Shut up about that. In the Star Wars prequels we're forced to sympathize with two opposing forcing. No, not the Jedi and the Sith, but rather the Jedi and Anakin. Anakin let go of everything to become a Jedi and train under Qui Gon Jinn and Obi Wan. He reluctantly left his mother in slavery, alone with no one to help her in the jobs they used to share. He was forced to accept the role of magic space jesus, and a prophecy that put him at the forefront of a MASSIVE war to rebalance the ENTIRE GALAXY. This cult-like religion forces him to keep his feelings secret, not letting them out even in privacy. While they show leniency when he does show emotion and sometimes reckless abandon, otherwise they force him to be something he's not. Anakin is raised to believe that emotions are evil. So when he gets secretly married to the one person in his life that lets him be himself, it creates more stress than one person can possibly manage. Yet he carries on his duties and does his best, even betraying on of his hest friends in the process, and throwing away his morals for the sake of an army masquerading as a religion. All he asks for in return is trust and acceptance, yet he gets neither of those things. On the other side, the Jedi are the only force stopping the sadistic, murderous, scheming Sith from taking over the galaxy and turning it into a living Hell. After thousands of years of war and destruction, they finally see what they think is salvation. They groom their new bringer of peace into a force to be reckoned with. They believe that he will either destroy their enemies, or stop all the senseless fighting between them. In a way, they were right. Anakin is lost, and the Jedi are desparate