of character development. The Jedi Order was failing (Mace's plotting to overthrow the civilian government made that clear). Ahsoka leaving was a symptom of that, and she had to forge her own path and bring the Order back to the light herself.
Non-sequitur, but okay.chimericoncogene wrote: ↑2020-05-27 08:34am Just rewatched S2E6 "Weapons Factory", the one where Ahsoka and Barriss get sent to blow up a droid factory by themselves by crawling through a maze of catacombs.
The Jedi are quite awful people.
Sending superpowered kids to war is bad enough, but Luminara Unduli is very much willing to send 15-year old Padawans (children!) on a mission with poor chances of survival and limited strategic import, and perfectly willing to see them sacrificed in the line of duty.
Two friggin' kids get sent on a mission that turns into a suicide mission, and one of their bosses is reasonably okay with the idea. No wonder Barriss went crazy.
The issue with this idea is that the Clone discipline was already breaking down. They individualized, via Jedi encouragement. some even deserted the cause.KraytKing wrote: ↑2020-05-31 02:44pm It may be a non sequitur, but it does touch on something important that I don't think anyone has mentioned yet. I take issue with the idea that Jedi would be universally loved by the clones. How many times did Jedi pursue stupid tactics? You're a soldier so professional it can't be compared to anything we've ever seen and now your commanders are subordinated to a bunch of monks whose only credentials are being able to flip and previously holding a position of power. The Jedi have no clue how to plan campaigns or anything before the war starts, it all has to be learned on the job. They can lead men in small unit strikes, but even then they consistently get everyone with them killed before succeeding. They show no regard for injured men or the dead on campaigns; never once do we see Anakin, Kenobi, or Ahsoka pause and do some Force-healing on the dying. The battles are almost always "charge into the enemy and kill lots" without any creativity.
No, I don't think the clones like the Jedi much at all outside maybe a few cases. But even though I believe this argument, I hesitate to make it because it's arguing over a point that doesn't matter. I am in full agreement with Gandalf on this subject. The clones execute their orders because of discipline. The counterpoint FaxModem1 has offered on tribal mindset? Such a phenomenon would represent a tremendous failure of ten years of conditioning. They aren't supposed to make friends, they're supposed to fight a war. If orders from the top tell them to burn a village of civilians, they're supposed to follow them. Execute children? Follow orders. In fact, the Jedi turning traitor would probably be pretty damn believable. Intensely religious order, long independent from all government oversight, has a powerful sense of moral superiority, and is accustomed to being judge, jury, and executioner wherever they please? Makes total sense they might launch a coup. They're PERFECT for it. They have their own independent structure and a belief system that gives those at the top incredible power to manipulate the rest, and each one of them is a death machine. You could hardly craft a better force to seize power. So yeah, when orders come through that the army of fanatic Supermen could be traitorous? Hell yeah you shoot them. It is ENTIRELY believable that they would try such a thing, and if they are then the only chance you have is to kill them before they wise up, or you and a lot of your comrades are going to die.
That rambled a bit. TL;DR good soldiers follow orders and clones are the best, and also it totally makes sense for the Jedi to try and seize power.
Gee Galvatron, it didn't take long for the Marvel/Disney SW EU Mark II to become shit again didn't it?
We saw the old EU destroyed....for more of the same old shit? This is how you destroy a fandom.chimericoncogene wrote: ↑2020-05-09 10:06pmYeah, that's canon now thanks to that comic, but it's just so stupid, and inconsistent with the portrayl of Order 66 elsewhere...
Let's get serious for a moment.The problems with a simple verbal trigger without specific commanders are limitless (malicious or accidental activation being chief among them)
I dared to have such high hopes because I thought that the Lucasfilm Story Group would a) learn from the mistakes of the past and b) have at least some authority to prevent them from happening again.MKSheppard wrote: ↑2020-05-31 08:47pmGee Galvatron, it didn't take long for the Marvel/Disney SW EU Mark II to become shit again didn't it?