QUOTE(TheCheshireKhajiit @ Apr 17 2017, 10:58 AM)

QUOTE(Callidus Thorn @ Apr 17 2017, 08:47 AM)

Except the point you're trying to make is the wrong one. The whole concept of one man's hero being another man's terrorist isn't the issue, because that's not exactly a complicated notion, it's the thinking behind your perspective that's missing.
I mean, do you just have a major authoritarian streak and a belief that because anarchy is inherently bad, order is inherently good? Because if it's something like that, then I could get where you're coming from. But just saying points of view again doesn't actually do anything.
Khajiit thinks that perhaps he's saying that the Empire wouldn't have felt like they needed to do all of the dastardly world destroying if everybody just toed the line and there was no rebellion. Like the planet Alderran brought it it upon themselves because they were pro-rebellion. The problem is everything we see in the movies shows that the Empire is almost universally loathed. At the end of RotJ, we see millions upon millions of people celebrating in the streets at the news of the Death Star II's destruction. That said, this one can't imagine that life for an average civilian in a place like Coruscant is much different under the rule of the Empire as compared to the Old Republic. It's in the places like the Outer Rim where we see the Empire really turning the screws on the populace. This is probably because they are used to a more free-wheeling, independent way of life which goes directly against the ideal of order that the Empire is trying to bring to the galaxy. Again, they brought it upon themselves, or so the idea could go.
The Outer Rim worlds were most hard hit by the Empire. They were sort of like The East of Nazi Germany. It was far away from the "civilized" core of the galaxy, where the Empire could do its worst without anyone back home realizing the true horrors of what they were up to. This is compounded by a sense of superiority that many, if not most Core-Worlders appear to possess over the backwood hicks from the Outer Rim. If a world in the Outer Rim had something the Empire wanted - like the metals used to construct Star Destroyers - then it populace was enslaved, and used to extract that resource. The planet would be strip mined, and everything on it destroyed to get whatever the Empire wanted. Once the resource was gone, the Empire would abandon the place and move on to the next world to exploit.
The Outer Rim worlds were also the core of the Separatist movement. While we know that the CIS was just a farce created by Palpatine so he could engineer the Clone Wars, the aftermath of said war still went hardest on former CIS worlds because they were still considered the enemy. The Antar Atrocity is an example. In spite of the fact that many of the population fought in a pro-Republic resistance movement against the CIS, Tarkin ordered mass executions and massacred huge swaths of the people, and he didn't care if they were CIS or Republic supporters. The Empire simply did not care who was on their side or not. It crushed everyone in its path.
But life on the Core Worlds was not a picnic either. As all tyrannys, the Empire restricted basic freedoms. Everyone would have to have papers to prove their identities, and thusly be cataloged in the Empire's databases. Travel was restricted. Everyone was under electronic surveillance. Companies could force people to work for 60 - 80+ a week. Anyone could rat you out to the ISB for anything, at any moment. Unless you were rich and above it all (as the rich always are), life was simply miserable.
This is all from reading both older Legends material and the new cannon books. The Antar Atrocity is in Tarkin. A New Dawn goes into a lot of the economics. Lost Stars has an Imperial officer whose mother was framed for embezzlement by another Imperial, and even though it was plainly a fraud, she was sentenced to hard labor in prison. It also shows how the Empire not only enslaves some worlds outright, but also simply crushes the people lucky enough not to be under the direct lash and guns. The Bounty Hunter Wars trilogy goes on and on about how The Emperor crushes and devours the wills of everyone around him, as if he was a black hole annihilating the galaxy. Even ruthless bastards like Boba Fett acknowledge that the Empire is horrific (but of course he just did not give a crap).
For some people this was of course a great opportunity. Someone ruthless and/or corrupt could use the Imperial system to advance, either in the military, or as a business person, or a politician. Contracts can be bought from Imperial officials. Not that it would be too hard anyway, with an ever-growing war machine that needed everything from Star Destroyers to boots. Rivals can be disposed of with accusations of treason that don't need even a shred of proof. And in a galaxy constantly at war, there are always opportunities for officers to move up the chain of command at a fast pace.
Plus of course we have to consider that the Empire was around for 20 years. That is long enough for a new generation of humans to grow up knowing nothing but the history that Palpatine wanted them to be taught. It is easy to mold people's minds when you can start indoctrinating from childhood. Doubtlessly that is where the vast majority of Stormtroopers came from.
So most regular people would have been happy to hear the Emperor was dead. But some would be crushed that their happy time was over.