What about a page for common Trektard fallacies about EU sources? For example, most of the SFJtards have never read an EU book, but quote the little snippets that Darkstar has collected on his page (that he's never read either) - or the ones that are quoted here - and spin bullshit about them with no context.
For example,
Tyrant's Test - Luke makes an off-hand comment about how little energy it'll take to do a task, because initially he thought it'd take six Star Destroyers hanging around for a month.
Here's the only thing Trektards quote:-
"I'm still surprised at how small an energy input it's supposed to take," Luke said. "I thought at first we'd have to bring in half a dozen Star Destroyers and keep them here a month."
And they characterize the relevant task as being simply "warming the atmosphere."
Here's the full context:-
Exactly what I said. We were all wrong. This ship [the vagabond] isn't a museum, or a temple full of treasure, or a lifeboat--or a monument, either. It's a tool kit, Doctor--a tool kit for rebuilding a destroyed world."
Turning, Luke grabbed both of Eckels's hands in a fervent grip. Joy and wonder together animated his smile. "They had time to do more than prepare this ship, Doctor--they had time to prepare themselves.
That planet is not dead--there are millions of Qella buried in the ground, awaiting the thaw. And we can give them that."
...
"I'm still surprised at how small an energy input it's supposed to take," Luke said. "I thought at first we'd have to bring in half a dozen Star Destroyers and keep them here a month."
"Small inputs, and time," said Eckels. "This planet teetered on the edge--it would probably have recovered on its own, as the Qella must have expected it would, but for the orbital wobble caused by the loss of the second moon."
"Look," said Lando. "It's starting."
The hull of the vagabond had begun to glow, crawling blue snakes of energy snapping along its length as the capacitance charge built up to a cascade. Then triple beams of energy stabbed downward from each end of the ship, creating ionized tunnels through the atmosphere in which precious chemicals began to be renewed. The beams converged at the surface of the half- frozen ocean below, creating massive explosions of steam, with towering, scalding plumes rising amidst the ice floes.
"Pretty good light show," Lando said lightly.
"Kind of a shame there's only the six of us to see it."
"Quite the contrary, General Calrissian," said Eck-els.
"That soup will have to simmer a long time, and it would be best for the Qella if it did so undisturbed."
Anyone who reads that whole quote and comes away with the impression that Luke was thinking about an ISD's ability to slag a world - as opposed to managing the extremely delicate job of thawing millions of living beings all over a planet without killing them, is a fucking moron - though I'd love to see them argue that pumping multi-gigaton blasts into the planet would be perfectly conducive to the task at hand
Of course, this is just one in their sad little line of "contradict a high example with a low example" methodology, where they assume that their sources are the standards by which other sources should be judged- but it's amusing that they confidently quote books they've never read, with no idea of what the context even is.