I wonder what Qui-Gon sensed from Damask. Obviously he doesn’t know he’s a Sith Lord, but Jinn saw through much of Plagueis’ bullshit immediately. Further goes to his character and how true he was to the will of the Force. I’m guessing he could at least tell how slimy and deceitful Damask was.
Even without the force, he may have intuited something underhanded about Plagueis, given that he and Dooku have thwarted some of Tenebrous’s plans, and Plagueis was known to be the Bith’s financial associate in their public guises
Demilitrization only further subjugated the outer rim. The people who had the most to fear from a centralized military authority were the most victimized by its absence. A situation ripe for exploitation, and Qui-Gon recognized it immediately.
You are correct It's been said before but I'll say it again "Nature abhors a vacuum" Where you fail to act someone or something else will always step up to take the place and become the enforcement body of the land it's better to have whatever it will be at least have some measure of checks and balances and a means for dealing with complaints and addressing issues for improvement rather than an enforcement body that disregards all means of criticism
In the new canon Mon Mothma was all about demilitarization - which just made it all the more easier for the First Order to take over in the sequel trilogy,
Hego saw high potential in Dooku more then he saw in Maul, Qui Gon, And Sifo Dyas and maybe even himself but less then he saw in Sidious and Anakin yeah.
Strange that the Jedi could never grasp the idea that the Republic might not be the just organization to follow, or that serving it could mean going against the will of the Force.
Then those worlds will need to find alternative means. That statement says much about Syfo Dias. It not only shows a lack of understanding of the problem, but a lack of compassion as well. What he suggested was not so easily achieved. I'm not sure if it was naivete, or arrogance. I can see why Plagueis chose him to play the role he did with the clone army. He sounded more worried about protecting the Jedi and the Republic, rather than the people they were sworn to protect.
Dose this scene take place before qui-gon meet obi-wan? Because If not, I would think logically he would be here as well. Then again, obi-wan shouldn’t know dooku during this time, I’m just saying is all. Also was qui-gon still dookus apprentice here?
Qui Gon is no longer an apprentice. I don't remember exactly when this meeting takes place, but I think it's not long after Qui Gonn is knighted. Obi Wan might not be a padawan yet, or at least a very new one. I could see it being the kind of meeting one might not bring a padawan for
My dude plagueis actually planted the idea of clone army in Sifo Dias head. That’s some next level scheming
I wonder what Qui-Gon sensed from Damask. Obviously he doesn’t know he’s a Sith Lord, but Jinn saw through much of Plagueis’ bullshit immediately. Further goes to his character and how true he was to the will of the Force. I’m guessing he could at least tell how slimy and deceitful Damask was.
Even without the force, he may have intuited something underhanded about Plagueis, given that he and Dooku have thwarted some of Tenebrous’s plans, and Plagueis was known to be the Bith’s financial associate in their public guises
He obviously failed the test and was too smug to see the truth demask spoke
@@tardarsauce3355But they had no idea there was even a darth tenebrous I believe at this point in time
Qui-Gon Jinn connection with the living force allows him sharper instincts then the most.
Demilitrization only further subjugated the outer rim. The people who had the most to fear from a centralized military authority were the most victimized by its absence. A situation ripe for exploitation, and Qui-Gon recognized it immediately.
You are correct
It's been said before but I'll say it again "Nature abhors a vacuum"
Where you fail to act someone or something else will always step up to take the place and become the enforcement body of the land
it's better to have whatever it will be at least have some measure of checks and balances and a means for dealing with complaints and addressing issues for improvement rather than an enforcement body that disregards all means of criticism
In the new canon Mon Mothma was all about demilitarization - which just made it all the more easier for the First Order to take over in the sequel trilogy,
I’ve listened to the book many times over the years and this channel is a godsend, because this is the closest thing to a book club
Hego saw high potential in Dooku more then he saw in Maul, Qui Gon, And Sifo Dyas and maybe even himself but less then he saw in Sidious and Anakin yeah.
You missed out the bit where Sifo-Dyas returned to argue with Plagueis and Plagueis nearly reveals Kamino but claims he forgot it in a trolling way...
This is Canon for me!
Strange that the Jedi could never grasp the idea that the Republic might not be the just organization to follow, or that serving it could mean going against the will of the Force.
I knew this clip would be popular
Then those worlds will need to find alternative means. That statement says much about Syfo Dias. It not only shows a lack of understanding of the problem, but a lack of compassion as well. What he suggested was not so easily achieved. I'm not sure if it was naivete, or arrogance. I can see why Plagueis chose him to play the role he did with the clone army. He sounded more worried about protecting the Jedi and the Republic, rather than the people they were sworn to protect.
Qui-Gon’s lines are read by an Irishman. Liam Neeson is an Irishman. Nice little nugget of wisdom.
Dose this scene take place before qui-gon meet obi-wan? Because If not, I would think logically he would be here as well. Then again, obi-wan shouldn’t know dooku during this time, I’m just saying is all. Also was qui-gon still dookus apprentice here?
Qui Gon is no longer an apprentice. I don't remember exactly when this meeting takes place, but I think it's not long after Qui Gonn is knighted. Obi Wan might not be a padawan yet, or at least a very new one. I could see it being the kind of meeting one might not bring a padawan for
@@cloudmaster182 okay thank you,
This was when obi wan was either a child or not born
@@bigbird2240 Yes, and I also know that Obi-wan didn't become Qui-gons aprentice until he was a damn near 13.
This scene takes place 20 years before The Phantom Menace. So Obi Wan is 5 years old.