[I think getting stunned by a blaster is more than enough.
Some flickers into his gaze then— surprise? Curiosity? He himself can barely conceive the idea of being punished "enough" for his crimes. Yet this man, Poe, was also responsible for the lives of so many ending early— but he could claim he'd already suffered sufficient punishment?
...granted, the way he talks about it...]
You claim the blaster is "more than enough", yet it seems you still can't fully decide whether or not it was the right choice. If you were truly in danger of having your fleet destroyed as a result of leaving them be, would there really have been a better option to take? I assume you weren't disobeying orders up until your decision to attack. Does part of the blame not rest on your superiors for sending you into a zone where you were likely to come across an opponent for which you were just barely equipped to handle?
no subject
Some flickers into his gaze then— surprise? Curiosity? He himself can barely conceive the idea of being punished "enough" for his crimes. Yet this man, Poe, was also responsible for the lives of so many ending early— but he could claim he'd already suffered sufficient punishment?
...granted, the way he talks about it...]
You claim the blaster is "more than enough", yet it seems you still can't fully decide whether or not it was the right choice. If you were truly in danger of having your fleet destroyed as a result of leaving them be, would there really have been a better option to take? I assume you weren't disobeying orders up until your decision to attack. Does part of the blame not rest on your superiors for sending you into a zone where you were likely to come across an opponent for which you were just barely equipped to handle?