6 Reasons The Jedi Would Be
The Villain In Any Sane Movie
Luke Skywalker, Yoda, Kit
Fisto -- they were our heroes growing up. With their lightsabers and Force
pushes, the Jedi battled evil and made the galaxy a better place. But did they
really? Here are six things about the Jedi that ... look, we're really sorry
about this, but we're about to ruin your image of Kit Fisto.
6 The Jedi Mind Trick Is Fucking Terrifying
Early in the first movie (and
this counts for both "firsts"), we're introduced to a Jedi mind trick
-- a way for Jedi to manipulate others. It's explained to viewers that The
Force gives "power over the weak-minded." Apparently, being stupid in
the Star Wars universe is a serious enough crime that your free will
can be taken from you by some dick wizard.
The thing is, there's no real
indicator of what the Jedi mean by "weak-minded." It's not just
stormtroopers who pulled Tatooine checkpoint duty. Powerful monarchs are
apparently susceptible, while mob bosses and junk salesmen are immune. When you
think about it, the "good guy" Jedi ability to control minds really
seems to work only on the exact minds it shouldn't.
When you think about it more,
you realize those incompetent stormtroopers that let Obi-Wan drive through the
droid checkpoint were almost certainly killed later by their supervisor. We
doubt Darth Vader would have taken, "Some old guy vouched for those
robots," as an excuse. And while on the subject, would they even remember?
A Jedi mind trick is probably like getting blackout drunk. Later that day,
those two stormtroopers were being pulled into the air by their throats and
shitting into their plastic armor with absolutely no idea why it was happening.
It might have been nicer to just run them over with the landspeeder, Obi-Wan.
And that's the thing -- it's
never made clear the limits of this power, either in its scope or where it's
appropriate to use. In Episode II, Obi-Wan runs into a sleazebag named
Elan Sleazebaggano (no, really, Elan Sleazebaggano). Elan tries to sell him a drug
called "death sticks," which would have the stupidest name ever put
on a page of a screenplay if it wasn't sitting there next to the words
"Elan Sleazebaggano." Obi-Wan uses his Jedi mind trick to tell him to
go home and rethink his life.
But wait ... if that works, it
raises a question: Why not do that all day? Wouldn't that eventually cut
galactic crime by around all? Couldn't you save billions more
lives a second if you had a TV show where you mind-tricked viewers into being
good rather than cutting a bad guy in half every few weeks? But that just
brings up the larger point ...
5 The Jedi Have No Official Policies,
Regulation, Or Accountability
If you sat down and watched
all six Star Wars movies, you might have some vague notion of a Jedi
Code. It seems like they should have one, right? They certainly wouldn't train
people and Muppets to control minds and crush throats without giving them
strict guidelines on when it's OK to do those things, would they?
If there is some kind of Jedi
Code, it seems to be a loose suggestion at best. In the prequels, Qui-Gon Jinn
doesn't follow the code, and the only consequence is not being allowed on the
Council. Is that even a punishment? The Jedi Council looks like Sam Jackson and
a room of radiation-poisoned dildos, and they seem to have all the political
power of a U.N. ambassador's wife's book club.
Is there a system in place for
when a Jedi starts doing whatever the hell he wants? For instance, if one of
them were to mind-trick his way through a police checkpoint to get to a bar
where he cut your arm off during an argument ... is there someone you can call?
In Episode II, after Obi-Wan casually flings himself into space traffic,
it's up to Anakin to steal a car and save him. Is that the Jedi Code? Grand
theft speeder? He doesn't flash any kind of Jedi badge -- the owner of that car
can simply suck it, courtesy of The Force.
In Episode III, Anakin
seems to go against the Code pretty hard when he mutilates and murders Count
Dooku. He even mentions several times that dismembering and decapitating people
in cold blood isn't the Jedi way. And then what? There's no investigation ...
no paperwork. Anakin doesn't have to turn in a report, but you know the
Jedi Council heard about it. Even if they weren't clairvoyant wizards, the
galaxy's worst forensics investigator would have figured out the murder weapon
was a lightsaber and given them a call.
Compare this to our world,
where you
have to go through months of applications just to sell tacos out of a
street cart. But, we guess the system works for them. After all, when in these
movies do you ever see a Jedi go rogue and start causing problems for
everyone?
4 The Jedi Don't Care About The Republic Or
Democracy In General
If you sat through the
prequels, congratulations! Suffering builds character! Well, during those
character-building hours, you may have noticed the Jedi were fighting for the
Republic. So they're on the side of space democracy, right?
Not exactly. The first image
we see in the Star Wars timeline is them going to negotiate the trade
route. Why are these unelected, erratic sorcerer cops who are barely even
accountable to their own Jedi Council in charge of this? Why wasn't a
representative of the Senate with them? Sending two armed men with no economic
or diplomatic training to a trade negotiation seems like something a gang would
do, not a democracy.
So they aren't big fans of
democratic procedures, but what do the Jedi think about the Senate itself?
Let's look at a quote from the end of the prequels, when Mace Windu and Yoda
discuss the growing threat of Palpatine.
Ki-Adi-Mundi told them,
"If [Palpatine] does not give up his emergency powers after the
destruction of Grievous, then he should be removed from office." That
seems reasonable. And then Mace Windu goes, "The Jedi Council would
have to take control of the Senate in order to ensure a peaceful
transition."
Yeah, these champions of
galactic democracy decided to stage a military coup to ensure a
"peaceful" transition. And it wasn't their last, desperate choice.
Taking over the government with lightsabers was their very first idea. So
maybe it wasn't a heat-of-the moment mistake when Obi-Wan took Ponda Baba's arm
off in Mos Eisley. Because it seems like cutting off arms and telling everyone
in the room to screw themselves is a Jedi's go-to move under any circumstance.
It's possible the Jedi were so
far up their own asses with their ideals they really thought they could
peacefully take over the Senate. Fine. But when they found out Palpatine was a
Sith Lord, by cleverly noticing that he's so obviously a Sith Lord, they
decided not to tell anyone. Instead, Mace Windu said, "He's too dangerous
to be left alive!" and they went in swords lasing.
They didn't get a warrant,
Senate approval, or verification of any facts. They went in to assassinate a
man with as much care and oversight as a punk band firing their drummer. Jedi
Council, you spent half the movie complaining about your powers not working and
your vision being clouded. And suddenly now, when it has to do with murdering
the leader of your government, you're certain you have it all figured out? Are
you even listening to yourselves, Jedi?
But that just brings up
another point ...
3 Jedi Have No Non-Lethal Options
It's clear Jedi are quick to
murder. But even if they wanted to peacefully deal with someone, Jedi don't
carry handcuffs. Or tasers. Or pepper spray. We know stun guns exist in this
galaxy, so why not carry one? If a 6-year-old can build a C-3P0, someone should
be able to rig up some kind of net gun or sleep Frisbee. Maybe a lightsaber
that simply hurts rather than eviscerates?
The closest thing we see to a
non-lethal move from a Jedi is about 20 minutes into The Phantom Menace when
Qui-Gon Jinn puts his hand on Jar Jar Binks' shoulder and makes him pass out.
Let's ignore the damage this does to the compartmentalization of nerd brains by
introducing the Vulcan nerve pinch to the Star Wars universe. What it
means is that Jedi have the means to poke a guy to sleep even when they have
goofy-ass never-before-seen alien physiology. They simply never use it as a
method of conflict resolution; it's only something they use to shut up their
annoying friends.
In Attack Of The Clones,
Obi-Wan uses himself as bait to catch the bounty hunter Zam Wesell. His plan,
in its entirety, is to stand by the bar, wait for her to stick a gun in his
back, then chop her hand in half. We're not saying he was wrong, exactly.
We're simply saying there were maybe a few ways to bring in the suspect without
hacking off a part of her. It's very telling that while her fingers were still
flying through the air, Anakin says to the bartender, "Jedi
business."
What's really weird is that
the Jedi don't feel bad about any of this. Not only because they live in a
universe where you can replace Jedi-removed limbs with robot parts, but because
...
2 Jedi Are Trained To Feel No Remorse Or Pity
Throughout the movies, we are
constantly hit with how the Dark Side is about anger, hate, fear, insecurity,
dry mouth, diarrhea, VCR repair -- it's bad, and obviously so. So when we see
any of the Sith fight, it's either cruel like Dooku, lustful like Maul, or
sadistically cheerful like the Emperor. The Jedi, however, fight with nobility.
They never seem to be having much fun during their sword fights. Yoda's
fighting style is 80 percent front flips, and he still manages to look bored.
But, then again, how often do
you see the Jedi show regret for those they fricassee? We never saw Luke wonder
about the widows of the Death Star. We know those robots mowed down in the
prequels were sentient. They joked, laughed, made sarcastic quips ... they even
feared death. Did any Jedi so much as blink as they cut them down? Or any enemy
for that matter?
These are supposed to be
enlightened peacekeepers. How enlightened can these people be if they can sleep
at night as easily as they cut people in half? There isn't a single line of
dialogue in these movies dedicated to the guilt a Jedi might feel for killing
thousands, maybe millions of people.
Furthermore, the Jedi don't
seem to care about collateral damage. In Return Of The Jedi, Luke blew up
a "pleasure barge." Some of the passengers were probably just nice
Tatooine couples on their honeymoon. A lot of the employees were slaves. Max
Rebo and the Max Rebo Band were probably on that boat! That's like killing the
Ace Of Base of space, Luke!
The detachment isn't just our
imagination -- it seems to be an important part of the Jedi doctrine. Yoda
routinely speaks to Anakin about removing connections with people, accepting
death as a part of life, and basically separating oneself from any emotional
links. Keep in mind Yoda says these things when he's talking about Anakin's
girlfriend and his mother, who they left on Tatooine to be a slave. And if he
can get that detached from his family and girlfriend, imagine how little he
cares when he's murdering his enemies and the innocent people standing near
them.
Speaking of innocent people
destroyed by the Jedi ...
The Jedi Abduct Children
The Star Wars universe
doesn't have very many children in it. In fact, the first one we meet grows up
to cut all the other ones we meet into pieces. The only thing we really know
about Star Wars kids is that, if you're born with Force powers, the
Republic takes you away from your family. In The Phantom Menace, Qui-Gon
Jinn tells Anakin's mother that if he had been born in the Republic, they would
have taken him early for Jedi training. How early isn't made clear, but
in Attack Of The Clones we see a room full of blindfolded toddlers
practicing with lightsabers.
So these children are taken
from their homes, or in Anakin's case purchased, and given deadly weapons
before they know how to read. It seems ... irresponsible. And to support that
point, we're going to pick on Qui-Gon Jinn again. This man threw a boy in a
dangerous pod race in some kind of ridiculous spaceship repair scheme even
George Lucas didn't seem to understand. After he miraculously survives that,
Qui-Gon drops him in a war zone with only the advice, "Watch me and be
mindful."
That's not a helpful tip for a
9-year-old going into his first gun fight. That's something you say when you're
teaching him how to eat an artichoke or convince his mother you need a bigger
TV. And if you've seen the movie, you know Anakin's "mindful" move is
to hide in the cockpit of a working starfighter and immediately bumble into the
war. Which seems like a great time to remind you: If you ate a pound of
shredded newspaper, your shit would write a better movie than The Phantom
Menace.
So that's their system, in a
nutshell: They take children who are too young to have developed any empathy,
moral reasoning, or critical-thinking skills, and raise them in the way of the
Jedi. This involves disconnecting from the rest of society, developing
supernatural abilities, and declaring themselves to be above any and all laws.
We're wondering if, every once in a while, a Jedi wakes up in the middle of the
night and says, "Wait, am I in a cult?"
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