Thank you, thus far, for your input on interpreting some of the other events that will flesh out Anakin's fall to the Dark Side.
If said events do transpire, then they will illustrate the more "classic" means by which those who come into power become corrupted by it becuase of their willingness to make decisions that others won't even contemplate due to the consequences.
I also appreciate Wire's summation of the mass psyche of the German people near the end of WWII against Stalin's forces, which by that time was also a motley
collection of people, slavic in nature. It's well known that the Germans envisioned a future where the Poles were going to become a personal slave force for them, so their arrogance and sense of entitlement was just completely twisted.
To me it seems as though Lucas is more focused on presenting a "big picture" of Greed, one that falls more in line with Eastern Religious and Freudian thought; that Greed and Love (Destructive and Creative) are two different sides of the same coin, with the "coin" being The Energy that's hardwired into us and gives us life.
A greatly truncated summation of this kind of philosophy is that everyone is born with an instinct for self-preservation and for reproduction. Protecting one's loved ones ensures that one's makeup ("soul" or whatever one wants to call it) will survive into another generation. The wealthier and more powerful one becomes, the greater the odds of one's own self-survival and the survival of one's loved ones. This is a description of the Love/creative energy at work.
But when one lives in a society where there are more than enough means to ensure a decent way of life for everyone in that world, these insticts become dangerous, and actually become harmful towards others outside of one's own range of direct experiences. One's will to assume power actually deprives others of the means to live a happier and healthier way of life. The lives of the "common" people become more stressful, more frustrated and one has to work harder just to ensure one's own survival and the survival of one's loved ones. The deprived nature of their lives makes them desperate for a "solution," even if it's a bad one that's given to them by their actual repressers (for example, illogically laying the blame for their discomfort on someone else because of their race or religous beliefs). This discomfort of living, instead of bringing people together against those who are actually causing them the discomfort, usually gets manipulated by the powerful to create even more fear-soaked division and weakness in their ranks.
When government sanctions such a power structure, it's ensuring that the creative energy made by the many is diverted to ensure the survival of the powerful few, and this tiny minority of "elites" then channel that once creative energy into a destructive force. And these morally repugnant acts are usually accomplished with fear, since fear is the key requirement towards turning the creative impulse into a destructive one.
When the whole idea was first introduced in Ep.II regarding Anakin's prime motivation for craving power, to "live forever/prevent death," I almost laughed, I thought it was so contrived. But in the grand scheme of things, those that seek to sustain a life of privelage while depriving others of what they're truly due unconsciously live their lives as if what they're doing is actually going to extend their names and influence forever. Somehow the creative energy that drives us all becomes bloated and twisted--greedy, and they become consumed by their quest on becoming a "god" of sorts. Yet in the end, they die like everybody else, and all the things they own, all the people of influence they know, can't save them. Worms will fatten on their "elite" flesh just as fully as eating a meaningless "commoner." And thus we all return to the earth as equals.
The tragedy is in losing sight of everyone's ultimate fate. This picture puts everything in its proper context, and it makes it more likely for people to "let go" of their own personal needs for the greater good of others, who will, in turn, take care of the individual who participates in said society. Such a cycle is creative in nature, and is the complete opposite of the destructive system.
Anakin is the complete package when it comes to explaining the "spiritual" side of greed, but he may not be the best model of illustrating of how it's actually practiced in the "real" world. Palpatine, I think, is a more concrete manifestation of the destructive power at work at the political level in the films. He perfectly embodies how fear is used as a tool to motivate masses of people into actions they otherwise would not participate in.
Padme declines Anakin's offer of the "Throne of Power" because she realizes the misery that it's going to cause others for their family to have their lives of privelage. She "lets go" so that others may live more rewarding and just lives, something that Anakin, with all the advice he's been given, cannot do.
Wow, a record long post for me. I just got caught up in it!
Till next time!
