"The triumphant humans, however, all but tore their Alliance apart on what to do with their defeated enemies. While Terenas Menethil II of Lordaeron believed the orcs would one day lose their lust for conquest, Thoras Trollbane of Stromgarde and Genn Greymane of Gilneas demanded their executions. They effectively settled on a sentence of life imprisonment, although disagreement and anger over the issue remained entrenched as nations left the Alliance in various frustrations"
Straight from beyond the Dark Portal.
He didn't decide anything, he saved Eitrigg after being exiled and banished from Lordaeron. At that point he had the utter liberty of acting as he most desired since the "Law" pretty much dumped him already. And what he did was doing he deemed was right doing.
You're still making convenient assumptions to favor your argument. Eitrigg abandoned the Horde when he realized the depth of Gul'dan's corruption, which means that he most likely didn't participate in the destruction of Stormwind, occurring after Orgrim Doomhammer rooted Gul'dan and his Shadow Council out.He was a enemy of humanity and he took place in crimes against humanity, he fought an unprovoked war against humanity to steal their land, he took part in the destruction of Stormwind.
You still try and forcing crimes on him that by all means he didn't commit ever. Yours are all crappy guesses that Eitrigg's history alone easily invalidate.
A Paladin who blindly follows the Law over his principles is not a Paladin, is a dog on a leash. The Law of the Alliance was wrong because it was biased and blindfolded. Tirion possessed the perspective and understanding the rest of humanity lacked. Of course, humanity could impose the Law through the strength of their society and political institutions, doesn't mean they were right. They were wrong.If the Law of the Alliance says he is to be punished for this, than Tirion can try to defend him on a legal ground, argue for him, try to prove that Eitrigg deserves mercy, but it isn't on him to be the Law and decide that the Servants of the Alliance who captured him are to assaulted and Eitrigg to be freed.
You're still deeming Eitrigg a "criminal" without the barest proof that he was. Nothing suggests it, nothing implies, nothing supports it. It's all your headcanon.He owed a Criminal a favour and helped him to escape, just on the base of his own sympathies.
And again, it was not a matter of sympathy alone. Eitrigg wasn't deserving of the treatment the Alliance was giving him because their judgement was conditioned by ignorance. They treated the one who possessed perspective as a lunatic. Their ignorance made them wrong, no matter the strength of their "Law".
No, a Paladin should be about putting the principles that make him a Paladin above everything. If a Paladin renounces to those principles to obey the Law, he may have proved unquestionable loyalty but has betrayed himself to begin with.So, in your opinion a Paladin should be all about placing oneself above law.
You still ignore the fact that Tirion didn't kill anyone and Eitrigg was no "rapist", if anything he was a better individual than most Humans. Saving Tirion given all the circumstances was an act of selflessness in par with one of an actual Paladin.That means, if a Paladins thinks his honor demands that he kills city guards to save a rapist who helped him once, it would also be okay?
The difference is that Tirion was sane and with the moral compass of a sane person, the Scarlet Crusaders had lost their minds and their grip over reality.What's with the oathes he spoke? With his other duties? It sounds like in your opinion a Paladin should only do whatever he thinks is right. That's what the Paladins of the Scarlet Crusade did, on the other extreme.
Tirion didn't lose his Light powers after saving Eitrigg.
Just saying.
The Scarlet Crusaders didn't either.
The Light is about what you think is right.
Tirion brought suffering upon innocents, the men who captured Eitrigg he assaulted and his own family, just because he liked an Enemy of mankind. I can't sympathize with that. I think he crossed a line were it wasn't necessary. But yeah, this is my viewpoint. I don't think that Eitrigg deserved it to be saved at the cost of Tirions family, his oaths and his duties.
On the other Hand, I think Arthas made the right choice back in Stratholme. He stopped to be a Paladin at this point, but it was a choice to be made.
Last edited by mmocfbbaf337eb; 2016-04-22 at 09:07 AM.
The paladin campaign final mission in the Alpha. It seems that Liadrin isn't part of the group that went to attack Balnazzar in Netherlight temple.
http://beta.wowdb.com/items/140113-l...he-silver-hand
Dafuq?
Paladins are 20-30 years old, depending on in which year legion plays. most people can remember their founding, Tirion, one of the first Paladins, was still alive until now.
Last edited by mmocfbbaf337eb; 2016-04-22 at 09:26 AM.
I would love to see more story between the Class Orders with the progressing story. With the assault on Light's Hope, the Paladins should be pretty pissed at the Death Knights, while being in good terms with the Priest Class Order after their own campaign, putting the Ebon Blade in disadvantage.
" speaking with 19 century voice"
Excuse me sir, you have no right to say those Hideous words
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why he have so much hate toward Etrigg
let the orc free
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he thought he lost it after the trail " the judge was Uther"
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"approaching Lothemar"
I didn't do it on purpose, the quest made me
IT made me do it