@Blackbeard069
@*Astrid107*
@Charys Da 2nd
@XXLuffytaroOoO56
That is true that there is a lot of gray in One Piece, however, there are things that the story and the plot don't touch.
And about Luffy, it's maybe only me, but I think that the plot, the narrative, and the story prefer Luffy's side, such as Marineford.
About the part of my preference... As I mentioned there are things that the plot and the story not going to touch or deal with for example you are not going to see normal characters (with a name and stories) that Luffy killed or people who die because of the actions of the Straw Hat Pirates (look on Enies Lobby, for example, we saw people that Luffy thrown from a cliff and all of them in the end survived, look also on the fight of Zoro in Whisky Peak Zoro didn't kill anyone although he said that he has no problem with it (and we already know that Zoro kills people in the past).
My point is more like, do you want to read a series that the main characters celebrate after they kill a lot of people?
About the corrupt, I don't think that "corrupt" is the right word here (that's why I don't used it).
Most of the Marines in the high rank are not corrupt you think that Sakazuki will take a bribe? Because I don't think so. The problem is more the radicalism and the fundamentalists of the soldiers like Onigumo or Sakazuki (you can't say that the murder of the soldiers that Onigumo and Sakazuki did was right).
@*Astrid107*
I'm mean to it literally.
When the story or the plot said that what the Revolutionary Army does is not right or when it said that the Revolutionary Army does bad things?
I mean the most bad thing that we know about is the fact that the Revolutionary Army trained kids to be soldiers and even then the story pretty much said that is fine and not going against it.
You can say that the World Government is worse and they are, however, you do not need to normalize the bad things that the other side does. Even if there are no other options (and I 100% accept that) you can't say that those things are fine.