A Liberal Dose
“A Short Time Ago in
a Galaxy Not Far Away”
Troy D. Smith
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away.
How well I remember the first time I saw that line. It was
early summer of 1977, and I was sitting in Oldham’s Theater. I was nine years
old. That very first Star Wars opening crawl was not super-detailed -it merely
told us that a band of determined freedom-fighting rebels had just struck their
first blow against an evil empire. And that was good enough for a
nine-year-old, really. Within a few minutes it had been established that there
was a cruel dictator named Emperor Palpatine who was trampling on the rights of
citizens all around the galaxy, and that his chief hatchet-man was a ruthless,
imposing, evil wizard-figure named Darth Vader. There was also a smarmy and
arrogant autocrat, Governor Tarkin, whom I recognized as Professor Van Helsing and
Dr. Frankenstein from the Hammer horror films I’d loved for a long as I could
remember, and a bunch of generals and admirals.
I missed some of the subtext on that first viewing (and the
next several, really). For example, early on, one of the generals complains about
complications arising in the senate, when Governor Tarkin delivers a piece of
news that flew right over my nine-year-old head: "The Imperial Senate
will no longer be of any concern to us. I've just received word that the
Emperor has dissolved the council permanently. The last remnants of the Old
Republic have been swept away."
25 years later I was sitting in one of the theaters at
Highland Cinema in Cookeville (Oldham’s closed not long after that first Star
Wars film years earlier), watching Star Wars: Attack of the Clones, my own nine-year-old
child beside me. In case you don’t follow these things, that was one of the
prequel films, set about a quarter of a century before the first movie. The
main plot involved then-Senator Palpatine manipulating events to get himself
elected chancellor, and then creating a false emergency that gave him the
excuse to eventually declare martial law and make himself Emperor. The final
step of that, a generation later, was the complete dissolving of the senate.
The first steps, in the previous movie, had been the beginning of a trade war
that would help set up the fake emergency later.
This movie also focused on Palpatine’s efforts to manipulate
an idealistic, naïve and (mostly) heroic young Jedi with anger issues, Anakin
Skywalker, into becoming his fervent supporter -he would later become Darth
Vader, and perform cruel acts his younger self could never have imagined. At
the same time, young Anakin was falling in love with a beautiful -and highly
principled -young senator named Padme Amidala. All of us in the audience knew
they would one day become the parents of Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia.
In the midst of a romantic scene between the young couple,
they discuss politics… and there is a foreshadowing of the troubles between
them to come.
ANAKIN: “I don’t think the system works.”
PADME: “How would you have it work, then?”
ANAKIN: “We need a system where the politicians sit down and
discuss the problem, decide what is in the interests of all the people, and
then do it.”
PADME: “That’s exactly what we already do. The trouble is
that people don’t always agree.”
ANAKIN: “Well, then, they should be made to.”
PADME: “By whom? Who’s going to make them?”
ANAKIN: “I don’t know. Someone.”
PADME: “You?”
ANAKIN: “Of course not me. Someone wise.”
PADME: “Sounds an awful lot like a dictatorship to me.”
ANAKIN (pause): “If it works….”
We all knew what was coming down the pike… because we had
seen the earlier movies. But 34-year-old me knew a lot more about history than
9-year-old me had, and I had long understood that George Lucas’s tale of the
rise of Palpatine was closely modeled on two things: the fall of the Roman
Republic and rise of the Caesars, and the fall of the Weimar Republic of 1920s
Germany and the rise of Hitler. And those were only the two most famous
examples of a template that has been followed over and over again through
history. A democratic republic exists, in which the people are represented by
an elected senate… until the people put into power a charismatic and ambitious
man who becomes a dictator by, first, making the senate powerless and
irrelevant, and then by eliminating them altogether.
Know who else knew their history (except for the Hitler and
Star Wars stuff)? The Founding Fathers. They knew how democracies, republics,
and democratic republics have tended to end. And as they worked together in
1787 to draft a constitution to guide this new republic they were creating, they
tried to install failsafes to prevent the repeating of that history -to prevent
the rise of tyranny. They did this by creating three co-equal branches of
government -executive, legislative, and judicial -to provide checks and
balances against each other, so that one individual would not have the power to
tear it all down.
But do you know what they didn’t have in 1787, and didn’t
plan for? Political parties. The Founding Fathers did not envision a time when
all three branches would be controlled by one party, or that such a party would
be so devoted to their leader (or, more accurately, to their voters who adored
him) that they would hand over all power to him, enabling him to be a dictator
from day one.
Maybe you don’t know much about history, or the Constitution.
But, for petesake, you can watch Star Wars.
--Troy D.
Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at
Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee
Democratic Party. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.
Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE
You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE
A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE
Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com
The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE
No comments:
Post a Comment