That may be the idea, but I'm not seeing it actually dramatized (but still hoping it's coming up sometime). Instead, I'm seeing Sith vs. the Republic, with the Jedi fighting for the Republic. I want Sith vs. the Jedi at a level above politics, with the Separatists and the Republic being a lower level of the same fight, in the political realm.The Sith/Jedi conflict is definitely at the center of this conflict.
Maybe she thinks she can pry the well-meaning Separatists away from the Sith influence. Or maybe she does think that even Sith can be reasoned with.But you have to wonder Padme's logic at the same time. She knows the kind of man that Dooku is and I'm sure she knows he's a Sith Lord. You're not going to be able to negoiate with people like Dooku or Grievous.
Another thing I'm curious about but haven't seen dramatized is exactly what "normal" people understand about the Jedi and the Sith. Maybe Padme just sees that as a political fight as well, and not some big-ass metaphysical struggle of Good vs. Evil where political ideas like negotiation are completely out of place.
If she doesn't see the stuff with the Force as being outside the realm of her own understanding of reality, that might also explain why she doesn't take Jedi rules about "no attachments" seriously enough to avoid being married to a Jedi who is obviously very attached to her. It's just another problem for reasonable people to deal with, not some ironclad rule that will "always" lead to tragedy.
He was wrong there. Depending on whether the war was "organic" or contrived, the characters come off as smart or stupid. I personally find it impossible to identify with stupid characters and once I lose identification with the characters, any story devolves into a farce.The movies never directly addressed why the Seperatists broke away from the Republic. You can get the ideas based on TPM I suppose. Corrupt and ineffective government that gets a new leader. Ten years later we learn that thousands of star systems are about to break away from the Republic. GL pretty much didn't feel the need to explain any of it.
So the lack of explaining Separatist motives destroyed the whole PT for me. Hayden Christensen was just the nail in the coffin.

Yet another aspect of the story that has been left in the dark! Are the Jedi to blame for any of this, and to what degree? I've gotten the impression that we're expected to believe they are blameless. But now (perhaps inadvertently) they are being implicated: if the Separatists' grievances are legitimate, then why don't the Jedi see that? Why are they acting like the Republic can do no wrong, and deserves their blind allegiance?The fact of the matter is a number of things led to the downfall of the Republic but perhaps one of the biggest things is the arrogance and contentment of even the Jedi Council.
They may be the military and should "stay out of politics" but if they are being asked to fight against people who have legitimate grievances, they are being irresponsible and immoral not to ask hard questions about the situation. If Padme knows the situation is ambiguous, the Jedi should have known that from the first, and should have been questioning their role in the war all along.
That sounds like a reasonable assumption.I think most people were just happy that the war had ended, and didn't realize that becoming an Empire was going to be so bad for them.
We know Padme cared. Bail and Mon Mothma presumably did too, and maybe a few allies, but did they represent anyone but themselves? Did everyone else only wake up after the Empire descended upon their lives?Apathy? Uh, no. Are we forgetting Padme's line "So this is how liberty dies: to thunderous applause."
I don't think they were signing up for an Empire at all, but rather a Republic with more security and maybe without the pesky nuisance of having to come to terms with the Seppys and actually fix the crap that was wrong with the Republic. Maybe everyone was complacent and lazy rather than scared.The Empire didn't happen because people didn't care, it happened because people thought it was a good idea.
He was also the moron who brought the Zilo beast to Coruscant. The fact that he didn't lose his job and end up in prison over that argues for the apathy viewpoint.Palpatine turned the Republic into a very effective government
The good news is that the debate in this thread proves how underdeveloped the story is so far, which means TCW has plenty of potential fodder for future seasons.
For example, now that the Seppys have been revealed to be people who do care enough about the corrupt, doddering government of the Republic to do something about it, might they actually turn out to be the nucleus of the Rebellion? At least they've shown that they aren't asleep and complacent, and they have a fighting spirit. When they realize they've been conned by their so-called leader Dooku, and that the Empire will be even more oppressive than the Republic was, they should respond with another rebellion.
If I were part of this story, I think I'd be on the Separatist side and very jaundiced about the Jedi, who may be extremely powerful but aren't using their power very wisely. And if someone told me that Jedi = good, Sith = bad, I would be inclined to dismiss that as propaganda and wonder whether the reverse were actually the truth.
Which could explain why reasonable people would side with a known Sith. And when Dooku shows his true colors, what does that prove? Maybe that the Jedi and the Sith are basically the same, and neither are trustworthy?
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