Kurayami listened as the two of them traded jabs back and forth about history long past and more recent. What
Liorra
said about being a Mandalorian in his mind made far more sense that strict adherence to some figurehead, as much as he respected Ijaat and
Mia Monroe
and would follow either of them into battle should they call for him. What she said about the Resol'nare though seemed to contradict that if he was able to recall it correctly, there was something about the Mand'alor as part of the Six Tenets and following them when they called.
From what little he could recall it was not something he had done well, if at all according to many. There were parts of the Resol'nare he held to, but there were certainly parts he did not, and that alone would make him an outsider in the eyes of any traditionalist, yet on Yavin IV he had been pulled into the Manda and been approached by many elders from many ages. The entirety of the encounter was as a dream one tries to remember after waking and very fuzzy, but his body bore signs of the encounters in the form of tattoo-like scars that spiderwebbed over his torso from his time spent therein and none could deny it. Lio had been there with him as well. Once a silence had fallen once more he let it linger a few moments before reaching out to Lio through the Force, brushing his mind against hers a memory of the feeling of wandering through the Manda by her side.
"Lio, I do understand your pain at seeing someone you looked up to so highly fall short of the expectations you had. It's not an unnatural reaction to be disappointed, but this level of lashing out at someone for a perceived slight is unfair to them. Mia has been put into an unenviable position and with Ijaat calling us all here and then retiring to the forge and leaving Mia to pick up the pieces and do the heavy lifting, she has done a more than admirable job. I hate to break it to ya kid, but the galaxy is not a simple place, I used to think similarly as you when I was young, Light side good, Dark side bad, no in between.
And It wasn't until I was working with the Corellian Defense Force that I was soon absolved of those notions. I started to see that not everyone who worked for the 'bad guys' was doing it to be evil. Many of them were forced into it by circumstance, like providing food for their family because a mafioso controlled that sector. Government officials were on the mafia payroll and looking the other way, making sure that these people could not get out of their circumstances unless they tried less than legal or ethical means. Desperation brought many Sith to those areas as a means to bolster ranks, they would offer freedom to the downtrodden...but only if that person would kill for them. So tell me what would you do if you had no other option Lio? Take the chance to improve your situation or stay stuck in the status quo ad infinitum?
I know what the Code of the Jedi and Sith state well. I have studied both in depth, and I personally find both to be equivalently dangerous extremes. One promotes passivism and only necessary action, which sounds good in theory, but then there are always the masters who take the portion of 'necessary action' out. They corrupt it or forget it entirely. Corrupt it until it means that a Jedi strictly will not kill an unarmed opponent, no matter who they may be, or remove it to the detriment of taking action even when the time is right and would be most advantageous to help as many people as possible. Whereas the Sith code is the opposite. They will take actions simply to antagonize many times, and will go out of their way to brutalize an already beaten opponent, reveling in death by a thousand cuts so to speak. You need to find a path that is not fully dedicated to either ideal Liorra, learn to utilize the anger you feel and channel it to a productive end, not a destructive one like the Sith. Find what others view as a weakness or a flaw in you and instead turn it into a strength.
I ask only that you think on my words young, verda.
Again he would let silence settle over the three of them until either she or Mia spoke up, in all honesty, he had probably said far too much just now as he was wont to do.