The alien racism thing never really came into Star Wars in a big way with the narrative in regards to the films but I've definitely seen the Hitler in Palpatine for quite some time.
I can say with 100% scientific accuracy that the answer is "kind-of". If you are using a generalization of race, then yes, just like all Wookies are....wookian? Twi'lek's are the same race. If we use races from different planets, it gets incredibly complex.wizzy555 said:I never understood the racist thing, it seems very tacted on for the sake of being evil. I mean it seems in the prequels that some of his most power supporters were Alien.
Also are the "humans" in star wars even the same race? It isn't really mentioned.
So, the deal with Order 66 was that it was just an order: a conditional clause that basically said, "In the event of an attempted coup on the Chancellor by the Jedi, execute the Jedi." It was so devious because Palpatine got the clone troopers in place, got them to earn the trust of the jedi, and then insured that an entire clone army bred from a race of cold, methodical killers with a legacy history of killing jedi efficiently were in a position to do so...without remorse, and without betraying their feelings because they were bred to essentially not have any feelings about this at all...it was just war. Even the cartoon series demonstrates that only a very few clones had grown beyond their breeding to question what happened (and I loved in Ep. III how Commander Cody had no problem with adding Obi-Wan to his kill list when the time came to it).Sniper Team 4 said:Hm...I never put together the second apart, about how all the Seps in the prequel trilogy were non-humans, and thus that would probably help push the pro-human mindset. I give you major bonus points for that one, because I am a HUGE Star Wars fan and I've heard this discussion many times.
Off Topic a bit: Does anyone else HATE how Order 66 went down? Because I do. I get it. I know the Jedi had to lose, and I know that numbers can overwhelm, but damn. Out of all these Jedi warriors, only Ki-Adi is able to fight back, and he only manages to take out two Clones.
This should have been a blood bath. Okay, Plo in the fighter and not-Adi on the speeder, they were toast. But the others? Especially the ones at the Temple? There should have been bodies of Clone Troopers, especially in the doorway and leading up to the steps. The Jedi were supposed to be these great warriors, able to sense danger coming. After all, they can block laser bolts. Anakin's good, but he can't be everywhere. The Clones should have been climbing over the bodies of their fallen comrades if the skill on that little kid was any indication. Instead, there are more dead Jedi than Clones, which has always bothered me.
There's a lot in Star Wars that is implied but not spelled out or demonstrated overtly except when it can be alleviated with a bit of comic humor, mostly because the series is aimed squarely at a PG crowd. The underlying racism (speciesism?) along with many, many other themes that are essentially adult and what make the films and universe have lasting appeal to adults are there, they just aren't as overt as you'll see in films that deliberately seek to play off on those themes.Redlin5 said:The alien racism thing never really came into Star Wars in a big way with the narrative in regards to the films but I've definitely seen the Hitler in Palpatine for quite some time.
Where? Beyond 'all the bad guys are human' (as are the vast majority of the rebels), where in the films does the Empire do anything racist?camazotz said:The underlying racism (speciesism?) along with many, many other themes that are essentially adult and what make the films and universe have lasting appeal to adults are there,