What Lucas got wrong; or, maybe the Jedi weren't all they were cracked up to be
I am going to do something I told myself I would not do: write a serious post about Revenge of the Sith, and about the Star Wars universe in general. As
kwalton said once, they're only movies. But they have some interesting messages in them, and the lack of critical thought with which some people -- especially teenagers -- seem to accept to underlying precepts bothers me a bit. Although I have to confess that, while I saw Phantom Menace several times (and IV, V, and VI more than I can count), I have seen the other two of the first three only once. (I intend to see Sith again -- Attack of the Clones I found next to unwatchable.)
(Part of this arose from a discussion with my son, who at fourteen is a more nuanced thinker than I was at twenty. He scares me a bit, but that's another story.)
There appear to me to be two basic messages: there is good and there is bad, and which is which is obvious if only you have all the information; and that denying that which makes us human gives us strength.
The first is a dangerous thought: it creates monsters. Not all injustice is a result of hunger for power: it is also a result of a firm belief in your own righteousness. Much political discord at a personal level in this country is a result of such thinking. Most conservatives I know are not evil people seeking power; they are people who honestly believe that what they are doing is the right thing. Substitute "pro-life" for "pro-democracy" in the Jedi ethos and you get Operation Rescue. The Jedi may be willing to die for democracy, but they are equally willing to spy and kill for it. They may exercise a more benevolent form of realpolitik than the Sith, but it is a form of realpolitik nonetheless. This is not to say that they are equally evil to the Sith: as
pecunium said in a recent post, intentions matter. That you intend good matters a great deal -- but it is not all that matters. The ends do not in and of themselves justify the means.
Which brings us to the second point. One of the most gruesome and evil acts committed by Anakin Skywalker in Sith (which fortunately takes place offscreen) is the murder of the "younglings." It is a scene designated to outrage the most hardened viewer -- what is worse than the murder of children?
Yet, it is troubling that the children were in the temple in the first place. As I can gather from the movies the Jedi removed potential recruits from their families so that they could grow up in a monastic environment devoid of fear. It is an idea old as the hills: there is a Jesuit maxim "Give me a child until he is seven, and I will show you the man." From an early age, Jedi are taught to deny basic elements of their humanity: Jedi must not fear, Jedi must not love.
Which is fine for a fairy tale. The problem is, you cannot teach children in a vacuum. You do not teach courage -- moral or otherwise --- by denying fear. You teach courage by showing how to embrace fear: not by saying "you must not fear" but by saying "yes, you are afraid --- everyone is afraid - but do not let the fear keep you from what you need to do." You do not teach love for mankind by denying love for the individual. You do not teach compassion by denying loss: you teach compassion by pointing out that the losses of self and extrapolating to an understanding of the losses of others.
You do not face a nine-year-old boy and say -- "you are unacceptable because you love and you fear." You face the nine-year-old boy and say "you feel fear, you feel loss, you are special because you are in a better position than most to recognize and care for the fears and losses of others."
Passion for social justice arises from a deep and profound sense of connectedness with others, which often results in anger -- or even rage -- on their behalf. A commitment to democracy formed absent that is a pale and bloodless thing. You do not live a good life by denying "the dark side": you do so by embracing and recognizing it and calling it for your own -- and not letting it rule your actions.
I would not wish to live a life under the Sith. But I am not convinced I would want to live under the Jedi either: an oligarchy, however benevolent, is nonetheless an oligarchy.
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
(Part of this arose from a discussion with my son, who at fourteen is a more nuanced thinker than I was at twenty. He scares me a bit, but that's another story.)
There appear to me to be two basic messages: there is good and there is bad, and which is which is obvious if only you have all the information; and that denying that which makes us human gives us strength.
The first is a dangerous thought: it creates monsters. Not all injustice is a result of hunger for power: it is also a result of a firm belief in your own righteousness. Much political discord at a personal level in this country is a result of such thinking. Most conservatives I know are not evil people seeking power; they are people who honestly believe that what they are doing is the right thing. Substitute "pro-life" for "pro-democracy" in the Jedi ethos and you get Operation Rescue. The Jedi may be willing to die for democracy, but they are equally willing to spy and kill for it. They may exercise a more benevolent form of realpolitik than the Sith, but it is a form of realpolitik nonetheless. This is not to say that they are equally evil to the Sith: as
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Which brings us to the second point. One of the most gruesome and evil acts committed by Anakin Skywalker in Sith (which fortunately takes place offscreen) is the murder of the "younglings." It is a scene designated to outrage the most hardened viewer -- what is worse than the murder of children?
Yet, it is troubling that the children were in the temple in the first place. As I can gather from the movies the Jedi removed potential recruits from their families so that they could grow up in a monastic environment devoid of fear. It is an idea old as the hills: there is a Jesuit maxim "Give me a child until he is seven, and I will show you the man." From an early age, Jedi are taught to deny basic elements of their humanity: Jedi must not fear, Jedi must not love.
Which is fine for a fairy tale. The problem is, you cannot teach children in a vacuum. You do not teach courage -- moral or otherwise --- by denying fear. You teach courage by showing how to embrace fear: not by saying "you must not fear" but by saying "yes, you are afraid --- everyone is afraid - but do not let the fear keep you from what you need to do." You do not teach love for mankind by denying love for the individual. You do not teach compassion by denying loss: you teach compassion by pointing out that the losses of self and extrapolating to an understanding of the losses of others.
You do not face a nine-year-old boy and say -- "you are unacceptable because you love and you fear." You face the nine-year-old boy and say "you feel fear, you feel loss, you are special because you are in a better position than most to recognize and care for the fears and losses of others."
Passion for social justice arises from a deep and profound sense of connectedness with others, which often results in anger -- or even rage -- on their behalf. A commitment to democracy formed absent that is a pale and bloodless thing. You do not live a good life by denying "the dark side": you do so by embracing and recognizing it and calling it for your own -- and not letting it rule your actions.
I would not wish to live a life under the Sith. But I am not convinced I would want to live under the Jedi either: an oligarchy, however benevolent, is nonetheless an oligarchy.