Why Would Anyone Fight For The Galactic Empire?

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 12. 12. 2018
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    In many universes, authoritarian regimes demand loyalty from their citizens and service members. On this episode of Incoming, we ask why the Galactic Empire was so appealing to so many nameless Stormtroopers and why none of them seem to be good people
    In Incoming, The Templin Institute discusses the theories and ideas found across alternate worlds.
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    Background music: “White Atlantis” by Sergey Cheremisinov. User under a Attribution-NonCommercial License.
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    Narration by M.A.R.C.
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Komentáƙe • 1,4K

  • @TemplinInstitute
    @TemplinInstitute  Pƙed 5 lety +403

    Are you a person of moral fortitude looking to faithfully serve an evil regime? Well, here’s a link to our Patreon! www.patreon.com/templininstitute

    • @unknownuser4692
      @unknownuser4692 Pƙed 5 lety +9

      I'm fortified in my evil morals

    • @storyman385
      @storyman385 Pƙed 5 lety +1

      Nope 100% rebel here

    • @osvaldofranco9036
      @osvaldofranco9036 Pƙed 5 lety

      starwars sucks now!!!

    • @Historyfan476AD
      @Historyfan476AD Pƙed 5 lety +8

      in hindsight the galaxy under the empire was better of than it is now under the new republic. the empire could defend it's planets and people, stopped crime and had an economy that worked. under the new republic the galaxy is splintered, is incapable of defending itself from outside forces, terrorised by an even more extremest group than the empire called the first order. oh the economy sucks as well. the emperor might have been bad but at least he kept the hover trains on time.
      we also have to remember that the empire was large and for most people it would be another day for them, we as fans see all the dark bits of the empire and the fighting the average civilian did not.

    • @chemistryguy9679
      @chemistryguy9679 Pƙed 5 lety +6

      r/theempiredidnothingwrong

  • @jabril7832
    @jabril7832 Pƙed 5 lety +1306

    That's pretty dangerous talk, citizen.
    *It might be considered treason.*

  • @jabril7832
    @jabril7832 Pƙed 5 lety +1173

    "Why would anyone fight for the Galactic Empire?"
    *It's treason, then.*

  • @wilji1090
    @wilji1090 Pƙed 4 lety +148

    "I encounter civilians like you all the time. You believe the Empire is continually plotting to do harm. Let me tell you, your view of the Empire is far too dramatic. The Empire is a government. It keeps billions of beings fed and clothed. Day after day, year after year, on thousands of worlds, people live their lives under Imperial rule without seeing a stormtrooper or hearing a TIE fighter scream overhead." - Grand Admiral Mitth'raw'nuruodo

    • @AAZ-yu5ss
      @AAZ-yu5ss Pƙed 2 lety +4

      The empire is CLEARY more efficient than the millennia lasting, “inefficient,” old republic. After all, we lasted 24 years and had the ILLUSION of a more stable government, that also routinely committed genocide against entire species, blew up planets for resisting our rule, hated women for some reason, and got beaten by a rebel killing their only leader compared to the old, “inefficient government,” being taken down from the inside by A SITH LORD WHO WAS THE SENATOR, CONTROLLED THE ENTIRE CLONE ARMY, as well as GENOCIDING THE JEDI ORDER!! Uh, I mean, DEATH TO THE REBEL AND XENOS SCUM!!!😡

    • @Etzelsschizo
      @Etzelsschizo Pƙed 2 lety +4

      @@AAZ-yu5ss ok, rebell fanboy.

    • @thechangamire3495
      @thechangamire3495 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@Etzelsschizo He's arguing in favor of the Empire, tho

    • @joaobaptista320
      @joaobaptista320 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@thechangamire3495 he's not

  • @javierdiez2742
    @javierdiez2742 Pƙed 5 lety +1467

    That's the thing of civil wars. Remember the scene of the ambush in the market of Jedha in Rogue One? Imagine the colateral damage those actions could cause. For an innocent person that was passing by, the imperials were just making their way through a crowded market, doing their thing and bothering no one, when the rebels attacked with indiscriminate fire and explosives. I find perfectly reasonable that anyone suffering that, specially if he or she loses a loved one in the attack, could become a staunch anti-rebel and join the stormtroopers with the sincere desire to prevent that from happening again. Under that light, the atrocities committed by the empire could seem like a necessary evil to restore order in a galaxy that was still recovering from the devastating effects of the Clone Wars

    • @casbot71
      @casbot71 Pƙed 5 lety +147

      True, but as far as Jedha residents are concerned, it didn't matter after the next day. 


    • @franzsanders9573
      @franzsanders9573 Pƙed 5 lety +37

      I mean, that’s true, but I still don’t think that really justifies the Empire’s warcrimes (I.e., destroying Alderaan).

    • @TheCool_Guy23
      @TheCool_Guy23 Pƙed 5 lety +121

      Nobody was saying that their crimes were justified, just how it's possible for the average Imperial citizen to actually support the Empire and want to defeat the rebels.@@franzsanders9573

    • @petargrad2293
      @petargrad2293 Pƙed 5 lety +94

      If the US could nuke Hiroshima and get away with it why can't the Empire get away with Alderaan?

    • @Gothic7876
      @Gothic7876 Pƙed 5 lety +67

      Because nuking Hiroshima was a valid reason to bring an end to a brutal war. Look up Operation Downfall and Operation Ketsugƍ. Those plans where horrifying.
      Alderaan WAS a war crime. Alderaan was seemingly loyal to the Empire and was destroyed anyway.

  • @Red0543
    @Red0543 Pƙed 5 lety +717

    To quote one of the best narrations I’ve ever heard:
    “No one ever complained about the cold on Hoth. We never felt it. Even though we were blinded by blizzards, we could see the final end of the Rebellion in our blaster sights. Was it only a mirage? Perhaps. But on that day, on that planet, our blood ran hot with dreams of victory, melting the ice that stood in our way.
    As the Rebels fled, the 501st gathered around a burning bunker and let out a cheer that shook the stars. The Rebellion was done, the Death Star was being rebuilt, bigger than ever. Order had finally returned to the Galaxy, in no small part due to the efforts of the fighting men of the 501st.” - “Our finest hour” from the 501st journal. Star Wars Battlefront 2 (2005).

    • @joshg1555
      @joshg1555 Pƙed 4 lety +20

      The second paragraph gave me chills when I first played

    • @darthrevan704
      @darthrevan704 Pƙed 4 lety +4

      chills man

    • @stormlancer6929
      @stormlancer6929 Pƙed 4 lety +10

      Then 1 year passed and the rebels destroyed the Death Star 2 killed Palpatine and destroyed much of the imperial fleet and fragmented the empire with the rebel alliance poised to retake the galaxy under a new republic. Good job.

    • @thechazz3230
      @thechazz3230 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      @@stormlancer6929 it was 4 years between Episode 4 & episode 5 IIRC.

  • @weldonwin
    @weldonwin Pƙed 5 lety +510

    There's the flip side of this, of the Rebel Officer who was a blood thirsty mass murderer, who joined the Alliance because it gave him ample opportunities for violence and despite their noble intentions, the Alliance accepted individuals like this, because they were desperate and took anyone who could fight and hated the empire. They'd ring their hands and shake their heads, claiming to find such men deplorable, but would still employ them as long as they were useful to the cause.

    • @Cen2050
      @Cen2050 Pƙed 5 lety +66

      ​@@louisduarte8763 Saw Guerra: Before he was an important character in Rouge One he was a character that appeared in a few episodes of Clone Wars and Rebels.

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea Pƙed 5 lety +44

      Yeah and in Return of the Jedi Luke tried to get Jabba a galactic mob boss of a criminal empire to join the Rebel Alliance. I mean honestly the Empire maybe oppressive but their goal is to bring order to the galaxy while the rebels are willing to consort with crime lords to bring them down.

    • @marcuskurze9759
      @marcuskurze9759 Pƙed 5 lety +14

      @@barbiquearea When did he tried to get Jabba join the Rebellion?I watched this movie a hundred times but I can not remember him doing that.

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea Pƙed 5 lety +15

      @@marcuskurze9759 If I remember correctly when Luke was confronting Jabba in his throne room after Leia's failed attempt to bust Han out, facing off Jabba he attempted to negotiate the release of his friends which included helping the rebellion's cause and getting something in return. Its been a while since a seen the movie I'm sure that's what happened during their encounter.

    • @ACEnBEAKY
      @ACEnBEAKY Pƙed 5 lety +17

      @ddam1320 Yeah, I think you're right. Luke wasn't trying to recruit Jabba. Also, the Empire dealt with slavers and human traffickers all the time. They used pirates to get to areas that were too narrow and out of the way for the empire to reach, and they used slavers to not only subdue poorer planets and continue to make them live under klepto feudal hell, but also relied on the pirates and slavers for, well, slaves.
      In the 70s Marvel comics of Star Wars, Luke and his crew would often break their teeth in (IE lvl up/grind) on pirates. The Rebel Alliance wasn't above hiring privateers, it's true, but they had a much higher standard than the empire. They would hire pirates who wanted to redeem themselves, as long as they weren't guilty of murder or slavery.
      Since the Empire had an unspoken alliance with the pirates and mafia types it had spared, it had more access to the criminal element of the galaxy than the Alliance. The Alliance may have gotten a few han solos, but for every Han Solo the Alliance had, the Empire had like 50 Jabbas (it initially cracked down on some cartels to look good, but after a while realized that slavers and pirates were already well trained assassins that kept parts of wild space under control, so instead the empire often just made deals with them).
      I also think the Alliance to Restore the Republic of the Rogue One/Rebels era was still in it's embryonic stage, and was a bit more morally gray. However, once the Alliance started showing that it could win, and the Empire showed it's true face with the destruction of Alderaan, I think that the Alliance started attracting a larger following of more idealistic people. This would give the Alliance not only the numbers to afford to be more idealistic, but also the type of people more likely to promote idealism and chivalry.
      At this point those joining the Empire would be in ignorance of what happened, in denial/cognitive dissonance, or accept such actions and would go sour as their compromise of deep convictions would poison their soul or deaden their minds. The Empire focused on recruiting people at this point, but now it conscripted people and rushed them through demoralizing and in adequate training because it's true face had been revealed. In Legends this is also when they would pump out the occasional handful of flash clones.

  • @TheLoreMasterYT
    @TheLoreMasterYT Pƙed 5 lety +1507

    The Star Wars book Lost Stars gives an excellent story of the perspective from the average Imperial. I highly recommend it, especially as a first read for those who've never read a SW novel before :)

  • @ThePCguy17
    @ThePCguy17 Pƙed 5 lety +133

    *Thrawn: Alliances* does a good job of this. Thrawn's underlings, and even Vader's soldiers get a lot of decent character moments and humanization. Vader's number one soldier even gets a moment where he has to take off his helmet to convince the children that he's rescuing that he's not going to hurt them. It's really fascinating, the way Timothy Zahn goes into the little details like that in ways that just feel...real.

    • @TemplinInstitute
      @TemplinInstitute  Pƙed 5 lety +40

      A lot of folks have recommended Timothy Zahn, I started Thrawn but never finished it. Maybe I'll give it another shot. - Marc

    • @ThePCguy17
      @ThePCguy17 Pƙed 5 lety +17

      @@TemplinInstitute I admit I had a hard time with how literally everything has gobs of detail, but if you want a good story from an Imperial point of view, I'm not sure how many other places there are to look. That'd be something to ask Alex for Star Wars Explained about. He's the one who got me interested in *Thrawn: Alliances* in the first place.

    • @necromorph1109
      @necromorph1109 Pƙed 4 lety

      Better than anything Disney had been about to make.

  • @ShrimpGaslight
    @ShrimpGaslight Pƙed 5 lety +477

    “Peace, stability and a more secure society”
    Palpatine for what he is, did not lie.
    The rebels were the ones who started the war

    • @kurokitsune1939
      @kurokitsune1939 Pƙed 5 lety +95

      Palpatine did what he promised.
      His methods were questionable.
      But he got the results he promised.

    • @michaelnguyen3259
      @michaelnguyen3259 Pƙed 5 lety +23

      @@kurokitsune1939 Yes but a what cost? His actions were bad enough to cause a rebellion

    • @torinodeguzman4243
      @torinodeguzman4243 Pƙed 5 lety +35

      Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.

    • @ShrimpGaslight
      @ShrimpGaslight Pƙed 5 lety +50

      Torino Deguzman
      Tell that to the Chinese peasants and citizens after the fall of Qing Dynasty. When the KMT was small and undermanned.
      Warlords form across the provinces formed their own fiefs and big cities are controlled by Criminal Kingpins (ie Shanghai).
      People are summarily executed, and fighting amongst warlords for realistically petty reasons resulted in even more deaths due to the chaos of neverending faction wars.
      Say what you want, you may think the Empire’s citizens don’t deserve safety, but fact is they had safety.

    • @thesussybaka7733
      @thesussybaka7733 Pƙed 5 lety +24

      @@michaelnguyen3259
      The Republic had been facing rebellion since the times of the sith empire. And the cis existed before Palpatine he just helped them. In legends people rebelled against the New Republic (Correlia being a notable one) and in cannon we have all the planets that joined the first order the moment they appeared.
      Edit: Completely forgot about the mandolorian wars. A bunch of bloodthirsty mandos who destroyed countless worlds and killed countles innocents just because they wanted to fight. That's what the peace and liberty of the old republic brought.

  • @ssgsorrels
    @ssgsorrels Pƙed 5 lety +198

    The expanded universe showed that the Empire controlled the media, and heavily censored stories, so the average imperial citizen saw the Empire as peacekeepers. Most of the core worlds had very little crime, so people felt safer, and whenever normal troopers were sent to put down dissidents, they were always told they were fighting insurgents or terrorists. Most citizens loved the empire, hence why the rebellion was so small pre battle of yavin.

    • @hushpuppy1735
      @hushpuppy1735 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Makes sense..

    • @LupusAries
      @LupusAries Pƙed 4 lety +11

      @@hushpuppy1735 As dies a lot in the EU, unlike the Disney "Canon"......
      I mean a lot of Rebel officers and even more than a few troopers were ex-Imperials.
      Which is why the "All Imperial Officers are war criminals"-Republican Order makes No Sense.
      Hell, one of the Fan favourites, Gillad Paelleon, served the Empire to the end.
      And He did transform the Imperial Remnant.
      The reason for all these cookie-cutter stories is Disney Lucasfilm's Lack of creativity and Talent.

    • @Jsay18
      @Jsay18 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Sometimes it's not even propoganda. In Star Wars: TIE Fighter, the second campaign is a peacekeeping mission against two hostile parties that are fully willing to genocide each other. Eventually they both turn against the intruder of their Xenocidal feud, and the Empire crushes both, returning the status quo, and establishing peace. Btw both sides were supplied by Rebels.

  • @JeroenDoes
    @JeroenDoes Pƙed 5 lety +619

    this is exactly why battlefronts campaign was a mess.They promised a campaign from the perspective of the empire and failed to deliver. Instead we got an other soft hearted weakling who was too dumb to see what was right in front of her for years who suddenly turned traitor, again...The Original games did even this better because there you were told the story from the 501st side. And you keept their loyal view for the entire duration.

    • @JeroenDoes
      @JeroenDoes Pƙed 5 lety +8

      Have you ever seen a playthrough of soulnomad? This is one of the few games that does a evil route right.

    • @Synthesizer4274
      @Synthesizer4274 Pƙed 5 lety +36

      This is why I love SWTOR so much. The Imperial storylines are amazing for having the choice to be as evil or altruistic as you want while also still being as loyal to the Empire as you want (even if its not THE Empire). In particular the Agent storyline was so good for me that I ended liking the Empire even MORE, context and baggage included. A bit ranty of me but if you feel starved for Imperial perspective (like I was) I can't recommend that enough.
      Oh! Also while I'm here I highly recommending watching I.M.P.S The Relentless if any of you haven't already, absolutely great series of fan-film documentaries unapologetically from the view of Imperial military. They're all up on youtube too!

    • @michaelbread5906
      @michaelbread5906 Pƙed 5 lety +8

      *FOR OUR BROTHERS!*

    • @Unzki
      @Unzki Pƙed 5 lety +12

      Perhaps the earliest Legends example I know of is the pilot Maarek Stele, protagonists of the old "simulation" game TIE Fighter and its expansions, who continues serving the Empire through the civil war and with the Imperial Remnant afterwards.

    • @Phnx28
      @Phnx28 Pƙed 5 lety +7

      Alex Hughes
      If I had to put a phrase on what I suspect it’s about: Being more afraid of parents as-opposed to reviewers, for fear of damaging word-of-mouth criticism impacting sales to kids & youths. Since many still consider video games more-akin to toys or kids’ cartoons than “serious” art or literature, if the devs include a campaign/“storyline” choice for the player to be “bad” in the ways the Galactic Empire was bad, they can possibly get more-progressive parents to refuse to buy their kids the game because of worries it’s somehow “glorifying militarism, racial/species/&c discrimination, and general tyranny.” More parents than we’d like there to be just can’t have their little, impressionable kid get their gaming rush by enforcing a more-than-vaguely fascist dictatorship; not even in fiction, would go the (faulty but all too common) reasoning. I seem to recall some World War II games years ago refused to give campaigns to the Germans, Japanese, and/or USSR for basically that line of “thinking.”
      Meanwhile the devs can get equally-slammed as well by more-conservative parents as well; just for different reasons. Despite the Galactic Empire’s “bringing Order to a chaotic Galaxy” schtick, law-and-order concerned parents who know their Star Wars lore could easily fault the whole game for “glorifying” both a government that first subverted (Palpatine’s takeover in Episodes II-III) and eventually abolished (dissolving the Senate in Episode IV) it’s own constitution, and the rebels fighting against it, essentially making a “Neither side here cares about Law or Tradition; just getting what they want!” argument. I doubt it would be common, but where the case it would likely be because they just don’t want their kids exposed to that sort of complicated meditation on the topic of “What is or is not legitimate authority?” until they’re older. Meanwhile more religiously-focused conservatives could object both to the Empire, which espoused a materialistic philosophy that at times reminded of Soviet-style militant-atheism while simultaneously being led by an autocrat and his enforcer (Emperor Palpatine/Darth Sidious & Darth Vader) who were devotees of what, if one likens the Jedi philosophy to being some fusion of Buddhist metaphysics with Christian-monastic ethics (venerating the Light Side of the Force as a means to “peace” by cultivating both individual & collective compassionate righteousness), would instead basically amount to space-Satanism (Sith venerating the Dark Side of the Force as the means to a Social-Darwinist form of “liberation” by cultivating individual talent & power above all else) by comparison; as well as to the rebels, as many religions have an almost-allergic reaction to the very idea of “rebels” being “good guys” morally-speaking (though more-likely for the Alliance/Resistance not explicitly being the-parents’-own-religion enough for comfort...).
      In that kind of position, one can’t really “win” absolutely; you can’t please everyone. So then, may the devs well think, best instead to either “not-offend anyone” or at least, “offend as few as can be helped”; leaving aside the hardcore rooting-for-antagonists types (including myself more-often than I’d normally care to admit) as they’re almost always (if with exceptions in oft-surprising places) the distinct minority in any franchise.

  • @cartermiller853
    @cartermiller853 Pƙed 5 lety +1742

    More rebel propaganda.
    Nothin to see here
    *Move along, Move along*

  • @marcustulliuscicero5443
    @marcustulliuscicero5443 Pƙed 5 lety +18

    There was one sympathetic imperial character, in the OT even.
    Captain Needa. Had no problem pursuing and destroying the Millenium Falcon, but upon realizing that he had lost its track he showed no hesitation to solely bear the blame for the failure in order to protect his crew from Vader's wrath.

    • @danieljohnson9917
      @danieljohnson9917 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +1

      I'm glad I'm not the only one who found Neda compelling. We see him for, what, two minutes? And yet he's what a military officer should be, not what the Tarkin Doctrine all but mandated.

  • @TheEmporerofRome
    @TheEmporerofRome Pƙed 5 lety +110

    In Star Wars Legends there was a story where a squad of stormtrooper became a group of vigilance. Still loyal to the Empire but wanted to cut out there corruption that had begun to happen with in the Empire. They even ran into Han and Luke, they tried to convince this group of StormTroopers to defect to the rebellion but refused. I can’t think of the book but if I find it then I’ll make an update to this post.

    • @KaenRas
      @KaenRas Pƙed 5 lety +37

      I believe it is called Allegiance by Timothy Zahn.

    • @TheEmporerofRome
      @TheEmporerofRome Pƙed 5 lety +14

      Thank you. I had trouble trying to remember the name.

    • @thelonelypilot
      @thelonelypilot Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Mara Jade; Choices of One is the book Edit: takes place after Allegiance

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      Huh

  • @georgiilogashenko781
    @georgiilogashenko781 Pƙed 5 lety +526

    Empire promises stability and security...

    • @Dirtyblue929
      @Dirtyblue929 Pƙed 5 lety +39

      Georgii Logashenko and genocide and political purges, but hey

    • @devo342
      @devo342 Pƙed 5 lety +30

      And yet they havnt done a thing about Jabbas criminal empire and support slavers.

    • @chimeraelite
      @chimeraelite Pƙed 5 lety +21

      because Jabbba is the devil they know and can deal with. He is a controlling factor and a better alternative than having him removed and having all out war between factions @@devo342

    • @araknas3981
      @araknas3981 Pƙed 5 lety +23

      @devo342 Has any of your precious Republics done anything? Now get back in the line, that zersium won't mine itself!

    • @derpimusmaximus8815
      @derpimusmaximus8815 Pƙed 5 lety +1

      #strongandstable

  • @117Jorn
    @117Jorn Pƙed 5 lety +65

    I think its fairly obvious, but there is one story of an Imperial I think we can all agree to be a shining example of what the Empire SHOULD have been, and not what it became.
    Grand Admiral Thrawn.
    He was the perfect military commander, and the leader that the Empire needed. He recognized the Empire's flaws, but saw a path towards redemption. He believed the Empire could be something that would not only keep the Chiss people safe, but safe for the entire galaxy. He didn't want to destroy worlds, enslave aliens or to be an evil bastard. He was, at his core, a good man who wanted the Empire to become what it SHOULD have been.
    And the best part is, at least in Legends, Thrawn was correct. While in the Unknown Regions, he lead the Empire of the Hand, and proved that the Imperial system CAN work, with only a few modifications to allow some Chiss doctrines. He succeeded where Palpatine, Vader and Tarkin failed - he created an Empire that wasn't built upon obedience, fear and treachery. Instead he created one based on merit, respect and ingenuity.
    This is why, out of all the Star Wars characters in both the E.U and Canon, Grand Admiral Thrawn will forever be my favorite character, with the only one capable of rivaling him being my second favorite, Darth Revan. And if I somehow ended up in the SW universe... I would rather side with Thrawn than any other faction.

    • @starwarsnerd100
      @starwarsnerd100 Pƙed 5 lety

      So he's your favorite character because instead of creating an ugly dictatorship that blew up planets and did other obviously evil things, he created a gentler, cleaner dictatorship. A dictatorship that's easier to root for. Interesting.

    • @117Jorn
      @117Jorn Pƙed 5 lety +7

      Its not even a full-on dictatorship. The Empire of the Hand was more of a Confederation than a True Imperium. While it was authoritative, it was only a real 'Empire' by name. Aliens could enlist into the military, who were allied together through cooperation of the native governments of the Unknown Region, as opposed to the brute force of the Empire. @@starwarsnerd100

    • @abysswatcher9172
      @abysswatcher9172 Pƙed 5 lety

      yes! ikr he's my Favorite character.The empire of hand was far better than any of the other factions

    • @ilovegod1870
      @ilovegod1870 Pƙed 3 lety

      Where can you read his story? or is it fromrebels?

    • @117Jorn
      @117Jorn Pƙed 3 lety

      @@ilovegod1870 His story can be read from various media. Rebels is a good starting point, but I would also highly recomend reading Timothy Zahn's Thrawn series of books - as well as the Heir to the Empire series that takes place in the E.U, as well as the 'Outbound Flight' novel which is basically Thrawn's prequel.

  • @grand-dadmiral
    @grand-dadmiral Pƙed 5 lety +190

    I joined as it was necessary. For my own people, as well as theirs.

    • @giladpellaeon1691
      @giladpellaeon1691 Pƙed 5 lety +12

      And the Empire gained much from your talents and the skills you cultivated in those who served under you.

    • @lorrainecarrillo5210
      @lorrainecarrillo5210 Pƙed 5 lety

      Thrawn
      How’d that turn out?

  • @jamestown8398
    @jamestown8398 Pƙed 5 lety +34

    In WWII there was one Wehrmacht soldier named Karl-Heinz Rosch, who was part of the occupation of the Netherlands. During a battle he saw two Dutch children playing outside, and risked his life to bring them to a shelter. He was killed by a grenade when tried returning to his post, and if he hadn't moved the children the grenade would have killed them instead. He's an example of how a good person can end up serving an evil government.

  • @eitkoml
    @eitkoml Pƙed 5 lety +198

    Why would anyone fight in the military for any tyrannical government? The same reason why anyone joins any military, a paycheck, opportunities to advance themselves in society, a natural disposition towards high risk work, etc.

    • @kristiankepley5944
      @kristiankepley5944 Pƙed 4 lety +7

      Imagine the joker who lives in such a society....

    • @stephenwood6663
      @stephenwood6663 Pƙed 4 lety +23

      Heck, Luke wanted to join the Imperial Academy to become a TIE fighter pilot - not because he felt ideological affiliation to the Empire, but because he was a bored teenager on a world which offered him few prospects. The Imperial Navy offered adventure, status, and a respectable pay-check: Luke can't have been the only young man tempted by these things.

    • @carbonbased669
      @carbonbased669 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @@kristiankepley5944 society...

  • @Riku-zv5dk
    @Riku-zv5dk Pƙed 5 lety +190

    I honestly believe Star Wars is more grey than it likes to present itself, but the writers are incapable of writing decent good guys without making the bad guys irredeemable because then they would have to face the fact that the good guys are just not as compelling. While the Empire is evil it is filled with the more compelling characters and is the best source of stories, though 99% of stories from Imperial p.o.v. have them defect, in the old EU there was the occasional characters who remained steadfast to the Empire. And most of these characters have similar backstories, back during the Republic and founding of the Empire they lived in hellish places, whether under the rule of the droid armies or just on a world that had been abandoned by the Republic and fallen into chaos and anarchy, they struggled to live and eventually the Republic army, and later, Imperial army came in and saved the world, bringing order and stability. Though this order and stability was near totalitarian it was an improvement from the perspective of the rescued it was something that saved them and something worth protecting at all costs and their enemy, the Rebel Alliance, wanted to restore the system that had given way to the cause of their suffering.
    The new canon though is completely incapable of creating a grey and gray conflict on any level, even when they try. It is always clear cut, underdog Rebels are good and overpowered Government is evil, hence why they destroyed the New Republic because they didn't want an equal power to the bad guys to back up the good guys....
    Sorry that went a lot longer than I planned.

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Pƙed 5 lety +24

      The "new canon" is run by a Mickey Mouse operation which is most interested in making stories with appeal to children.
      Blurry shades of grey, moral relativism, and ambiguously skewed ethics don't really have any place in these straightforward good-guys-defeat-the-bad-guys toy commercials.

    • @granmastersword
      @granmastersword Pƙed 4 lety +2

      @@pwnmeisterage well...except some novels where they do bring grey morality in the universe when Disney tries to push the black and white perspective held in the OG trilogy to not have much complexity

    • @thelastsaints101
      @thelastsaints101 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      While you're correct in that you're also incorrect. The Mandolorian came out and it has a lot of Grey in it.

    • @alexanderchristopher6237
      @alexanderchristopher6237 Pƙed 4 lety +5

      Gabriel Davila well, the Mandalorian isn’t exactly tied to the main story of Star Wars. It’s more of a filler story of here’s what’s life is all about while Luke and Darth Vader are duking it out.
      Star Wars generally has been mostly about good vs evil.
      So why stories like these work in Star Wars? Well, it’s because the main arc (good vs evil) has been the main theme for 9 movies already. Of course people got bored after 9 movies of the same theme.

    • @FreemanicParacusia
      @FreemanicParacusia Pƙed 4 lety +3

      @@pwnmeisterage I sense that they tried to do that with Episode 8, but pussed out with Episode 9. Episode 8 subverted expectations. We got to see the double-dealing of the weapons manufacturer equipping both sides of the conflict. We got to see the flaws of the Jedi order and mulled over the idea of whether it deserved to be resurrected at all. We got to see the plucky lone wolf hero get taken down a notch for assuming he knew what was best for everyone and barging ahead without thinking. We entertained the notion that you don't have to be from an "important" bloodline to be important.
      The writers gave us that. And they got HAMMERED for it.

  • @joewedg3703
    @joewedg3703 Pƙed 5 lety +13

    Order out of chaos
    Humanity first
    Long live the empire

  • @connorgolden4
    @connorgolden4 Pƙed 5 lety +486

    In the new canon it’s hard to find these people, not so much in legends.

    • @theredpanda3729
      @theredpanda3729 Pƙed 5 lety +25

      Thrawn still exists in the new Canon, even if his portrayal is not exactly as good as it was in the old EU(Legends) it still had him as a voice of reason and took side with the Empire for it's unity not for it's xenophobia (as Grand Admiral Mitth'raw'nuruodo was a Chiss) and ruled through intuition and guidance rather than most who took after Darth Vader in ruling through fear and intimidation.
      Edit: Even though he is not mentioned in the movies, the new canon books do.

    • @FlipDarkFuture
      @FlipDarkFuture Pƙed 5 lety +3

      I doubt there were many examples of 'good Imperials' early in the canon of Legends. Remember it's only been about 4 years or so since Disney took over Star Wars and started their canon for it.

    • @FreelanceDev4life
      @FreelanceDev4life Pƙed 5 lety +41

      @@FlipDarkFuture Disney is very.... liberal... at the moment. I doubt they understand nuance or moral ambiguity.
      Don't expect it from Disney any time soon, or any time at all if it wants to remain very liberal.

    • @emmerjacob
      @emmerjacob Pƙed 5 lety +20

      In the new cannon there's only the First order which is really lame and nothing to fight for just pure evil...Unlike the Empire which gives its subjects a purpose.. in the First Order they abduct you, while in the Empire they enlist you..Big difference

    • @connorgolden4
      @connorgolden4 Pƙed 5 lety +21

      emmerjacob ramada Yeah the new canon hasn’t added much of note. The “good” stuff it’s added are all stolen from the EU like Thrawn and the Inquisitors.

  • @thomasgodridge5945
    @thomasgodridge5945 Pƙed 5 lety +74

    The Republic, New Republic, Empire and First Order were all flawed in their own right. None were even remotely perfect.
    I was hoping beyond hope that Battlefront II and other works would show the perspective of such an Imperial as described in the video...and was furious when they defected. Is it so much to ask for a loyalist?
    I want more characters like Thrawn, Pellaeon and Veers.

  • @bottasheimfe5750
    @bottasheimfe5750 Pƙed 5 lety +15

    Well, in my play through of Star wars the old republic, I played a sith Inquisitor who, while absolutely an adherent to the dark side of the force, tended to show mercy when his enemies relented. Only the most resilient of his foes got the "sith shock therapy". As a former slave, he sought to improve the well being of the lowest Imperial citizens, while at the same time doing his work as a member of the Sith Order. While this isn't the Galactic Empire, the Sith Empire in SWTOR was similar to the Galactic Empire, but on a much smaller scale.

  • @TurKlack
    @TurKlack Pƙed 5 lety +40

    From all I know:
    Legends Empire was a more "foot on the ground" Government lead by a Sith.
    Canon Empire right now is an Evil Entity just for the sake of Evil.
    I thought long about it, but the core reason why the Empire commit atrocities, is Palpatine. Without him the Empire could be what it was always promised to be. A place for a safer and secure Society.

  • @MaliciousMallard
    @MaliciousMallard Pƙed 5 lety +138

    Best example of a good Imperial campaign comes in the form of the TIE Fighter game. Maarek Stele serves the Empire throughout the entirety of the campaign, fighting rebels and pirates and ultimately bringing stability and peace to worlds that were before locked in civil war and unrest. Never in the game is it suggested that you are doing anything but the right thing for the people living under the Empire’s Rule.
    We need more stories like that.

  • @thesteel09
    @thesteel09 Pƙed 5 lety +16

    Captain Needa could be viewed as a “good person”. The Empire is built around the morals of self preservation. However he owned up to his mistake and went to apologise to Darth Vader, probably knowing the consequences. Don’t know his backstory, but from this little scene in Empire Strikes Back, we can presume he’s not an “all bad” person.

  • @SGresponse
    @SGresponse Pƙed 5 lety +6

    The answer is Maarek Stele, mate.
    One of my favorite characters from the Star Wars EU.

  • @cyrolocker1229
    @cyrolocker1229 Pƙed 4 lety +8

    “Listen man I know that the empire represses my rights and freedoms but god damn it it has a better dental plan than the rebels”

  • @fernandomarques5166
    @fernandomarques5166 Pƙed 5 lety +23

    I've read Lost Stars, that book gives a incredible insight on the view of the common stormtroopers.
    In that book there was a alderaanian, he saw his planet blow up in the DS1, after that he embraced the only thing he had left, the empire.

  • @TheACEcompany
    @TheACEcompany Pƙed 5 lety +10

    "There are no good men in war.............just men trying to get through"

  • @jamesricker3997
    @jamesricker3997 Pƙed 4 lety +9

    The Empire brought peace and stability, the instability of a later years of the Republic combined with a chaos of the Clone Wars would give many citizens the desire to fight to maintain the peace and prevent the chaos from happening again

  • @DarkNova50
    @DarkNova50 Pƙed 5 lety +25

    For all the flak the prequel trilogies get, it presented us with a more realistic interpretation of how good ol' Sheev came into power. The man orchestrated a conflict that let him run a killer PR campaign, to the point where most of the Republic looked at him as THE man who saved the galaxy from the Clone Wars, as well as managing to survive an attempted coup by the Jedi. I think it would have been interesting to see if the average Republic citizen trusted the Jedi Order, or whether they regarded their resident space wizards with fear and suspicion; the latter would have worked in Palpatine's favour, and I could see how he might have used that to his advantage.
    I think it could be interesting to see the political side of how Palpatine managed the Empire after he took control. Did he keep working that public image, selling himself to the populace as the man who saved the galaxy? If so, then I could easily see how good people would want to fight for the Galactic Empire, and view the Rebellion as a bunch of criminals.

  • @giladpellaeon1691
    @giladpellaeon1691 Pƙed 5 lety +9

    Timothy Zahn has done a good job of writing Imperials as people. Allegiance and Choices of One are two good examples where a squad of stormtroopers desert from service due to an incident with the ISB but still believe in the Empire believing the Empire as a whole but feeling there are some bad apples tarnishing the name.
    Also Gilad Pellaeon first introduced in the Thrawn trilogy was a completely loyal Imperial because the Empire brought order and stability where the rebels were criminals only bringing chaos to the galaxy.
    And thirdly the Empire offers a really good benefits package.

  • @lewatoaofair2522
    @lewatoaofair2522 Pƙed 5 lety +4

    "Good people can faithfully serve an evil regime."
    Reminds me a lot of the Milgrim Experiment. It was conducted out of the question of "how the German people could have been brought to support the Nazis, even with the holocaust."
    The experiment involved the participant being put in charge of a switch box that conducted electric shocks to someone in a separate room. They were told to administer the shocks whenever the other person answered a question wrong, and progress to lethal levels. (The shocks weren't real, by the way.) Those experimented often questioned going that far, while the professor overseeing them was just there to insist that the experiment continued. Over 2/3 of participants reached the "deathly shock."
    Ethical criticisms aside, this experiment says a lot about this "good people doing or serving horrible things" point. It comes down to the charisma of authority figures.

  • @ImperatorZor
    @ImperatorZor Pƙed 5 lety +5

    Pelleon was a good officer and a good person and a loyal believer of The Empire.

  • @kingnaga619
    @kingnaga619 Pƙed 5 lety +5

    This is the kind of content that puts you guys so far above and beyond any sci-fi/fiction lore channel.

    • @TemplinInstitute
      @TemplinInstitute  Pƙed 5 lety +1

      Thank you very much. This is the kind of content that always makes me nervous because I'm never sure how people are going to respond. Glad ya liked it! - Marc

  • @mr.terrific601
    @mr.terrific601 Pƙed 5 lety +66

    Never click on a video so quick in my life

  • @Nidhogg13
    @Nidhogg13 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    This is a very valuable video. Every single point made here also applies to the Confederate States of America, which certain types also want to denigrate as a cartoon villain with no nuance, along with everyone who fought for it.
    “Stonewall” Jackson ran a school for poor black kids, ya’ll. Lee said he wished he owned every slave so he could free them and avoid the war. It enrages me to see them treated as villains to be forgotten.

  • @kecta441
    @kecta441 Pƙed 5 lety +60

    Grand Admiral Thrawn.

    • @johnathonhaney8291
      @johnathonhaney8291 Pƙed 5 lety +2

      Perfect example!

    • @Krondon-SSR
      @Krondon-SSR Pƙed 5 lety

      Prawn*

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea Pƙed 5 lety +1

      "The Empire is a government. It keeps billions of beings fed and clothed. Day after day, year after year, on thousands of worlds, people live their lives under Imperial rule without seeing a stormtrooper or hearing a TIE fighter scream overhead.” - Thrawn

    • @lafortya
      @lafortya Pƙed 5 lety +2

      And Captain Pellion (sp?), Thrawn's Number One. He wasn't a cartoon bad guy, but a dedicated and pretty much honorable military man.

    • @zingtea
      @zingtea Pƙed 5 lety

      @@Krondon-SSR Fookin' prawns!

  • @filimongalogavros5301
    @filimongalogavros5301 Pƙed 5 lety +4

    Order . Justice . Freedom . Security
    To the Galaxy .

  • @RilfDanielson
    @RilfDanielson Pƙed 5 lety +49

    "This is not to say that the Galactic Empire was anything more than an evil regime." That's where you're wrong, *CITIZEN*

    • @punctuationman334
      @punctuationman334 Pƙed 3 lety

      Palpatine was retarded and not based. Please get thrawn into power and I’ll consider the empire.

  • @TheIfifi
    @TheIfifi Pƙed 5 lety +97

    I have always found the "Baddie for the sake of being Bad" sort of villain is boring and makes my eyes roll. People like the Hand of Judgement, a stormtrooper squad under Mara Jade's command, stern believes in the order and principle of the empire but who fought corrupt imperials were great for the lord. Giliad Pelleaon was another great character but perhaps what Larissa said about Thrawn in your previous episode is one of the best so far:
    *"If Thrawn was a believer in the empire has become a subject of much debate, it is widely recognized that he admired many of it's concepts. A centralized government with a strong military. His views of the rampant xenophobia within the regime was a great deal more complex, as shown by his egalitarian rule in the empire of the hand. The Galaxy may never know his true motives for making war on the New republic, was it all part of a great plan to prepare the galaxy for the arrival of the Yuzhaan vong, was he only interested in the protection of his people? Or was he simply an opportunistic warlord.."* (Great voice Larissa)
    Disney is just doing so much to make it black and white, I find it boring bland. Not to mention terrible story writing.

    • @AverageEstonian
      @AverageEstonian Pƙed 5 lety +1

      Yet at the start of every large government there is a noble cause but when it gets to big things fall apart since paper work gets to big to handle and red tape gets to long nuf said.

    • @TheIfifi
      @TheIfifi Pƙed 5 lety +4

      @@AverageEstonian But you did not say anything at all.. This was just a sweeping generalization, a great simplification.

    • @AverageEstonian
      @AverageEstonian Pƙed 5 lety

      @@TheIfifi Some times it is easy to keep thing simple so almost all people can understand meaning of what is said.

    • @TheIfifi
      @TheIfifi Pƙed 5 lety +5

      @@AverageEstonian Sounds like a lazy excuse to me...

    • @AverageEstonian
      @AverageEstonian Pƙed 5 lety +1

      @@TheIfifi Well yeah it is some what lazy since i got home from work at moment when i wrote it so yeah still i stated my opinion.

  • @bigslurpee2078
    @bigslurpee2078 Pƙed 5 lety +236

    Well, let's say rebels killed your parents. Then you join up to save other people from those who kill your people.
    Edit: Thanks for the likes!

    • @devo342
      @devo342 Pƙed 5 lety +7

      By blowing up a mostly innocent planet and forcing people into slavery? Nothing like a self righteous hypocrite.

    • @bigslurpee2078
      @bigslurpee2078 Pƙed 5 lety +38

      @@devo342
      Not trying to seem self righteous, just providing an explanation. No need to be rude.

    • @chadkingoffuckmountain970
      @chadkingoffuckmountain970 Pƙed 5 lety +5

      Yeah but what if imperials killed my parents? Do I just join up
      With them then?

    • @bigslurpee2078
      @bigslurpee2078 Pƙed 5 lety +17

      @@chadkingoffuckmountain970
      I'm not trying to explain every dynamic, just the one in which somebody might be patriotic to the empire. I'm not saying everybody joined the empire.

    • @johnathonhaney8291
      @johnathonhaney8291 Pƙed 5 lety +23

      Rogue One hinted at such terrible things happening with certain Alliance factions in the early days. It'd give anybody strong incentive to join up with the outfit that'd do something about it.

  • @MrChopstsicks
    @MrChopstsicks Pƙed 5 lety +4

    Why? in the words of Arthur Morgan.
    "I need Muneh, BOAH"

  • @user-ys7ab2fg3s
    @user-ys7ab2fg3s Pƙed 5 lety +4

    Cool uniforms, shiny ships and great benefits. For the Empire!

  • @echothewanderer112
    @echothewanderer112 Pƙed 4 lety +3

    Because storm trooper. That's all the reason I need.

  • @gangsta74110
    @gangsta74110 Pƙed 4 lety +4

    Legends is filled with such stories of imperial Troopers, officers, and such being decent, morale, hard working persons, and I love most of them sm

  • @CaptainM792
    @CaptainM792 Pƙed 5 lety +4

    Both the Rebels and the Imperials wanted to make the Galaxy a better place. The rebel alliance wanted to restore the Republic, but they don't realise that they could achieve that by working for the empire. First, become an officer in the imperial navy, then, rise to high levels (eg. Admiral, Grand Moff or Governor) and use you political powers to improve the empire, make the empire same as or better than the republic. In other words, you become a good imperial. That is how you could "Restore the Republic".

  • @CommissarInbram
    @CommissarInbram Pƙed 5 lety +9

    Play the Swtor, lots of good Imperial stories :)

  • @andrewmichael9201
    @andrewmichael9201 Pƙed 4 lety +2

    To answer MARC’s question at the beginning, yes there are Imperial officers who honored their underlings. Mainly Grand Admiral Thrawn.
    Thrawn on numerous occasions accepted questioning of his orders by his officers and rarely punished failure. To him, so long as an officer worked to the best of their abilities, he accepted their failure and often taught them how to be better officers. So long as they didn’t express insubordination,blatant stupidity, or ignorance, he kept them in service to him. If they didn’t meet these criteria, he sent them on their way to a different officer, often one who refused to work to the best of their abilities and got their position not through hard work but instead through political machinations.

  • @stephangeiger4268
    @stephangeiger4268 Pƙed 4 lety +5

    In Russia many people see Rebel Aliance as terrorist group, that just fight for goods of ex senators, which lost power after enstablishment of Galactic Empire.

    • @Batkenpre
      @Batkenpre Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Do you mean Russian fans

  • @chickenmaster2134
    @chickenmaster2134 Pƙed 5 lety +3

    For a "good" imperial officer that doesn't defect, I recommend reading about Tank in Empire 16-18: To the Last Man.

  • @supsup335
    @supsup335 Pƙed 5 lety +5

    There is a Comic about the story of a Stormtrooper, which is exactly what you dscribe. In fact, he has enough reason to HATE the Rebellion

  • @Jpeg.g
    @Jpeg.g Pƙed 3 lety +1

    this is why I love the squadrons trailer so much, it shows a wing commander caring about and protecting his squad mates at the cost of him being left behind, it shows an x wing pilot being a d!ck saying "THE WARS OVER" right before crashing into a rock because he was to busy yelling at the tie pilot, and the pilot saying "not for me" as a transport appears overhead

  • @foppishdandy8068
    @foppishdandy8068 Pƙed 5 lety

    That was the most video-relevant ad read I've ever heard. Truly, kudos to the Institute!

  • @TR-ru7wl
    @TR-ru7wl Pƙed 5 lety +3

    Your video is timed perfectly to come 5 days after the release of the fan film "Bucketheads" which came out on youtube. It follows a squad of stormtroopers trapped in enemy territory, and it's pretty much what you're talking about in this video.

  • @argentward1
    @argentward1 Pƙed 5 lety +31

    I've personally always been pro imperial, despite the love and 'hope' that the rebels loved to preach, it was generally only the higher command of the rebel alliance and face characters that were the good people in the story, in many, many events most resistance groups resembled Saw Gerrera, merciless, amoral and blinded by ill educated rage. Individuals who killed anyone who didn't support their cause, regardless of being a man woman or child.
    One also has to remember that the story is presented in the eyes of the jedi, or the rebel alliance. Not the eyes of the citizens or the Empire it's self to which never knew that Anikin was still alive, that the jedi attacked the clones first at the temple or that palpatine was indeed a sith lord.
    To most, everyone saw their beloved leader betrayed by a religious fanatic cult that was no longer supported by a democracy on the verge of collapse. A galaxy ruined by a war of politics and corruption. The empire was formed (To the face of the galaxy) to rescue the galaxy that in many places were just rubble or planets that were home to lawless scoundrel that abused the population for personal gain.
    and as it's stated above, the empire despite it's harsh control tactics did in fact bring security, food and opportunity to everyone when they arrived, even aliens, despite their Anti-Alien behavior.

  • @spartnmarcen5110
    @spartnmarcen5110 Pƙed 5 lety

    This is a great video. Definitely need more of this kind of topic.

  • @Luey_Luey
    @Luey_Luey Pƙed 5 lety +1

    It's worth noting that Luke himself in the OT talks about his dreams of becoming an imperial pilot

  • @CurtWedin
    @CurtWedin Pƙed 5 lety +10

    The novel Lost Stars by Claudia Gray covers this topic in a pretty interesting way. I'd recommend checking it out!

  • @henriquepedrazzi9008
    @henriquepedrazzi9008 Pƙed 4 lety +14

    >imagine unironically disliking the empire because of MuH fReDoOm

  • @sir.charlesmadden842
    @sir.charlesmadden842 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I think that good example of a good person who serves the Empire is Gilad Pellaeon. This man made so that the remnants of the Empire ended slavery, stopped committing war crimes and he managed to finish the Galactic Civil War using diplomacy. Pellaeon valued his subordinates and believed in imperial values.

  • @williamfisher3313
    @williamfisher3313 Pƙed 5 lety +2

    I’ve always been an advocate for this theory. Both in fiction and in reality. Just because someone is serving in the military of a flawed people or government doesn’t automatically make them a evil person. People, both in our world and any fictional world are often more complicated than that.

  • @ZombiePanda88
    @ZombiePanda88 Pƙed 5 lety +6

    Reason:
    Job
    Career
    Money
    Employment
    Space Adventure!

  • @user-Jay178
    @user-Jay178 Pƙed 5 lety +1

    Great video and you guys make cool and awesome videos.

  • @LtCmdrTyler
    @LtCmdrTyler Pƙed 5 lety

    This is one of the best Templin Institute videos. I've always been a fan of The Empire, and this video does a really good job of explaining why someone might choose to fight for what it stood for.

  • @nahx6205
    @nahx6205 Pƙed 5 lety +3

    The problem with the Empire is how it was structured.
    If the emperor is pissed he yells at the high command,
    So then high command yells at officers,
    Officers then yell at NCOs,
    NCOs yell at regular soldiers,
    Soldiers yell at civilians,
    The civilians yell at the emperor and call for his overthrow, making him more pissed so the cycle repeats.

    • @tefky7964
      @tefky7964 Pƙed 4 lety

      And in which type of government is it different?

  • @Gordozinho
    @Gordozinho Pƙed 5 lety +3

    "Hans, are we the baddies?"

  • @uncleurdnot
    @uncleurdnot Pƙed 5 lety

    Good Incoming video Marc, still waiting for a video on the United Federation of Planets but I can wait a little longer.

  • @niccanavan1028
    @niccanavan1028 Pƙed 5 lety +1

    Great video 👍

  • @imperialadvisoraremheshvau3788

    Oh ... this is BEAUTIFUL. May The Emperor Bless the Templin Institute’s work.

  • @_98s
    @_98s Pƙed 5 lety +30

    Please can you guys do a video on Mandalorians EU or canon which ever would be great

    • @sapith2700
      @sapith2700 Pƙed 5 lety

      Juan Collazos Mandalorians from EU/Legends have more information on their history and culture. So I’d say definitely do EU Mandalorians.

    • @commenter3843
      @commenter3843 Pƙed 5 lety +3

      eu mandalorians are better, more culture and they are not theses pacifistic fools that they became in the clone wars and rebels

    • @wasserruebenvergilbungsvirus
      @wasserruebenvergilbungsvirus Pƙed 4 lety

      God whenever I read EU here I think you mean European Union and become confused as heck... D:

  • @Amadeus8484
    @Amadeus8484 Pƙed 4 lety +1

    Veers actually seemed like a decent person, professional and competent.

  • @wazup1337
    @wazup1337 Pƙed 5 lety

    I love these videos. It reminds me of my English lectures in college

  • @Emrald7
    @Emrald7 Pƙed 5 lety +5

    Big points are sound. Most western viewers will point to post 9/11 mentalities, with promises of stability after decades of conflict. And the Galactic Republic post-War does fit the bill quite nicely for that.
    An interesting Star Wars story might take place, giving the daily lives of soldiers as they just make it through the hum-drum of everyday life on a forward operating base on the Outer Rim, fighting off insurgents.
    Admittedly, I’m thinking this through from the bottom up, but I’m sure someone could make a compelling Officer, but a story I’d like to see is a medical officer trying to keep his troops motivated and fighting to get supplies of bandages when the other officers just want more weapons and ammo.
    ... but that’s just me spitballing.

  • @DaHuntsman1
    @DaHuntsman1 Pƙed 4 lety +4

    I can answer this in real practical terms: The reason why anyone would fight for the Galactic Empire is the same reason why anyone would fight for any form of Government. Reasons of patriotism, money, and sometimes just straight up not having any other choice

  • @MGSBigBoss77
    @MGSBigBoss77 Pƙed 5 lety

    Love that artwork of the Imperial Scout Trooper at; 5:30 Jovemini's art isn't it?!

  • @TheFinalFifty
    @TheFinalFifty Pƙed 3 lety +2

    "Is it possible to be a good person, and an imperial soldier?" Yes
    Whats not possible is for someone to be a rebel soldier or sympathizer and to also be good person

  • @seanwaddell2659
    @seanwaddell2659 Pƙed 4 lety +4

    Are we going to talk about Thrawn or?

  • @seranonable
    @seranonable Pƙed 5 lety +4

    I'm so glad I didn't buy Battlefront 2. Remember them talking about wanting to tell the other side of the story? In retrospect, that was a clear bait and switch.

  • @ilyamuromets5188
    @ilyamuromets5188 Pƙed 5 lety

    I'm glad this video subverted my expectations and clearly established an argument that shares parallels to real life.

  • @iagoregiani3244
    @iagoregiani3244 Pƙed 5 lety

    Good video as always!
    Would be nice to see a discussion between The Templin Institute and some specialized SW channel, such as The Lore Master, Star Wars Explained or Star Wars Reading Club

  • @ops3892
    @ops3892 Pƙed 5 lety +4

    The Empire brings stability, order, and technology to the uncivilized. Long live The Empire death to the rebellion.

  • @FreyrDev
    @FreyrDev Pƙed 5 lety +3

    I just watched the naming video. Can you just explain this a bit more: if you had an 'organisation' that spanned many planets that each had some local authority but still had a central government, could that be called a protectorate, or would it be better as something like a confederation

  • @bodipsypha
    @bodipsypha Pƙed 3 lety

    Great point!

  • @pubcle
    @pubcle Pƙed 4 lety +1

    In the movie, I'd suggest the most human portrayed character in the Empire was Admiral Piett. Though in the opening and cut scenes of New Hope Luke is talking about the idea of joining the Empire, when he refers to joining the academy he's talking about an Imperial Stormtrooper academy. He hates the Empire but it's his chance off the planet and away.
    Fel's bloodline, as the inheritance of the Empire, is fascinating in the old EU. The true believers like Giliad Pellaeon and Marek Stele are great. Tarkin himself as the architect was one who merely believed force and fear to be the only way to ensure a lasting peace. Yularen is fantastic in the books and old lore that explained him. Most of the major naval officers besides the nobles and a few of the more cruel. Zel Johans is an Imperial Army Officer from a few core books and stories that was pretty good. Honestly just going through officers of the lore gets you a lot of characters that were just straight true believers.
    I love how the Expanded Universe of the old lore came to conclude the collapse of the Empire because it was realistic and proved the Empire had a point and there was reason people fought for it. The Emperor's death created a power vacuum and shattered the Empire, the Rebellion was pathetic for a galactic military force, they couldn't take planets, the Rebellion was never powerful enough to truly take major Imperial fleets head-to-head and had a tiny amount of manpower, it wasn't set up to fill in that vacuum at all at the time of the Empire's destruction and everything collapsed into a chaos of war that was worse than the Galactic Civil War as few planets allied and all fought, and even until the end there were still true believers which kept the Empire alive.

  • @kennethlacroix889
    @kennethlacroix889 Pƙed 5 lety +3

    Well one argument is that jedi values-based and democracy didn't work out in the republic, as it was a very elite regime, keeping the poor people overtaxed in the outerworlds (which turned to the seperatista), and wasn't very equal or fair. The empire strives peace by assinilation and the republic had peace through treaties and agreements. You know, im not joking when i imagine the star wars universe to be russia in its transformation to the USSR. The "peaceful" Tsars are the enemy to the same people they serve, which brought the pendelum swinging to a more authoritarian state. This was a lot more applicable in legends.

  • @cjsites
    @cjsites Pƙed 5 lety +6

    It’s morally easy to point and say...”evil, bad men” than to understand the individual actions that led to a decision or belief.

  • @echobravo7499
    @echobravo7499 Pƙed 5 lety

    LOVE THIS!!!

  • @gridcoregilry666
    @gridcoregilry666 Pƙed 5 lety

    well done!

  • @svijj_
    @svijj_ Pƙed 5 lety +13

    Do you question the words of the mighty Emperor?

  • @dsmithum
    @dsmithum Pƙed 5 lety +12

    This argument would hold more weight before Alderon and the dissolution of the senate. After that it is pretty obvious the empire was something not worth preserving to any moral individual.

    • @devo342
      @devo342 Pƙed 5 lety +7

      I'd say the time an admiral landed a starship on a bunch of protesters and wasn't even given a token punishment or maybe the legalization of slavery or even the jedi purge proved the empire had no right to exist.

    • @Fangtorn
      @Fangtorn Pƙed 5 lety +2

      The senate was corrupt and full of traitorous rebel sympathizers. Alderaan was a hotbed of terrorist activity. There are all sorts of justifications moral individuals can make for all sorts of atrocious acts, especially when the very regime that committed them controls what they hear about it.

    • @Historyfan476AD
      @Historyfan476AD Pƙed 5 lety +14

      @@devo342 the republic created the breeding ground for an organisation like the empire to rise. later on the new republic showed it was incapable of keeping the galaxy together and protected.

    • @bigslurpee2078
      @bigslurpee2078 Pƙed 5 lety +7

      @@devo342
      The Jedi were painted as traitors so their deaths were justified in the eyes of the average imperial.

    • @Emrald7
      @Emrald7 Pƙed 5 lety +2

      I feel like their must have been some form of propaganda or misinformation campaign. No way they just ran that without some tight lipped information control.
      Admittedly, I haven’t read cannon stuff, or legends, so I’m spitballing with real life stuff.

  • @LAJ-47FC9
    @LAJ-47FC9 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    The lure of stability is far more powerful than people think...

  • @Glitch_Online
    @Glitch_Online Pƙed 5 lety

    Love this video... even IRL we need to learn to judge the individual and not the group.

  • @5Picoseconds
    @5Picoseconds Pƙed 5 lety +230

    because they are the good guys! smh it's pretty easy to understand!

    • @dwnkaomwn3953
      @dwnkaomwn3953 Pƙed 5 lety +1

      That's in the eyes of the beholder.

    • @devo342
      @devo342 Pƙed 5 lety +7

      No I'm pretty sure destroying an entire planet becuase a few of its rulers are rebels is pretty clear cut evil

    • @RandyrheBlackKnight
      @RandyrheBlackKnight Pƙed 5 lety +21

      Alderaan deserved it. How many billions of innocent people died because they funded a Galaxy wide coalition of terrorists?

    • @robertpeterson3871
      @robertpeterson3871 Pƙed 5 lety

      Yes

    • @robertpeterson3871
      @robertpeterson3871 Pƙed 5 lety

      You have rights

  • @Brainwashed101
    @Brainwashed101 Pƙed 5 lety +2

    I love this! My go-to comparison is the US Civil War. Plenty of skilled and honorable men fought for an incredibly indefensible cause.

  • @baronmunro1494
    @baronmunro1494 Pƙed 5 lety

    Woah I thought this was a generation tech video when I clicked on it. Very happy to see it's a Templin video.

  • @sirjgn4868
    @sirjgn4868 Pƙed 5 lety +2

    When a crazy emperor destroys planets in 40k its a normal Tuesday, but when a crazy Star Wars emperor does it everyone loses their minds :P

    • @tefky7964
      @tefky7964 Pƙed 4 lety

      Did you say that our God Emperor is crazy,YOU HERETIC?!