I'm sorry to go back to this, but I think I see where your confusion comes from. You're talking about source material like this would be an adaptation of the character, like when the Flash changed the Wests from white to black, but the comics are supposed to be equal to the shows, so this would be the same version of the character. So basically, what you're suggesting would be like if Picard brought back Geordie La Forge, but recast him with a white actor.I will. People don't seem to understand what I am saying about how diversity doesn't have to be defined by source material.
So what's this character about. Is she a doctor and pilot? That sounds kind of interesting. Does she have any connection to Ahsoka in the comics?
Oh for the love of Dagon . . . will you please stop?
You're not going to backwards logic your way into making a "it's totally OK to whitewash a POC character" argument seem not racist, because racist is exactly what it is.
Yes, POC characters have been whitewashed before, and that is a BAD thing, not a precedent to follow.
Yes, some of the minor details of continuity are open to a little flexibility between media, usually by way of the "unreliable narrator" clause.
No, a person's ethnicity does not qualify as a "minor detail", especially when said ethnicity is already underrepresented.
Aphra is explicitly and unequivocally of an East Asian ethnically. No ifs, ands, or buts. End of discussion.
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