How do you roleplay a lawful character who grew up in a culture that encourages chaotic values?

How do you roleplay a lawful character who grew up in a culture that encourages chaotic values?

>With our combined strength, we can end this destructive conflict, and bring order to the galaxy.
>Whether they like it or not.

got sick of their shit

In hindsight Vader did nothing wrong, the common man in the galaxy is too apathetic to be trusted with freedom.
>Blow up two death stars
>End the empire
>Later cannot muster support to fight the last order and have to fight like guerrillas despite many people who fought in the civil war still being alive
>First order blows up a lot of stuff
>Republic instantly collapses

>"Weirdos."

>Vader did nothing wrong

How many children were on Alderaan?

The children would have joined the rebellion and promptly abandoned fighting for democracy the minute the empire collapsed.

Every single one of them? Because if that's the case, I don't care what you think, there's something to be said for a society that can organize itself in such a monolithic, predictable way.

Pretty easily

Depends on what the fuck you mean by "chaotic values." If the culture is all about individual freedom and acting with authenticity based on some kind of inner truth, maybe he'd attack anyone he suspected of acting with what Sartre would call "bad faith." Anyone who seems to have settled too nicely into their role in society are letting that society decide what they are. They are not authentic and there fore not truly alive, so it is not murder to kill them. Similarly, anyone who seems to act as though they "cannot" do something that they do in fact have the power to choose (for example, "I cannot betray my family") has committed mental suicide and may as well be euthanized.

he's the first one to die for being a spineless pansy

Then I would likely create a value who fought against the values at home and who thought he was rebellious, but as he travels the world he realizes that the people around him actually values the ideals he naturally upholds more than the ones that he was raised with. If he was raised within a CE society he might still have a few evil traits that he comes to understand aren't appreciated in the rest of the world.

Alderaan shot first.

Basically look at all these reactionaries rising in Europe and 'Murica upset with the policies their parents voted for.
>Inb4 /pol/
Eh, write what you know.

/pol/
I love it how Sith are in effect, endgame evil as shit, but on a Civillian level, they often manage to do ridiculous amounts of actual good that benefit the people.

Major issue of the empire was probably not being able to hold onto the clones- or for that matter, put Sith Alchemy into making Space marines. And Sheev not telling everyone- "Oh yeah, I build this incredibly costly death lazer to actually stop a horrible race of literal Darth Nihluses/offspring of Tyranids and Klingons" And lastly not teaching people in schools as to why the Republic was utter ass in everything it did because it simply had to much conflict of opinion to get fuck all done, next to dragging the Jedi into war and non-code, fucking themselves over constantly as a result- but you know, Mass Jedi removal and all that, and the whole "The Force is actually the Elder God from legacy of kain that literally tried to make Vader into it's Soul-Reaver that one time".

But a L character raised in C territory places value on L because of the control it emphasizes, as it understands the importance of Change, Stagnation Strength and Excess, but also understands that wholesomely embracing it is the path to self-destruction, and the dissolution of ambition and other such aspirations to be lost. He sees free-will as a social construct that exists as a social mechanism to fight against nihlism, but understands that like many things, it's incomplete and cannot be truly fulfilled. He operates under letter of agreement, not the fictitious notion of promises- simply because promises are broken and voided because they're a notion placed on percentage based capacities to perform- making them unreliable as a concept, and as he understands human imperfection- establishes that 100% is bullshit, and there is only a threshold of success marked as 'what is high' through effort, productivity, and achievement, earned through sacrifice in any and all forms.

That was Tarkin's call, not Vader's.

In constant disgust of everything around them.

And he stood there and let it happen even though he had the power to stop it, both in the sense that he's the second-most powerful man in the Empire in terms of its hierarchy, and in the fact that he's just more powerful than anyone on the station.

He's not just some hapless bystander.

>He's not just some hapless bystander.
The Trolley dilemma teaches us there's no such thing as a hapless bystander. Every single individual in the Death Star was in a position to push a particularly fat crewmember into the Death Star's core at any given moment, but they refused. Therefore they all deserved death and the rebels did nothing wrong.

Prove me wrong utilitarians and catagorical imperative ethicists.
Pro-tip: you LITERALLY cannot.

Why has nobody mentioned Elric?

Came here to post this.

>five books completed and he's still alive, surrounded by enemies, without a care in the world

The two most obvious ways would be
>The character is hyper-lawful, bordering on stupidity sometimes, as an over-reaction to the environment they grew up in
or
>The character is lawful, but rides the line between lawful and neutral a lot, since their definition of what's lawful is inherently more chaotic than everyone else's.

Fred Rogers.

>taking the trolley dilemma seriously
>literally a utilitarian strawman designed to justify a shit meme by taking it to spherical-cow-in-vacuum level, the only place it isn't laughed out of the room

Step it up senpai. By your self-imposed standards, Alderaan was a terrorist harbour destroyed by the legitimate state power of the galaxy.

For law substitute Gen Z, for chaotic substitute Boomer.

>Muh radical freedom

he just wanted to be a lover