That's not what "logical fallacy" means. Meanwhile, it is completely absurd to say that two Sith cannot have ruled the galaxy, because they did.
A logical fallacy is an error in logic. Saying that a group rules the galaxy when there are only two members is not logical. Hence, it is a logical fallacy.
That is a contradiction. Cave Vader was not a "legitimate threat" like the clones, that was the whole point. Did Obi-Wan "fail" when he killed Maul?
Vader approaching someone without saying a word isn't threatening? How about Hitler? Or Dracula? Or Jason Vorhees?
All the clone troopers did was raise their weapons, and then it was "off wit' their heads!"
To battle droids. How exactly is that "bloodthirsty"? Perhaps the word you're looking for is oil-thirsty? And how is fighting to save the lives of others in any way out of character or reprehensible for a knight?
Do the clone troopers have oil for blood?
Starting a war to save the lives of a small group of people seems rather out of character for "keepers of the peace", as the Jedi are called on several occasions.
You are now. But I wasn't talking about interpretations, I was talking about your apparent unfamiliarity with the films' actual content. For example:
Ummm.... thanks?
That's a demonstrably false statement, not something that can be handwaved away as "interpretation" or "opinion". All statements are not equally valid.
Where is it mentioned that Luke destroyed the Death Star in the subsequent films? I'm not talking the special editions or uber-special editions. The only mention ever made is in the opening crawl of ESB, and then no mention of Luke destroying it was made.
Wrong. That's why argumentum ad populum is a logical fallacy. Majorities are often wrong. A majority once believed that the world was flat. Was it, in fact, flat at that point?
We are talking about a Star Wars film, right? Not a comprehensive worldview or a view of science based on religion. You can't scientifically prove that people who find the prequels flawed are wrong.
There is nothing wrong with liking a film that is fundamentally flawed. Hell, I'm a huge fan of Johnny Nmemonic, and that was a horridly bad movie!
I just find it pointless to try to logically argue that a film so many people were bothered by is not in any way flawed. If the film were a great film, people would have accepted it as such.
Granted, every film has it's detractors. The prequels just have far more than their proportionate share of hardcore fans. There is no large community of people who pick apart
A Clockwork Orange, or
Alien.
Why do you think the prequels have been targeted?
\For the record, Grover was
Sesame Street vintage:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZhEcRrMA-M
Ah hah!
I did watch Sesame Street, as most kids growing up in the 80's.