Was the Death Star Attack an Inside Job?

Meant to blog about this before and forgot about it. Fortunately EOZ had a link and I was reminded. This is one of those serious questions that plague humanity.

Here is a link and a short excerpt:
Was the Death Star Attack an Inside Job?

1) Why were a handful of rebel fighters able to penetrate the defenses of a battle station that had the capability of destroying an entire planet and the defenses to ward off several fleets of battle ships?

2) Why did Grand Moff Tarkin refuse to deploy the station’s large fleet of TIE Fighters until it was too late? Was he acting on orders from somebody to not shoot down the rebel attack force? If so, who, and why?

3) Why was the rebel pilot who supposedly destroyed the Death Star reported to be on the Death Star days, maybe hours, prior to its destruction? Why was he allowed to escape, and why were several individuals dressed in Stormtrooper uniforms seen helping him?

4) Why has there not been an investigation into allegations that Darth Vader, the second-ranking member of the Imperial Government, is in fact the father of the pilot who allegedly destroyed the Death Star?

5) Why did Lord Vader decide to break all protocols and personally pilot a lightly armored TIE Fighter? Conveniently, this placed Lord Vader outside of the Death Star when it was destroyed, where he was also conveniently able to escape from a large-sized rebel fleet that had just routed the Imperial forces. Why would Lord Vader, one of the highest ranking members of the Imperial Government, suddenly decide to fly away from the Death Star in the middle of a battle? Did he know something that the rest of the Imperial Navy didn’t?
Read the rest.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is one of those memos I don't understand. Must be a guy thing.

MUST Gum Addict said...

Reminds me of one of the best star wars bits I've seen in years...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hAL7w2ybTfQ

Jack Steiner said...

Miriam,

You are missing out.

MGA,

I ran that video here around last May. It is classic.

Still Driving Traffic

Still one of the most popular posts on the blog.