And this proves what exactly? That the film evolved during the editing phase? That's true of most movies like this. Scenes get deleted, reshoots are sometimes required, endings are changed, subplots dropped, scenes are re-ordered and sometimes the context of an entire third act can be entirely altered because the plot is becoming too complex. Hell, 'Men in Black' did that last one with just one line of ADR and a VFX shot!
Did his editors have vital creative input into the movie? Of course they did, that's what he hired them for and the fact he fired the first guy (who's previous work shows he was by no means incompetent) should be enough to prove that Lucas wasn't just blindly depending on an editor to fix it for him. Editing a movie is very time consuming, painstaking work, especially in the pre-digital days and requires an editor to go over and over and over hours of footage to find the best takes, find the right coverage to use, when to cut-away and when to linger. They have to go over the entire movie front to back and back to front to find where things aren't working--something that's often impossible to determine until you have the footage all cut together--and address it. That's what the editing phase is for. Very few directors have the time and energy to do this all by themselves and none for a film this complex, much less one they're also writing, part financing and executive producing all while establishing several companies to get it all done, including developing technology and techniques that simply didn't exist until they built it!
Lucas needed collaborators at every level of the production. He needed a conceptual artist so he hired Ralph McQuarrie, he needed a score so he hired John Williams. Does the fact that he didn't build a single set with his own hands, sew any costume, or conduct a single piece of music make Star Wars any less "his"? Of course not.
Also, as noted, this was a difficult shoot on a low budget sci-fi movie that nobody thought would be worth anything, with several key members of production being actively obstructive, adding stress and strife to an already overworked director. The only reason it didn't fail a thousand times over is because Lucas was the driving force of the whole thing.
No George Lucas: no Star Wars. Period.
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