When you think about it, was Palpatine's plan kind of dumb?
When you think about it, was Palpatine's plan kind of dumb?
From a long term perspective, what did he gain from all of the oppression and over centralization of power other than fostering rebellion and instability? Once he was chancellor he could have dialed back the overt machinations continued to exist in the shadows to weaken the Jedi and grow his own power.
Hell, he could have become a sympathetic father figure to the Republic after Order 66 had he just remained as Supreme Chancellor, or even put himself in a position where he could step back and install a puppet successor and maintain the illusion of democracy while controlling the levers of government. Why create an unstable power base for himself when it seemed like he was mainly interested in doing SIth magic stuff in seclusion? Was he just bored?
I've always hated the story lines that turn authoritarian genocidal megalomaniacs into the good guys and I have a hard time understanding how so many people are not off put by that.
I may be saying this as a guy who stopped being a Star wars fan after the rise of emperor Micky but it seems like all of the empires actually good theorys seem to always quote post Disney Star wars content because I remember there being rampant slavery human superiority I could probably pull a Disney is trying to make the empire good conspiracy but because I haven't been playing attention to star wars outside of prequel memes I understand I don't know shit anymore
It's more interesting when a layer of complexity and moral ambiguity is added to the motivation of the antagonists instead of a simplistic "these guys are the bad guys because... Well they are evil and that's just how evil people are."
It's a situation that makes you think. If that threat was there and Palpatine did what he did to oppose that threat, how does that affect his moral standing? Does the end justify his means? Were there better ways to go about it? What if he did a Dr Strange and looked at hundreds of thousands of possible timelines and all of the other options failed but creating the Empire is the only way to stop it, but he just got unlucky and this was the timeline where the rebels managed to escape Vader's grasp with the Death Star plans and his plan fails? If his intentions did affect his moral standing, does his failure cancel that out, since all of the suffering the empire caused ended up being for nothing?
So the Grysk are the Disney version of the Yuuzhan-Vong?
Essentially
Isn't this basically the plot of fable 3?
I thought so as well
Whoa that is interesting, that's for sharing, I never heard about any of that