How can an organisation like the Empire, who is willing to do whatever it takes to accomplish a goal (regardless of any ethical concerns), fail to stomp out a small rebellion of whinny teenage-like brats.
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1) The officers had no moral objections, but a good portion of the troops did. They aren't the old clone troopers, who had been conditioned to follow ANY order. They were ordinary people, with their own opinions. Supplimentary material revealed that, for example, on the first Death Star, the gunner was trying to stall for time to avoid firing. The general consensus is that also played a part in the Stormtroopers lack of accuracy against targets in non-uniform apparel (Luke, Leia, Han, etc.) 2) Support. Even planets that weren't ballsy enough to outright challenge the Empire held some degree of antipathy towards them, and would like as not harbor and supply Rebel forces as best they could without tipping the Empire off. Imagine what happened during the Revolutionary War. Even some who were against outright war would shelter troops, or provide supplies. 3) Aces. The Rebellion encouraged free-thinking and innovation, in contrast to the Empire's discipline and regimented thinking. The Rebels, thusly, had a good deal more talent that had been fostered (Wedge, Luke, and many other pilots, for example).
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Because they have to make sequels
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Because they chose not to shoot the escape pod because it "had no life forms."
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You telling me that the Empire, who built not one, but [i]two[/i] -blam!-ing Death Stars, doesn't have enough on the budget to fire a couple of lasers? Lmao
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The military prowess of Wedge Antilles and Admiral Ackbar.
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Luke has hacks
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Plot armor
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Same reason the US has been unable to stop Al Queda
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The U.S. has a degree of moral objections to achieving an end... the Empire does not.
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You say that, but plenty of schools have been droned
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Yes, but only enough they still have stopped short of destroying a planet...
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Only because they can't
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What was Obama's slogan? "Yes we can."
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