'' It's not your fight Keno?''


What's was the importance of the lesson Raphael and Splinter were trying to teach Keno. Personally, I thought Keno was a good fighter, but Raphael and Splinter didn't want him fighting............I didn't understand the emphasis.

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Keno was a good fighter, but like Splinter explained it wasn't Keno's fight. You shoudn't fight just because you can, you should only fight for a reason. Keno was a little hotheaded like Raph and would rush into fights, but luckily for him soemone always helped him, wheras when Raph rushed into fights something bad always happened. Splinter didn't want something bad to happen to Keno when Shredder wasn't really his problem, he was the turtles problem.

Just a thought.

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Thanks, I noticed at the end Keno finally learns his lesson (after the Shredder gets blasted through the window) and he says to Raphael ''I know, it isn't my fight.'' A relieved Raphael finally says ''At last.''

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Exactly. For example, Superman is capable of virtually destroying anyone easily, but he only fights to protect the innocent and the weak.

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Keno can't be that much younger, if at all, than the turtles themselves. Where do they get off calling him "kid"?


"Why do you say this to me when you know I will kill you for it?"

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the first film had alot of StarWars reffrences in it, (Shredder = Vader, Casey and April = Han and Leia, the foot = storm troopers etc) and to me, the scene in Secret Of The Ooze with Splinter and Keno is the ONLY Star Wars reffrence in the entire film.

its alot like Empire, when Yoda tried to keep Luke there instead of helping his friends.

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It's because he was a young kid, a human kid. They didn't want to involve a young human kid in this. It's a simple as that.

Everything doesn't happen for a reason, people simply justify reasons for things that happen

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