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  • Blanket warning that this episode will contain spoilers for all of the Broken Code, including

  • A Light in the Mist.

  • It isn't sectioned off since its material is far more woven into my discussion today,

  • so if you're still avoiding spoilers, I would come back to this one at a later time.

  • At this point, it's difficult to find a single Warriors fan who doesn't know the

  • basics of the Warrior Cats afterlives.

  • We have Starclan, the body of most dead warriors who get to live in happiness and harmony forever

  • among endless high levels of prey and perfect weather and also where they get to receive

  • prophecies and omens which they can then talk about and pass down to the living if and when

  • they choose.

  • We also have the Dark Forest, a place where all the cats who were...excluded from Starclan

  • go, whatever the reason for that exclusion.

  • If you are sent to the Dark Forest instead of Starclan upon your death, you are doomed

  • to an eternity in a dark and barren forest with no prey, endless danger, and either the

  • company of various tyrants and murderers or, if you happen to be there before the Power

  • of Three arc, forced to be alone forever, unable to meet a single other cat.

  • This seems like a pretty darn awful situation to find yourself in for the rest of existence...or

  • until you fade away from being forgotten or are drowned in an insta-death pool depending

  • on what arc's lore you're working with.

  • So let's take a look at exactly how these worlds are utilised.

  • Obviously, the Dark Forest is meant to be a punishment.

  • No matter which incarnation of the world you find yourself in, the cats sent to the Dark

  • Forest are there because of something they did wrong.

  • They were deemed to be bad cats based on their actions in life, and were therefore punished

  • in death.

  • But, of course, we know that judgement isn't applied evenly or objectively.

  • Even before canon adopted the lore of literal trials where a few biased cats choose whether

  • or not to let someone into Starclan, it was clear from the fact that cats like Ashfur,

  • Mudclaw, and Clear Sky got into Starclan that there was more personal choice going on than

  • objective moral judgements.

  • Since it *isn't* an objective, all-knowing judgement of your soul that puts you in one

  • afterlife or the other, one should conclude that it is possible for mistakes to be made,

  • or even for changes to occur in a cat after death that would change how they would be

  • judged were they judged at that moment.

  • For this example, I think it's time I turned to what finally spurred me to make this video:

  • the Broken Code, especially its last two books, The Place of No Stars and A Light in the Mist.

  • While we saw that someone like Mudclaw stopped being a threat when he died and realized the

  • truth he had been unable or unwilling to see in life, Ashfur's warped views only got

  • stronger in death, and he never gave up on his singular goal of getting Squirrelflight

  • and getting back at everyone who he perceived as slighting him.

  • This, and the evil actions that followed, are things that would probably land a cat

  • in the Dark Forest, and after his death Starclan admits that letting him into their ranks was

  • a mistake.

  • However, a truly astronomical level of cognitive dissonance is clearly at play, because on

  • the other hand we have many of the Dark Forest cats, including Snowtuft, who has completely

  • forgotten whatever evil deed put him there in the first place and is now just a fun tom

  • who actively chose not to join with Ashfur and helps Rootspring, Shadowsight, and the

  • others take him down, Juniperclaw, who we actually saw redeeming himself *before* his

  • death, not unlike Hollyleaf, and who hasn't done a single bad thing since, and a boatload

  • of other cats who have long since abandoned or stopped caring about the evil drives that

  • brought them to the Dark Forest and work instead to help take down Ashfur and hopefully reunite

  • with their friends and family in Starclan.

  • These cats, by and large, *do not deserve* an eternity in the Dark Forest, but when the

  • question of actually allowing them into Starclan is presented at the end of A Light in the

  • Mist, it is considered just a fact of life that they won't ever be able to cross over,

  • and that the place where you are sent when you die is where you should and will live

  • forever.

  • This is absolutely ludicrous.

  • We have first-hand admittance that there can be mistakes made.

  • We have seen first-hand that cats can change after death, for better or worse.

  • There is no reason to believe that, in a world where those two facts are in place, the rules

  • for eternal prosperity or punishment should be finite and unchanging.

  • If a cat, even in death, is doing horrible things and disrupting the safety of the dead

  • and / or living cats, they should be punished accordingly, not given the same benefits as

  • every nice queen, medicine cat, or deputy who simply wants to live out their days in

  • peace.

  • Likewise, if a cat has proven that they have understood their deeds to be wrong and worked

  • to change, especially if, in the process, they actively helped to save the clans, then

  • they should be allowed into Starclan, not forced to experience eternal torment in the

  • Dark Forest for crimes long passed, and not guarding the barrier between the two afterlives

  • without actually being allowed into paradise themselves.

  • Assuming that cats are capable of change after death, and we have continuously seen proof

  • that they are, judgement should flat-out not be finite.

  • That is, simply, wrong.

  • I have heard arguments in the past that some of these cats don't deserve forgiveness,

  • either because their deeds were too horrible for them to ever deserve Starclan, or because

  • they personally slighted another cat and that cat wouldn't, and shouldn't be expected

  • to forgive them.

  • I'll go over these arguments individually but as an overarching point: *Forgiveness

  • is not the same as redemption.*

  • First of all, the idea that a cat is so evil or has done something so horrible that they

  • can never be trusted and should never be let into Starclan is...flawed.

  • Certainly there are some cats like Tigerstar, Mapleshade, or Brokenstar who never saw the

  • error of their ways and in fact only got worse and more eager for destruction over time,

  • but this isn't the case for all, or even the majority of the cats who end up in the

  • Dark Forest.

  • And if there is even a single cat (of the perhaps ten to twenty that may reside there)

  • who doesn't deserve to be tortured, should we keep this system in place without any alteration?

  • I would think not.

  • Redemption is not a matter of erasing one's past deeds.

  • That is an impossibility.

  • It's about moving past those mistakes, understanding why they were wrong, who they hurt, what led

  • you to them, and working to improve yourself until you wouldn't do those things again.

  • Knowing that cats can, and have changed, what should be judged isn't who they were, or

  • more accurately, who some sector Starclan thought they were, upon their death.

  • It is who they are today, in the present, how they have grown, and what they will likely

  • choose to do with the rest of their futures.

  • I can't see Snowtuft, Silverhawk, Juniperclaw, or the others going on to commit more atrocities,

  • given the cats we saw they were and the deeds they did in the Broken Code.

  • Punishing someone is really only helpful insofar as it keeps danger away and proves to the

  • perpetrator that something they did was wrong.

  • If the cat being punished isn't a danger, and already knows they are wrong, then continuously

  • punishing them by making them live in the Dark Forest is just an exercise in pointless

  • suffering.

  • Secondly, I must acknowledge the people who argue that one or more cats in Starclan were

  • personally slighted by a cat in the Dark Forest, and shouldn't be expected or forced to forgive

  • them no matter how much they say they've changed.

  • To this I say, yes, of course.

  • You're absolutely right.

  • If someone has hurt you personally, put you in danger, or just made you uncomfortable

  • emotionally or physically, then no one in the world should ever force you to forgive

  • them or let them back into your life.

  • You are allowed to have boundaries, and that choice isn't wrong or morally lacking in

  • any way.

  • However, I do think that in discussing whether or not Dark Forest cats can be allowed back

  • into Starclan after redemption, the question of forgiveness is something of an irrelevant

  • one.

  • As I said, forgiveness is not the same as redemption.

  • Redemption is about a person's own actions and steps they make to be better.

  • Forgiveness has nothing to do with the person themselves.

  • It is not owed, and it isn't in their control.

  • Forgiveness is an individual's choice of whether or not to let someone who hurt them

  • back into their life.

  • This shouldn't really have anything to do with whether you're allowed into Starclan

  • with all of your friends and family, all the prey you can eat and the opportunity to see

  • prophecies sometimes, or whether you are cast off to a dark forest of solitude, misery,

  • and danger where everyone around you is being punished for their misdeeds.

  • If it is forgiveness specifically which is required for a cat to get into Starclan, that

  • is, if you aren't let into Starclan if cats there would be uncomfortable having you there,

  • then why was Hollyleaf allowed in?

  • Did her death come and Ashfur cleared her?

  • Did he say he was a-ok with forgiving his murderer and the kit of the cats he still

  • hated beyond belief?

  • It just makes no sense.

  • Individual grievances are separate, and in a world as vast as Starclan, you could choose

  • to never see the cat who wronged you ever again.

  • You don't have to interact with them.

  • You certainly don't have to forgive them.

  • But that doesn't mean they haven't changed enough to earn a place in Starclan.

  • They are separate concepts, and should be treated as such.

  • Warriors has never been a series with a very strong handle on what redemption and forgiveness

  • are or how to do them properly.

  • It had Breezepelt wake up in Crowfeather's Trial and be a completely different, nice

  • character who apparently hadn't ever willingly attacked his own clan, along with a medicine

  • cat and a pregnant queen, and, dealing with the very example I brought up, it had Hollyleaf

  • just forgive Ashfur completely and act like it was totally fine for them to hang out in

  • Starclan together after he tried to murder her and she successfully murdered him.

  • Likewise, it has always been a series that is quite averse to change.

  • The ideals, dynamics, and even specific characters that existed in the first and second arcs

  • have been clung to tightly ever since, which includes the inherent benevolence of Starclan,

  • and the inherent evil of the Dark Forest.

  • Even if the cats in those places prove the ideas wrong, even if an arc's worth of time

  • is dedicated to pointing out the flaws in the system that is causing problems for the

  • living and dead cats alike, those ideas still won't be given up on, so at some level,

  • I'm not that surprised.

  • Warriors did what it always falls back on and took the safe route, not radically changing

  • their afterlives any more than they radically changed the warrior c-

  • Sorry what was that?

  • An official list of the new rules was released on the website to clarify what was never actually

  • specified in the new book?

  • They did more than just reorder and reword some things?

  • Oh three rules are gone you say.

  • Which ones would those be?

  • Oh, welldon't trespassnot being a rule doesn't really matter ifchallenge

  • trespassersstill is.

  • Ah, good to see that one go.

  • Even Code of the Clans didn't portray it as being a good rule.

  • What's the last one?

  • ...You're joking.

  • No...you have to be.

  • Why in the world is thedeputy must have mentored at least one apprenticerule gone

  • now?

  • That was one of the most intuitive and actually useful rules in the code!

  • Deputies absolutely should have experience in leading a cat, making plans, giving orders,

  • and keeping track of another's safety before they take on the role.

  • I would have thought the number of bad leaders and deputies who just got thrown an apprentice

  • at the last minute if they got one at all, including in this arc, would prove that.

  • Why would you ever remove that rule?

  • No, no, I'm sorry, I got of track there.

  • Okay, well, I'm not that surprised that the Warriors afterlives were given only tiny

  • changes with no serious considerations to the possibility of change and redemption for

  • the cats who are already dead and judged.

  • However, I am far from happy about it.

  • While this may be the way to write a safe book series, it is not a good way to think

  • about real life.

  • Redemption is always possible, if you work at it, and change should be acknowledged,

  • especially when it's for something as important as your eternal resting place.

  • Warriors may never acknowledge it, but we don't have to follow in their pawsteps.

  • Thank you for watching, and always remember to redeem yourself for mistakes regardless

  • of who will choose to forgive you.

Blanket warning that this episode will contain spoilers for all of the Broken Code, including

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