How would you feel if I broke into your home and stole your property?"
Probably more accurate for him to say to go after either of her castles. Which I suppose he wouldn't
You know it's... Canon, right?
I believe he was talking more about the Celestia bashing, and or hypocrisy, than the Daring Do side of things? Which I still agree with besides my following response.
Well what do you know. I honestly had no idea. My apologies.
No problem.
See, if you look at the episode it's relatively obvious that something is up. Caballeron has an artefact and sells it. Nothing there is illegal. Ahuizotl turns up and takes it. Possibly theft, but then it turns out that he knows the site it originally came from. Not only that, but the ponies who are helping him are dressed in a similar enough way to him and to the site that it looks like they're from the same culture. They even have cutie marks to go along with it. That means that this isn't some abandoned ruin, it's part of an existing culture. It's not someone finding a tomb deep in the Egyptian desert, it's someone taking a crowbar to the floorboards of Westminster Abbey.
I actually haven't gotten to Season 9 yet. I think I stopped off after that goat centaur Teltic whatever attacked and was beaten.
But I did look up Daring Do's Antagonist character prior to this and I don't believe that just because Daring Do ain't as much a good guy as that episode insisted on was means Ahuizotl was any less a villain. Even if she struck first, his response was still to set off 800 years of scorching sun, which if successful, he would have caused untold ecological disaster world wide. Plus, you know, all the
death, sentient and otherwise. No way would moving the sun closer would have only affected the what? 30 miles or so of the immediate jungle area they lived in?
Now how that is supposedly gonna kill off one pony that he had tied up suspended over a piranha pit and could have killed off anytime I don't know.
At best the ponies that helped him could get away with this literal crime against nature with being told one thing by him in their native tongue and being unable to make heads or tails of what he was threatening to the stupid foreigners in their strange language. They did just admit to being unaware. But he did verbally state his intentions with that particular artifact Infront of Daring Do and the Mane6. Plenty of witnesses.
If we are supposed to take Daring Do's books with some hefty salt because she wrote him as the bad guy then we should take his books with her as the bad guy with the same. It's not as if either books weren't written with an
agenda right?
He said to create 800 years of scorching sun, not now that he's finally gotten his people's heirlooms back home where they belong he wasn't going to let her steal them again.
1 is a green flag that all is clear and Daring Do is correct, the other is a red flag that something is very wrong and not as it should be.
The existence of ponies in the appropriate garb and marks following his commands is secondary to the immediate disaster he is
actually saying he'll unleash.
The thefts and the doomsday weapon\plan are 2 separate matters. I don't see why the near mass murder should get off lightly just because the one to thwart him wasn't keeping her nose clean. And that is assuming this was the ONE time he ever did, and ever was going to get people and animals killed. He's not innocent just because she's guilty. If both did two different crimes then they should both get two different appropriate times
Also, how do his people feel about having the sun beat down on them for 800 years with heat stroke and watching all their crops and various water sources dry up? Think Ahuizotl Think!
It usually comes across (at least to me), as if Grayven, just wants the other person to care enough to have an actual debate with him. I think Grayven, would love a genuine debate without the other side getting emotionally invested. Especially with Grayven, he's a god of Conquest. It seems like he's just trying to conquer the conversation/debate, but almost never has an emotional stake in what he's disecting. It's either debate people and conquer their minds, or beat them up and physically conquer them. I don't think Grayven can help himself, but he doesn't actually care about his own points themselves, only as a means to making people agree. It's like his divine nature forces him to turn even a simple conversation between potential rivals into a contest.
That is an interesting point, and would fit with his actions...