wā¦what if all thr jokes in rebels about zeb snoring is actually how lasats purr
reaching the point of hyperfixation where I can no longer engage with it due to the nausea that I experience at the mere thought of seeing it on my screen is the closest Iāve ever been to being diagnosed with female hysteria
ALEXSANDR KALLUS 3.21 āZero Hour: Part Oneā
YES
Big fan of Kallus-- especially post-defection Kallus whos working on dropping the whole imp apathy thing-- secretly caring so deeply and strongly about everything, he just doesnt quite know how to show it š«š«
Actually, I think Kallus' rebellion might've been sparked not just by the want to be cared for, but also the want to care for someone. Zeb showed him that caring can be a conscious choice when he showed him care despite their history. In the pilot we see Kallus breaking character for a moment with Ezra, acting as if he almost wants to comfort the child, but instead he dusts off Ezra's shoulder. It's a small moment, but I think it implies that Kallus deep down always cared, he has just mastered the apathetic imperial act so well that he's even fooling himself
Kallus is such a petty bitch. Like he's a former ISB agent so you just KNOW he pulls out a whole ass evidence folder when Zeb asks why he's mad at him
Every autistic person deserves infinite funds to be able to purchase items related to their special interests with
dere you go
also fuck it, i got laid off, im claiming the kalluzeb easter egg in veilguard as mine
i drew the art, and the wonderful and dearly missed susan hyx I added as the author
oops! it seems i tripped and dropped several million free books, papers, and other resources
https://annas-archive.org
https://sci-hub.se
https://z-lib.is
https://libgen.is
https://libgen.rs
https://www.pdfdrive.com
https://library.memoryoftheworld.org
https://monoskop.org/Monoskop
https://libcom.org
https://libretexts.org
http://classics.mit.edu
https://librivox.org
https://standardebooks.org
https://www.gutenberg.org
https://core.ac.uk
For the wip meme, can i have a hint of "Gorgeous" and a dash of eepy Kallus pretty please?
Both of these are crack fics lmao. For Gorgeous, Sabine wins a bet with Kallus and makes him shave his beard, leading to chaos on base when everyone realizes that clean-shaven Kallus is a fucking knock-out
Offering Ezra fifty million credits would have earned the same incredulous expression. āYou got Kallus to shave?!ā Ezra gaped. āForce, Sabine, you're practically erasing his whole identity.ā āI can hear you,ā Kallus called, his voice muffled through the door. The razor had stopped buzzing. āRest assured Jabba, the loss of some hair will not drastically change the course of my life.ā There was some rattling behind the door, probably Kallus tidying up the āfresher. Sabine tried not to bounce on her toes in glee. The anticipation was almost too much to bear. āI bet he doesnāt even have a jawline underneath all of that,ā Sabine whispered conspiratorially. āPeople with weird beards are always compensating for something.ā āI can still hear you,ā Kallus sighed. The door cracked open. āI truly think this is more important to you than you think it is to me.āĀ āDonāt be shy,ā Ezra crowed. A grin that matched Sabineās had slipped into his expression. āWe have to get the full picture.ā
for What Do You Do With an Eeepy Kallus, for some reason I started a fic where Kallus just falls asleep random places because he never gets enough sleep??? And I have no memory or writing any of it
Kananās theory was that Kallus had missed out on so much sleep as an ISB agent that his body was making up for it in the here and now. Sabineās theory was some form of extreme sleep apnea. Ezra would always chime in with the ever-stupid theory that he had been cursed by a Sith Lord in his youth; eye rolling always followed that proclamation. Cassian Andor had no such imaginings: in his opinion, it was just the plain old honest-to-Force brand of insanity that only occurred around one Alexsandr Kallus. Which is how he found himself hauling a very unconscious ex-ISB agent by his ankle down one of Yavinās many dirt paths. It wasnāt the first time Kallus had fallen asleep at his desk, but it was the first time that Zeb wasnāt around to strong-arm his boyfriend out of Intelligence. No one else had volunteered for the job, which had left one beleaguered Cassian Jeron Andor to try and figure out some way to drag 195 centimeters of dead weight all the way to the barracks. Suffice to say, he was not thrilled.
Alright literally nobody asked and this is totally just me thinking way too much, but I NEEEEEEDDD to talk about the Kallus from the lower levels headcanon and just how much narrative potential it has
(also If you see anything spelled wrong or phrased weirdly NO YOU DIDNāT)
To be completely frank I think that Kallusā character is almost out of place in a children's TV showā DO NOT GET ME WRONG, he is a fantastic character that is integral to the Rebels plot, but many implications made by his character are much more fitting in shows with higher ratingsā thatās why he comes of so fucking ridiculous half of the time, he is a character with massive implications, but he has to be readable to a younger audience. PLUSSS Rebels was made on a tiny budget compared to other Star Wars animated projects, so the producers could not put time or money into further delving into his arc because they needed to focus on the main cast. They couldnāt afford to go into smaller character-centric arcs like in the clone wars. Now, taking that into account, it is no doubt that Kallus has an incredible character arc (tbh Iād say the best in Star Wars, but i might be glazing idk) but there are aspects of that arc that could not be explored more due to the aforementioned restrictions on the production side.
Thing is, Star Wars is all about making connections to the real world (ex. Return of the Jedi was an allegory for the vietnam warā or also THE ENTIRETY OF ANDOR) And although Kallusā arc already does that on a baseline level, its potential for drawing these connections was for sure not explored to its fullest.Ā
Now, I know you didnāt sign up for a lesson in world history and politics when you started reading this but youāre gonna have to stick with me to see where Iām coming from;Ā
It is no secret that the greatest defense against propaganda is education. Thatās why maps that show which states have less extensive education and maps that show which states are conservative look nearly identical. Thatās why conservative states are far more likely to pass legislation that bans books with political content; they need people to continue to be uneducated in order to keep the state conservative. Even if we omit nefarious political intent, in order for educational institutions to truly thrive they need funding (which tends to be severely lacking in conservative communities) State legislation aside, some school systems literally cannot afford to give their students an all encompassing education. And next to that, in many impoverished rural communities, you end up having kids that need to start working early on in order to make money to support themselves and their families OR they start working early just cause they want to (bootstraps mentally and all that); these kids do not have a reason to set aside their time to sit down and think about the politics of the world around them, which is why a lot of people end up just falling in line with the conservative mindset that surrounds them.Ā
āWhat about the people who arenāt conservative / patriotic? How do they play into this?ā You may askā AND LET ME TELL YOUā itās not really a huge secret that the United States Military does this quirky little thing where they pay for your college and give you financial benefits while youāre an active service member. Thatās actually a MASSIVE recruitment tactic that they use in schools! IN FACT, (as someone who grew up in a blue state) wherever military recruiters would come to my school to ykā¦recruit people, they would almost ALWAYS stress the financial benefits more than promoting the whole āSERVE YOUR COUNTRY RAHHH AMERICAā thing .Ā
So basically itās a system that sets children up for failure by leaving them broke and struggling, and some of those children grow up in areas where they are funneled into having certain political beliefs without the resources needed to form their own opinion, OR you have kids that just want to reap financial benefits because living is too damn expensive. (And of course there are people who fit into BOTH or neither of the categories; Iām generalizing a little bit for the sake of keeping this post shorter than it could be) (This is a very nuanced subject and I know that, I just don't want to make you all read an entire essay)
The issue comes when these misinformed children grow into adults, and those adults become dangerous.Ā
BACK TO STAR WARS
So thereās not really a whole lot of extensive canon lore (at least that Iāve seen) about how the Coruscant economic system works, but I think it's fairly obvious that it is operating on a capitalistic system not unlike the united states, where the richest of the rich own most of the wealth, and the rest of the population are left living paycheck to paycheck; itās just that some paychecks are bigger than others.Ā
It is this system that allows for the lower levels to fall into complete poverty. None of the wealth from the top is trickling down (literally) and the people in the lower levels are left fighting for scraps.Ā
Most areas in the lower levels are controlled by money hungry gangs, and corrupt law enforcement does what these gangs want just because theyāre paid to. The further down you go the less control The Republic has; at some point you reach a depth where the Republic has zero influence. And even if they did, at this point in history, most of the senate no longer represents the people.
THIS IS WHERE KALLUS COMES INĀ
I want you to imagine being a kid in the lower levels. Youāre fighting for your next paycheck so that you can help pay rent, youāre shoplifting and picking pockets just so that you can eat. You cannot afford to live. And not only that; youāre suffering from intense vitamin deficiencies, the air is undoubtedly toxic, the water probably isnāt good to drink. You are exhausted. Physically, mentally, even subconsciously, you are a kind of bone-deep tired that nobodyā ESPECIALLY A KIDā should ever have to feel. If you can even afford to go to school youāre not leaving with a better understanding of the galaxy, because all youāre worried about is finding something to eat and going the fuck to sleep. But that's your normal, youāve never known anything different.Ā
Youāre not thinking of ways to question the system, youāre too tired to.Ā
And you donāt care about The Republic because The Republic doesnāt care about you.Ā
But then The Empire rolls around. And the Republic didnāt give a fuck about you, but maybe the Empire willā besides you donāt really care about the politics of it all, because you see that they offer free room and board to those who enlist, and that is your one way ticket out of the fucking hell hole that youāve had to endure for your entire life.Ā
And so you enlist. And even if you didnāt care about politics before, the people around you do, and they are telling you exactly what to think without giving you the resources to form an opinion of your own.Ā
If Kallus grew up in the lower levels, that would have been his reality. He would have been the perfect person to indoctrinate because he came from a system that wouldnāt have allowed him to know any better.
This is especially palpable when we think about why he became Fulcrum in the first place;
He educated himself in ways that the empire did not allow him to be educated before. He asked questions and he did not like the answers that he got.Ā
He realizes that heās been fed lies and propaganda that have made him complacent in a system that had done immeasurable evil, and he HATES that. He realizes that he does NOT believe what the empire believes and that he has to align his actions with HIS opinions, not the empires.
He realizes that harm that his ignorance has done and he takes it upon himself to lock THE FUCK IN in an attempt to help and rebalance the scales.Ā
(And this bit is kind of a side note, but idk where else to put this:if Kallus comes from a background like the one listed above where he is constantly fighting for survival, he becomes a narrative foil of EZRA!!! They become two sides of the same coin; a kid whos impoverished because of the Empires cruelty, only looking out for himself until his worldview is changed for the better by the kindness of the people around him VERSUS a kid whos impoverished because of the Republics failures, only looking out for himself and CONTINUing TO DO SO as his worldview is changed for the worse by the greed of the people around him.) (DO YALL GET WHAT IM SAYING??? I FEEL LIKE IM ONTO SOMETHING THERE??)(I MIGHT BE CRAZY BUT LIKE I FEEL LIKE THATS āļøāļø)
All of this is really just to say that Kallus is the perfect example of the dangers of complacency. He is the bystander effect at its worst. He admits that he ānever asked questions,ā simply because the empire told him not to, and he becomes dangerous because of it. He does evil shit just ācause heās told to. The empire says that a certain number of civilian deaths fall within an āacceptable marginā and he just shrugs his shoulders and goes āyeah, okay, if you say so.āĀ
Already in canon, he is an example of what people can become if they refuse to question the systems in power, but when you take into account the possibility that heās from the lower levels, he also becomes an example of how people end up in a system where they are set up for failure so that they donāt end up questioning those systems in the first place. Heās an example of how the Empire benefits from systematic suffering because the people who suffer without even realizing it are the people most easily shaped into pawns.Ā
End of rant
I absolutely think there's an underlying angst to Zeb and Kallus' relationship at its core. Kallus experienced something traumatic that made him view all Lasat as violent monsters. Which is obviously a messed up viewpoint and one he's doing his best to consciously challenge... But there's definitely moments in the beginning where the subconscious fear gets the better of him. Waking up from a ptsd nightmare to a Lasat reaching for him is not something he handles with much grace or sensitivity and it's definitely a thing that complicates their relationship.
It's worse for Zeb, 'cause while Kallus is left with guilt and shame, Zeb has to deal with burning anger and resentment during similar episodes. When he has a flashback Kallus is just about the last person he wants to see the face of, and unlike Kallus he can't just reprimand himself for misplaced emotions 'cause Kallus carries more blame than Zeb likes to think of. It definitely takes him a long time to reconcile the Kallus he knows - loves - with the Kallus who made his world - his family - crumble to pieces, even if part of his people survived.
It's a lot - to Kallus, Zeb is worth it. He can't quite wrap his head around how, but somehow Zeb thinks he's worth it too - they're worth it.
fuck your entire life put some goddamn respect on zebās name. purple chewbacca didnāt brokeback mountain agent kallus in that icecave so hard that it changed the course of the rebellion to be relegated to glup shitto status
i literally dont care what your excuse for using AI is. if you didnt put your own effort into making it im not putting my own effort into interacting with it.
i hate that every time i look for color studies and tips to improve my art and make it more dynamic and interesting all that comes up are rudimentary explanations of the color wheel that explain it to me like im in 1st grade and just now discovering my primary colors
There are many warriors, fools and children, Captain. The child in you can't see how things are, but how they can be. The fool denies his destiny, but it is the warrior you are who will create one. You are never one of these. In time, you become all of them.
This is the moment Kallus finally realizes that he's never going to catch the Spectres. And it's the moment that his redemption begins.
Every single episode Kallus is in this season he's met with failure after failure, and we witness his frustration grow every single time. He tries everything, has all of the odds in his favor countless times and yet every single time the rebels slip through his fingers.
And it all leads to this. This has to be it. He has the Spectres cornered against an exploded star cluster, they have no where to go, this time he's going to win. He has the laws of physics as his ally for force sake!
... but he still loses.
The rebels fly into the star cluster, completely unharmed. Meanwhile his Tie Fighters and light cruiser are being torn apart right in front of him.
I've seen so much talk about how Zeb sparing Kallus's life on Bahyrn was the prophesy of the Child saving the Warrior being fulfilled. I'm not arguing with that, because the prophesy was fulfilled time and time again in Rebels. But this was the first spark of the flame that saved Kallus.
This was the Child saving the Warrior for the first time.
Had this episode happened sooner than it did, I think Kallus would have continued to fly in after them and died - or at the very least gotten very close to it, with all of his men dead and him hanging on for dear life in a barely functioning escape pod.
He wouldn't have had the mounting pile of failures to humble him, wouldn't have had the miracles he'd witnessed the Spectres pull off as warnings to not take them lightly. When we first met Kallus he was an extremely prideful man (still is, even when he defects, but he gains some humility to balance it out), so certain of himself that he quite literally threw himself into danger numerous times with the expectation that he'd win, because he'd never been challenged like he had been with the Spectres. If he was still that same unchallenged man all would have been lost.
But Kallus lets them go, crawling away with a damaged but still mostly working ship after witnessing the laws and forces of nature itself bend to the rebels will.
And it destroys his pride, and his hope. He's been thoroughly devastated by his failures... though he is still in denial about why he's failing, and why he'll continue to fail. He still isn't seeing the bigger picture about the shortcomings of the Empire, he still doesn't think to ask the questions he should. Much like the Fool, in denial of what is destiny.
The next time we see Kallus is above Geonosis - with like 30 storm troopers, a handful of walkers, and... what? 3 tie fighters for an ambush against enemies that fought gravity and won?
He went into this knowing there wasn't a point. And the entire time his ambush party is distracting the rest of the Spectres he's fighting Zeb - and only Zeb. He follows him all the way into an escape pod, with the goal seemingly to take Zeb down with him, because he knows that he can't take them all. But if he can get one, the one who he's obsessed with the most, then it will be enough.
A very foolish plan, much befitting the Fool.
This plan inevitably fails, and Kallus is injured and stranded with his mortal enemy. Unable to fight anymore he submits himself to his failure, so certain that he's going to either be murdered by Zeb or freeze to death. He sits there, shivering and terrified, muttering about the monsters in the dark.
Much like a Child.
There are many warriors, fools and children. In time, you become all of them.
When Zeb spares Kallus's life, giving him the meteorite to keep warm, moving to fight the Bonzami alone, mending Kallus's hurt leg, taking his advice on how to get out of the cave, all before carrying him up the pillar and throwing him out of harms way - the child completely and undoubtedly saving the warrior - Kallus shoots the Bonzami instead of Zeb.
The Child saves the Warrior, and in turn the Warrior saves the Child. Time and time again. Kallus asks questions, he becomes fulcrum, he risks his life and safety over and over again to save Zeb and his family. And as Zeb found Lira San by saving Kallus, Kallus finds a home on Lira San by saving Zeb.
And it all started here.
Me: oh yeah, I use Jensen Ackles as a reference for Kallus
Meanwhile, Kallus and Jensen Ackles looking lowkey nothing alike:
Your honor, irrelevant
guys i love alexsandr kallus
I dont
guys i love alexsandr kallus
I need it to be known that yes, Kallus is technically my favorite character, but i would hit him over the head with a piece if plywood if given the chance
Hey guys will you beat me to death with sticks if I post this
Kallus is so funny itās like heās not even a Star Wars character. Heās elevated
I do appreciate Kallus's realization that he actually is very wrong in how he approached things. That all the Imperials Zeb has met have tried to kill him, and thus can be judged the same. That's when Kallus's mind changes, imo. When he offers to hold Zeb's bo-rifle without the intent to kill him.
He's determined to prove to Zeb that not all Imperials are bad, and consequently ends up not remaining an Imperial lol.
Gift fill for @noblelightfighter for the @galactic-gift-gathering !!
Prompt: āIt's time to decorate!ā
A little Rogue One/Rebels crossover for you :)
You have some really fire points actually!!
I wrote my post at like 3 AM last night so the gears werent turning at 100% but you're absolutely right
Kallus is absolutely intensely biased and predjudiced throughout seasons 1 and 2 there is absolutely no question about it. Like, he has obviously done fucking insane and horrific shit in the name of the empire and he needs to be held accountable for his actions because his (probable) mental health issues do not excuse it, and that's absolutely the whole point of his character.
Honestly, I think that's what makes Kallus' redemption arc so palpable; he holds himself accountable with little to no prompting to do so. Zeb tells him to ask questions in an off handed comment, but Kallus listens, and once the bubble that he built around himself-- which is essentially just an imperial echo chamber that excuses xenophobia and colonialism-- once that bubble pops he takes it upon himself to attempt and right his wrongs by becoming fulcrum.
When I was writing my main post I think I managed to leave out a whole lot of stuff (again, written at 3AM) but i totally forgot to make a point about how the Empire IS the perfect indoctrination machine-- in fact, the empire employs indoctronation and propaganda tactics that are not dissimilar to those seen in 1930s Germany, with how it pits non-human species against the empire and paints them as "other"-- and i think the fucked up part about that indoctronation pertaining to Kallus is that we can see that Kallus really does want to do good (again, hence why he became Fulcrum in the first place) but he exists in a Xenophobic echo chamber of the Empires design. I mean, if he did have PTSD post-Oderon the empire absolutely took advantage of whatever vunerable mindset by not providing tools that would allow him to identify Onderon as an isolated incident. He truly genuinely beleives that he IS doing good in the empire. I mean everyone around him is telling him so, he is rewarded for batshit insane behavior, while others are punished for asking questions, ect ect.
Its really interesting that it took like... the smallest suggestion to challenge his beliefs ("look for answers, maybe youll find the truth") for him to not only do so, but to also--in lieu of realizing the heinous system that he's become complicit in-- hold himself accountable for his actions.
Anyways, yes OP, you brought up some stuff that 3AM me didnt think of and you are like 110% correct
I just need to get these thoughts out so Iām throwing this ramble here:
Now, this may totally just be me thinking too much (fork found in kitchen) but I feel like when it comes to how we tend to think about Kallusā characterization, the implications of Kallusā experience on Onderon are very overlooked.Ā
So he goes to Onderon with āthe boysā-- which, the term āthe boysā has its own set of implications about how Kallus must have really cared for those troopers under his command but I digressā and on a patrol theyāre attacked, yada yada, we all know the story.Ā
But Kallus becomes fully paralyzed. He doesnāt describe the extent of his paralyzation but given that he had to watch as his squad was āfinished off one by oneā itās pretty fair to assume that he could not move whatsoever. The fear that any person would experience in that situation is completely indescribable, that is genuinely some shit straight out of a night terror.Ā
He isā as we knowā spared (albeit we donāt get exact details (did the merc try to kill him but reinforcements arrived before he could? Did the merc think that Kallus was already dead? Secret 3rd option?)) and he makes a full physical recovery, but there is no way in hell that he is not coming out of that encounter with some crazy PTSD.Ā
Thereās not a whole lot of info on Imperial mental health services but I donāt think itās a longshot to assume that they are probably close to nonexistent.
So the empire now has⦠an ISB agent with field experience⦠with untreated PTSD⦠where said PTSDs inciting incident pertained to a Lasat⦠and theyāre looking to make an example out of Lasanā¦ā¦ā¦.. Are you picking up what I'm putting down hereā¦...?
If you arenāt; it is BY NO MEANS a wild assumption to say that the Empireā essentiallyā weaponized Kallusā PTSD, given that he would be less likely to question the moral atrocities happening on Lasan since he was already biased against Lasat as a whole.Ā
Now, we donāt really have a solid grasp on what Kallusā exact role in Lasan was since heāsĀ kiiiiinnnd of an unreliable narratorā I mean weāre given the line in Droids in Distress where he takes credit for giving orders during the siege, but Kallus routinely just runs his mf mouth whenever heās throwing hands so itās likeā¦Ā that could either be the truth or a crazy exaggeration, we as viewers have literally no idea whatās going on thereā but it goes without saying that Kallus is obviously not excused from his participation just because of (likely) untreated mental illness, but that is literally like the whole point of his character so like we all knew that
Now, after Lasan, Kallus does something really bizarre for an imperial to do; he accepts the borifle given to him through the Boosan Keerah, and even though he doesnāt know about the cultural significance of that, he still takes it upon himself to learn how to use this weapon. I think that literally any other imperial would have tossed that shit out on sight, so I think it does kind of imply that Kallus did have a good deal of respect for Lasat culture.
Now we can all recall how Kallus is so annoying and also batshit insane whenever he fights Zeb for the first season and a half of rebels, and ME THINKS that this is because he wants to prove to himself that if he were not paralyzed on Onderon, he could have saved the members of his squad. He had to sit by and watch them die, and I think that he just wants the vindication; now you may be thinking, But Emma, he beat the Lasat who gave him his borifle, why would he still be obsessing over thisā say it with me nowā he is mentally ill. No victory will ever be enough to prove this to himself. Point blank period.Ā
To double down on that point, Kallus never actually says anything xenophobic about Zeb or the Lasat as a whole. (At least not that I can remember). He says āLasatā never know when to give up,ā but thatās not like⦠a crazy thing to sayā in fact, in a fucked up sorta way, it almost sounds like a compliment???? Like, Kallus completely sees Zeb (and the Lasat in general) as equals, heās not operating under the usual xenophobic imperial mindset that other species are lesser than. This weird obsession that he has in seasons 1 and 2 is just there because he wants to outwit and outfight Zeb (and the rest of the Ghost crew⦠but especially Zeb)
And after the Honorable Ones???? Itās literally never brought up again. He chills tf out so hard after that it is high key uncanny. And like, yes duh that is becauseā for writing purposesā thatās the beginning of his redemption and they want viewers to root for him as fulcrum, but it also implies that after finding common ground with Zeb, and understanding where heās coming from and who Zeb is as a person, he realizes that heās been CRASHING TF OUT for basically no reason.Ā
And he is SO QUICK to switch sides?? Like, he is fulcrum at least a decent time before the beginning of season three. The whole point is that the second he asks questions and delves deeper into what the Empires motivations are he is disgusted enough that he doesnāt just drop everything and disappear, no, he became a spy for the rebels because he wants to help. I feel like that just goes to show that, at his core, Kallus is a good person. A deeply confused, and hurt, and misguided person, but a good one.Ā
I dunno, this is just a really long winded way of saying that Kallus is the perfect example of an imperial pawn. Like the Empire is an incredibly effecient indoctrination machine that exploits people at every turn, especially their own soldiers, and I think that Kallusā relationship with that indoctrination along with his own motivations is just super super interesting and I think about it literally all the time
I just need to get these thoughts out so Iām throwing this ramble here:
Now, this may totally just be me thinking too much (fork found in kitchen) but I feel like when it comes to how we tend to think about Kallusā characterization, the implications of Kallusā experience on Onderon are very overlooked.Ā
So he goes to Onderon with āthe boysā-- which, the term āthe boysā has its own set of implications about how Kallus must have really cared for those troopers under his command but I digressā and on a patrol theyāre attacked, yada yada, we all know the story.Ā
But Kallus becomes fully paralyzed. He doesnāt describe the extent of his paralyzation but given that he had to watch as his squad was āfinished off one by oneā itās pretty fair to assume that he could not move whatsoever. The fear that any person would experience in that situation is completely indescribable, that is genuinely some shit straight out of a night terror.Ā
He isā as we knowā spared (albeit we donāt get exact details (did the merc try to kill him but reinforcements arrived before he could? Did the merc think that Kallus was already dead? Secret 3rd option?)) and he makes a full physical recovery, but there is no way in hell that he is not coming out of that encounter with some crazy PTSD.Ā
Thereās not a whole lot of info on Imperial mental health services but I donāt think itās a longshot to assume that they are probably close to nonexistent.
So the empire now has⦠an ISB agent with field experience⦠with untreated PTSD⦠where said PTSDs inciting incident pertained to a Lasat⦠and theyāre looking to make an example out of Lasanā¦ā¦ā¦.. Are you picking up what I'm putting down hereā¦...?
If you arenāt; it is BY NO MEANS a wild assumption to say that the Empireā essentiallyā weaponized Kallusā PTSD, given that he would be less likely to question the moral atrocities happening on Lasan since he was already biased against Lasat as a whole.Ā
Now, we donāt really have a solid grasp on what Kallusā exact role in Lasan was since heāsĀ kiiiiinnnd of an unreliable narratorā I mean weāre given the line in Droids in Distress where he takes credit for giving orders during the siege, but Kallus routinely just runs his mf mouth whenever heās throwing hands so itās likeā¦Ā that could either be the truth or a crazy exaggeration, we as viewers have literally no idea whatās going on thereā but it goes without saying that Kallus is obviously not excused from his participation just because of (likely) untreated mental illness, but that is literally like the whole point of his character so like we all knew that
Now, after Lasan, Kallus does something really bizarre for an imperial to do; he accepts the borifle given to him through the Boosan Keerah, and even though he doesnāt know about the cultural significance of that, he still takes it upon himself to learn how to use this weapon. I think that literally any other imperial would have tossed that shit out on sight, so I think it does kind of imply that Kallus did have a good deal of respect for Lasat culture.
Now we can all recall how Kallus is so annoying and also batshit insane whenever he fights Zeb for the first season and a half of rebels, and ME THINKS that this is because he wants to prove to himself that if he were not paralyzed on Onderon, he could have saved the members of his squad. He had to sit by and watch them die, and I think that he just wants the vindication; now you may be thinking, But Emma, he beat the Lasat who gave him his borifle, why would he still be obsessing over thisā say it with me nowā he is mentally ill. No victory will ever be enough to prove this to himself. Point blank period.Ā
(edit:) He is for sure operating from a place of extreme predjudice and bias but I think it's worth noting that heās not operating under the usual xenophobic imperial mindset that other species are automaticaly lesser than. (end edit) This weird obsession that he has in seasons 1 and 2 deels like it's mostly there because he wants to outwit and outfight Zeb (and the rest of the Ghost crew⦠but especially Zeb) (edit: Though it is 100% influenced by Xenophobia-- his mental illness and xenopobia DO coexist!!)
And after the Honorable Ones???? Itās literally never brought up again. He chills tf out so hard after that it is high key uncanny. And like, yes duh that is becauseā for writing purposesā thatās the beginning of his redemption and they want viewers to root for him as fulcrum, but it also implies that after finding common ground with Zeb, and understanding where heās coming from and who Zeb is as a person, he realizes that heās been CRASHING TF OUT for basically no reason.Ā
And he is SO QUICK to switch sides?? Like, he is fulcrum at least a decent time before the beginning of season three. The whole point is that the second he asks questions and delves deeper into what the Empires motivations are he is disgusted enough that he doesnāt just drop everything and disappear, no, he became a spy for the rebels because he wants to help. I feel like that just goes to show that, at his core, Kallus is a good person. A deeply confused, and hurt, and misguided person, but a good one.Ā
I dunno, this is just a really long winded way of saying that Kallus is the perfect example of an imperial pawn. Like the Empire is an incredibly effecient indoctrination machine that exploits people at every turn, especially their own soldiers, and I think that Kallusā relationship with that indoctrination along with his own motivations is just super super interesting and I think about it literally all the time