The Force: bad things are gonna happen
Jedi: ????? What bad things
The Force: watch out
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The Force: bad things are gonna happen
Jedi: ????? What bad things
The Force: watch out

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Andor episode one has it all. Manufactured consent. Propaganda schemes. Gay theatrics. Visa debates. Lesbianism. Imperialist environmental destruction and resources extraction. Leftist infighting.
501st album cover what type of music are they making
cries and throws up

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I want to see how clones are generally more athletic than the average human. The strength, the speed, the flexibility and agility. The stamina especially. I think it'd be interesting if the average human can go three days without food and clones have a "starvation mode" that can be activated under low-food, stressful situations where their metabolism momentarily drops to conserve energy.
I also want to see the downsides, of course. Yes clones are very strong and they can go long periods of time without eating or drinking, but that need to build of that muscle and those fat reserves somehow. Their daily caloric intake is HIGH, especially because they work out every day and go to battle. Ration bars? Like two and a half meals worth of dense calories. They'd make a regular person sick, probably. Definitely not recommended for children. Jedi get their own set unless they're burning similar amounts of calories on average. The daily meals in the mess hall are less intense.
Maybe their eyes can adjust quickly to the dark or other changes in ambient light. Maybe this also increases the risk of certain eye problems later in life (but since the majority of clones don't reach even middle ages, this isn't a problem).
They're smarter by training/education and have very strong memories because of that. That also means they can't forget traumatizing things that happen to them -- or it's harder to forget, at least.
actually the more i think about it the more I feel that that was an amazing line for maul. i dont like when stories frame the desire for revenge as inherently selfish, self destructive paths of rage (especially when the revenge clearly comes from a systemic lack of justice). First because of the parenthetical reason -- I personally am not against righteous anger and violence against an abuser as part of the process of healing. A theme like "there's no justice and nothing can be done to or about the person who hurt you, and if you seek to stop them, then there's actually something morally wrong with you and your anger, though initially empathetic, is actually a force equally as destructive as the initial harm. give up!" has been done to death (which is why I love the kdrama The Glory, but I digress).
Back to the main points. Self destruction can and does happen of course, but I also like when the person seeking revenge is thinking about other potential victims and trying to stop further abuses from happening, as Maul says in the latest episode. Now there's a protective, selfless layer to the vengeance that makes it more nuanced than what we typically get. We also get an added layer of friction -- Maul has now hurt a lot of people in order to protect others. He's been trying to groom another child (Devon) essentially in order to stop children from getting groomed and abused. He's continuing the cycle of violence even if he's fighting/tells himself he's fighting to stop it.
They are on twitter trying to tell me that the clones actually aren't people and they're not human and since the narrative (erroneously) treats them as soulless meat droids then that means we should too