Board Thread:Manga/@comment-34196931-20200108165627/@comment-37493549-20200123181207

Drivebladesman wrote: I think it may have to do with some of these factors:

1)  Marley and the rest of the world originally hated Eldians due to the atrocities committed by people who are no longer alive.  Eren and his friends, on the other hand, were harmed by people who are still alive. You realize that the worldwide tyranny of the eldian empire isn't some irrelevant ancient history right. Karl Fritz building the walls and threatening to crush the rest of the world with the rumbling if they displeased him happened only a few decades (a century max) before the start of the series. Grandparents of the older people that are alive in the series at the moment would have lived through it.

As far as Marley are concerned the eldian empire is alive and well and capable of flattening them at any moment. They didn't know that Fritz brainwashed his own people into forgetting that they're the eldian empire. Neither do they know about the vow to renounce war or that the founder can only by used by royal blood (Not that either of those things stopped Eren anyway, meaning their concerns were entirely justified).

That's why they sent the warriors to paradis, to secure the founder and remove the threat. Of course the warriors killed a lot of people but you can see how they'd think it was justified to literally save the world.

Drivebladesman wrote: Plus, destroying every human on the outside world and killing dissenting Paradisians that Eren can't brainwash could possibly be an effective way of ending the revenge cycle for good. Plus, Eren could make up for all those deaths by generating even more living people on those dead lands, reviving them like a phoenix revives itself. He may have killed lots of people, but he could end up creating even more lives to replace the dead and bring the world's human population back up to its previous number. This is some sick perspective. You're literally describing a 'final solution'.