out of the galaxy far far away; Hi Rogues! This just in: writing a book a is f****ing hard. Jyn will be back next someday with more astounding facts for your dash!

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@roguejyn
out of the galaxy far far away; Hi Rogues! This just in: writing a book a is f****ing hard. Jyn will be back next someday with more astounding facts for your dash!
There was a time when words shaped reality. When truth was not something that could be bought, or annexed, or secured through force or it's threat.
For truth is not an argument, nor a decree. It is simply what is; not what power wishes it to be.
It requires no permission. It does not wait to be authored. It exists as it is: indifferent to banners, immune to slogans, and stubborn against every hand that tries to reshape it.
When I stood in the Senate chamber five years ago, I believed, perhaps naively, that truth still possessed weight within those walls. To stand in that chamber is profoundly humbling. A thousand platforms, each bearing a world, each suspended over a a void. It is analogous, deliberately so, to the galaxy itself. The chamber is vast enough to swallow voices, to make suffering feel distant, theoretical.
I remember how small Ghorman sounded in that space. One name, spoken into an ocean of indifference. I spoke of crushed streets and shattered bodies. Of a people ground beneath the machinery of “order.” I believed, even then, that if I described the horror with enough clarity, if I named it for simply what it was, the chamber would have no choice but to listen.
But I also remember what followed. For a moment, the chamber was still. Then it erupted. Not in horror at what had been done, but in fury that it had been said.
I was told I had broken decorum. That I had endangered stability. That I had mischaracterized events every sentient being already knew. The outrage was not for Ghorman. It was for the discomfort of those forced, however briefly, to look at it.
Then the protests came, as they always would, that Ghorman was an exception. That the suffering inflicted on it's people was tragic, yes, but contained. That what was done there could never be done elsewhere. That the Empire had merely stumbled. That this was not who we were.
They were wrong.
On Ghorman, the unthinkable became possible. And once the unthinkable becomes possible in one place, it becomes viable in another. From viability comes repetition. From repetition, normalization. And from normalization, inevitability.
Tyranny is spread mostly by precedent. It is banal. It is boring. It wears the mask of routine.
Long have I feared that the terror visited upon the Ghorman people would not remain on Ghorman. That a government willing to crush a world beneath its heel would, in time, learn to crush a street, a home, a single life.
The scale is what changes. The logic does never does.
And now, on Coruscant, no less, we have seen that fear come to fruition. The truth is visible. Unmistakable. Yet the official record declares something else entirely, conjured after the fact, a danger invented to justify the irreversible.
And again we are being taught to treat truth as negotiable, as partisan, as something that may be overridden by uniform and title. Taught to look away when that logic comes home. When it no longer falls on a distant world, but on a familiar street. When it is no longer them, but us.
Democracy, or any system of governance, or any society for that matter, that values justice, in truth, not merely in name — cannot survive that lesson.
We are told this is the price of safety. That fear must be met with force, and force must be shielded from question. But safety built on silence is not safety.
It is submission.
And a society that cannot speak what it sees will soon be unable to see at all.
Five years ago, I said that the distance between what is said and what is known to be true had become an abyss.
We are told to stand back from it. To accept it. To let it define the limits of what may be spoken.
I will not. That abyss exists only so long as we agree not to cross it.
Every lie that goes unchallenged widens it. Every truth that is spoken, plainly, without permission, becomes a crossing.
The Empire depends not on our belief in falsehood, but on our silence. It does not require that we accept its narratives, only that we cease to contest them.
That act alone is our salvation.
JYN ERSO Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016)
In times of darkness, survival is not just about enduring, it is about the choices we make in the face of adversity.
Let me be clear — to resist oppression is not always to take up arms, but often to take up responsibility: to be better than the forces that seek to divide us, to listen rather than shout, to understand rather than impose, to choose empathy over enmity, and to extend a hand in solidarity, unarmed and unguarded. These choices, though quiet, hold the power to transform even the most overwhelming tides of tyranny. These are choices available to us all, even in the smallest of moments.
And yet, it is often within these smallest of moments that the seeds of change—or of destruction—are sown. It is in these moments that those who wield great influence over the galaxy choose whether to lead with humility and wisdom or with arrogance and domination. As I reflect upon the recent actions of such individuals, I find myself both deeply troubled and reminded of the profound responsibility each of us bears, no matter how small our part may seem, to resist tyranny in whatever ways we can.
Figures such as Director Krennic and others in the Emperor's inner circle cast a long shadow, their actions indicative of the deeper rot festering within the Empire.
Recently, right here on Coruscant, Director Orson Krennic, a man of significant wealth and influence, one who fancies himself an innovator and builder of futures, stood before a grand assembly to deliver a public address. It was in this moment, under the guise of exuberance, that Krennic performed a gesture that bore the disturbing echoes of ancient Sith traditions. The significance of this act was not lost upon those of us who understand the weight that symbols carry.
This Sith salute — for I shall not, even for a moment, dignify it as anything else, cloaked in the plausible deniability of Imperial fervor, was far more than a fleeting display of enthusiasm. It was a deliberate act, a quiet signal to those aligned with his beliefs and a chilling reminder to the rest of us of how easily history’s most painful chapters can be revisited under the guise of innocence. Krennic, a man whose ambition is matched only by his proximity to the Emperor himself, has wielded his wealth and power not to build a brighter future, but to pave the way for domination and subjugation. In that smallest of moments, he revealed the dark path the Empire had chosen—a path lined with symbols and gestures that signal allegiance to tyranny.
Let us not forget, his so-called "clean energy projects," lauded as the future of sustainable power for the galaxy, share an unsettling foundation with the principles that enable the construction of superweapons.
This duality reveals a chilling truth: the tools of progress, if placed in the hands of those who lack moral conviction, become the tools of oppression. For Krennic, the promise of clean energy is but a stepping stone to the Empire's ultimate aim of domination, his projects a façade behind which he conceals the mechanics of mass destruction. It is a sobering reminder that technology itself is neither good nor evil—it is the intent of those who wield it that determines its legacy.
When Emperor Palpatine declared the Galactic Empire, he wasted no time enacting decrees that cemented his authority under the guise of restoring order. He stripped citizenship from children of those deemed "undesirable," erasing their right to belong and marking the vulnerable for further exploitation. Simultaneously, he declared a "galactic emergency" at the Outer Rim borders, branding entire systems as threats while empowering Imperial enforcers to act with impunity, all to tighten his grip on trade and resources.
Palpatine’s sweeping measures extended to the galaxy’s environment and well-being. Under the pretext of an "energy crisis," he escalated planetary mining operations, disregarding the devastation wrought on ecosystems. Withdrawing from the Galactic Health Consortium, he severed critical cooperation in disease prevention, endangering trillions of lives for the sake of consolidating power. He even erased diversity from Imperial policy, declaring that the Empire would only recognize "two genders" and dismantling programs fostering inclusion, a chilling attempt to impose conformity at the expense of the galaxy’s vibrant identity.
Perhaps most disturbing of all, Palpatine pardoned insurrectionists responsible for atrocities across the galaxy, rewarding their loyalty with absolution. These decrees, taken together, paint a portrait of an Empire that seeks not unity, but conformity; not stability, but submission.
It is in these moments that we, as citizens of the galaxy, must ask ourselves: will we allow the Emperor’s vision to define us? Or will we, in our smallest acts of resistance—offering aid to the oppressed, preserving the histories he seeks to erase, and choosing compassion over compliance—light the way for a brighter future?
For tyranny thrives when we surrender to despair. But so too does hope endure, even in the smallest of moments.
out of the galaxy far far away;
So yes, this is somewhat political. And I really didn't want my first post back here to be a rant about politics that doesn't really affect me (I'm not even American) but I nevertheless feel compelled to use this small platform to rant a little.
About Mars.
The truth is, my absence from tumblr has been largely due to me pursuing personal writing projects. I love Star Wars, but I also love Star Trek, Stargate, Battlestar Galactica, and basically anything with "star" in the title. That is to say, I love all science fiction, including "hard" sci-fi.
Outside of being a writer, I am (by education) an aerospace engineer. Suffice to say, spaceflight is of special importance and interest to me (as well just all flight.)
One of those personal writing projects I mentioned earlier is a neat intersection of all these things. It's a hard science-fiction novel about spaceflight and in particular Martian exploration.
And the truth, as I see it, is this.
Mars should not belong to one nation, one corporation, or one individual. The exploration of Mars—and space more broadly—is not just a technological challenge but an ethical one. It asks us to think about who we are as a species and what values we want to carry into the stars.
Spaceflight, like science fiction, at its best, represents the collective aspirations of humanity. It reminds us that when we rise above the boundaries of geography, politics, and ideology, we are capable of achieving the extraordinary. The Moon landings inspired the world not because they were an American triumph, but because they symbolized what humans, together, could do. That spirit is what drives my passion for Mars exploration and fuels my writing.
What I saw today, the rhetoric, the symbolism, and the political framing of space as a tool for dominance, was deeply disheartening. Instead of focusing on Mars as a shared goal for humanity, it felt like the announcement was weaponizing the dream of exploration for chest-thumping nationalism and individual aggrandizement. And when that is paired with displays of behaviour that echo some of the darkest chapters of history, it’s impossible to separate the mission from its troubling context.
Mars isn’t just another frontier to conquer or colonize. It’s a test of whether we can learn from our past. Will we carry the baggage of division and exploitation into the cosmos, or will we use this opportunity to redefine ourselves as a species that prioritizes cooperation and sustainability?
I can’t ignore the irony of talking about unity while criticizing certain individuals and systems. But I believe that criticism is necessary when the actions of a few threaten to overshadow what should be a collective effort. This isn’t about “hating on SpaceX” or rejecting the contributions of commercial spaceflight; though I most certainly am guilty of both to varying degrees, it’s about asking bigger questions: Who benefits from these efforts? Who is being left out? And what does it mean when the most visible leaders in this field fail to embody the values of inclusivity and cooperation that space exploration should represent?
The Mars mission I dream of and write about is one where humanity works together, pooling not just resources but perspectives, talents, and dreams. It’s a mission where the diverse voices of Earth have a say in how we expand into the cosmos. Because Mars isn’t just a destination; it’s a mirror. It will, just as Apollo did, reflect back the choices we make now, the values we hold, and the legacy we leave behind.
So yes, this is somewhat political because space has always been political. But it’s also deeply personal, because space represents the best of what we can be. And I believe it’s worth fighting for that vision, even if it means pushing back against those who would turn it into something smaller, narrower, and darker.
out of the galaxy far far away;
Hey Rogues! I am here. Pepperidge Farms remembers or smth.
out of the galaxy far far away;
Hey Rogues! Not gonna lie, the more I see SWBF2015's Jyn Erso character model, the more it bugs me. I saw some SWBF2015 stuff around on tumblr today, and I was bugged enough to spend a couple of hours "brushing up" my own 3D model of Jyn. I hope you enjoy.
I’m just worried they might miss you and hit me.
out of the galaxy far far away;
Step 1 : Have IMMENSE muse for one of your other characters.
Step 2: Forget the login for that blog.
Step 3:
out of the galaxy far far away;
So I just got done with the first episode of Ahsoka, and yah! It's better than I thought it would be! I still find it funny that they sent E-Wings after Sabine for speeding on the bike or whatever lol, that's like, traffic enforcement by F-14. Lothal constabulary be like:
out of the galaxy far far away;
seeing yet more pr0n bot-blogs have started following me be like
out of the galaxy far far away;
Hey Rogues! It's me! I have got myself a brand new star wars muse, and I can't wait to share them with you all very soon! Exciting times!
Who are you?
You know who I am. I’m Jyn Erso. Daughter of Galen and Lyra. You’ve lost.
“Am I up next?” Jyn asked. She laughed caustically as she guessed why Mothma had approached. “You here to prompt me?” There had to be versions of Jyn’s story that Mon Mothma, chief of state of the Rebel Alliance, wanted told—and others she wanted silenced. But Mothma shook her head. “No. I wanted to say…” Her gaze held on Jyn’s face as she searched for words. Jyn thought through all the trite, meaningless statements the woman might make: I’m sorry for your loss. The Rebellion is proud of you. Good luck with the crowd. “I won’t forget what we did to you,” Mothma said. Jyn stared and tried to comprehend the sadness in her voice.
out of the galaxy far far away;
Hiya Rogues, just dropping in to share some mandatory Halloween viewing.
out of the galaxy far far away;
Watching Rogue One for the 10000000000th time but the hologram of Galen still hits me in the feels every time fuck damnit.
𝙬𝙝𝙚𝙧𝙚 𝙨𝙝𝙤𝙪𝙡𝙙 𝙮𝙤𝙪 𝙗𝙚 𝙠𝙞𝙨𝙨𝙚𝙙?
knuckles
it feels as though you have fought every day of your life. sometimes, you cannot even tell how much of the blood on your hands is your own... and how much comes from those who've tried to hurt those you defend. you deserve the gentleness of a kiss to your bruised knuckles and broken skin, a reminder that you are not only made of violence.
tagged by: @tachiisms tagging: everybody!