What the hell is wrong is Julius Caesar?

Moderator: Vympel
So say the Rebels.Evil Jerk wrote:The Empire protected it's *loyal* citizens.Durran Korr wrote:Describes the Empire even better.
The Rebels never even did that. Face it, they were backed by senators who wanted to keep looting the galaxy
That's like saying that if Exxon controlled the government of Saudi Arabia, it wouldn't benefit. Or even just a smaller country. Governments, through taxation, often can gather more money than businessesNo. The Trade Federation gains nothing from the invasion of Naboo beyond what Sidious has agreed to do. It is clear that the Trade Federation would not invade Naboo, nor any other obscure planet were it not for their "bargain" with Sidious. Without Palpatine/Sidious there is no invasion of Naboo, and there is no Separatist movement.
Of course not, but Palpatine should not be singled out as so despicably evil because he did it, too.That doesn't make it right, or just.
The Noghri, Wookiees, and the Mon Calamari are not propaganda.
Julius was voted into power after he had already seized it! Think Sadam Hussien (spelling?). And as far as his coughing up his own cash to feed the hungry, that's bull. His money came from taxes, and taxes come from where? That's right the people. He was a power hungry oportunist nothing more, any piety on his part was an act. Machiavelli anyone?nothings wrong with julius. people are just taught that he was an evil dictator trying to conquer the world when in fact he was VOTED into the position of dictator and when he recieved it he made sure noone in Rome when hungry all payed for by himself not the Republic.
Someone isn't aware of Palpatine's eventual plans for the Empire.Sea Skimmer wrote:I think the Emperor is fine the way he is, not a good person but his end goals are in the best interest of the galaxy, as the Vong proved.
Wrong. The Republic had lasted for 24,000 years and was supported by the people of the Galaxy while it simultaneously survived one near-galaxy-wide war and a massively destructive conflict with neo-Sith followers. It was Palpatine's predecessor, Darth Bane, and his Brotherhood who ignited the war that all-but-destroyed the Republic....leaving it in tatters. It was Palpatine's descendents which caused the destructive reforms which paralyzed the reformed Republic (this is "this Republic which has lasted for 1,000 years" that Palpatine spoke of) and the emasculated and newly-orthodox Jedi Order.Coalition wrote:Palpatine could have been looking at history though.
I.e. the Star wars galaxy was unified by Xim the Despot 25,000 years ago.
In AOTC, Palpatine said that the Republic had stood for 1,000 years.
Therefore, a dictator-like government had lasted for 24,000 years, but the Republic had lasted for 1,000, and was falling apart as he watched.
Multiple sources say corruption was nearly as bad under Palpatine's Empire as the Republic, plus citizens enjoyed the plus's of conscription, slavery, ideological testing, and a police state.From that, he was trying to go with a government that had worked, for a long time, and his decision to turn the Republic into an Empire was an attempt to preserve Galactic Unity.
Where else was he to go? Just because getting an education was closer to his priorities and a more practical option then somehow getting into the Rebellion....Biggs Darklighter joined the Academy to get training and off Tattoine where he could join the Rebellion.Of course, there were some short-sighted people who disagreed with that. Not to mention that most people thought the Empire was evil (Luke Skywalker in SW4), but didn't Luke put in an application to the Imperial Academy?
Doesn't work that way. Palpatine's planned Empire would have been where the Dark Side ruled supreme (ref: Dark Empire). A totalitarian oppressive regime where authority under Palpatine's whim, a Sith Lord who's only motivation was "squeezing the life out of the galaxy that spawned him" (NEGTC) and controlling everything.So Luke could either believe that the Empire was evil, but he was willing to work for it, or he believed he could change the system from within. The first option allows for a grey area of evil, while the second allows the Emperor to get millions of self-motivated individuals to join his military machine.
Either way, Palpy wins.
So say the Rebels? You can't label third-person prospective sources as Rebel-biased propoganda. They're not dialogue or written from a specific in-universe point of view. Third person omniscient knows and sees all, and is thus unbiased as a literary perspective. I could label any source you deem as pro-Imperial trash, but then this argument would be meaningless.Setzer wrote:[So say the Rebels.The Noghri, Wookiees, and the Mon Calamari are not propaganda.
Well, admittedly the wookies and Mon calamari may have been enslaved, but the Noghri agreed to serve the Empire. That they were hoodwinked is irrelevant, the Noghri served Thrawn of their own free will [/i]