Enough people make excuses for letting something they would kill with absolute freedom live, when in actuality they may be afraid of public backlash for their actions.
Take for example Kefka: he makes no difference between killing an enemy as a fellow soldier and killing an innocent or an ally as long as he can justify it or find a benefit to it in his own world. Never the less, he makes efforts to hide the latter from this community where somebody would... [A frown, a finger tap.] should be able to stop him. In his own world, he gloats freely about his power with nobody to stop him.
I can't yet expect the villagers to be strong enough to kill something with a loved one's face, even if it's making a mockery of their lifetime... Still, my own slacking can only be called cowardice.
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Take for example Kefka: he makes no difference between killing an enemy as a fellow soldier and killing an innocent or an ally as long as he can justify it or find a benefit to it in his own world. Never the less, he makes efforts to hide the latter from this community where somebody would... [A frown, a finger tap.] should be able to stop him. In his own world, he gloats freely about his power with nobody to stop him.
I can't yet expect the villagers to be strong enough to kill something with a loved one's face, even if it's making a mockery of their lifetime... Still, my own slacking can only be called cowardice.