Rebellions Start Small
But here's the thing about winter: you can prepare for it.
You can write off those warning about White Walkers. Doomsayers. Alarmists with ulterior motives.
You can let the Palpatines decide your fate. Accept the decline. Keep your head down.
Or you can resist.
Resistance isn't doom-scrolling. It's not trading outrage with fellow sympathizers or firing off hot takes on the holonet. That feels righteous—but it's performative. It changes nothing—and burns the one resource rebels can't spare: time.
And you can't wait for the council to agree. Even the Rebel Alliance gets stuck—factions debating, votes failing, leaders frozen by indecision.
Real rebellion starts small.
One person. Or two. Or a handful who feel the urgency and just... act.
That often means going against convention. Against the odds. Sometimes it means stealing a ship and going anyway.
I'm not suggesting we steal a ship.
But I am suggesting that trying—and failing—beats refusing the call. Beats waiting for a future that will almost certainly be worse.
Rebellions don't need permission.
They don't need perfect plans.
They just need to start.
Small.