Although I think you are probably getting at what I am about to say, just for clarity's sake: it's less that she's opposed to the sacrifices as such, and more that she's concerned that if they were to complete them and restore their world and return to things as they were, they'd reach the fate of the Plenty, i.e. the third of the Dead Ends... about which she hears a couple of lines in Meteion's report, and... that's it. Enough to confirm her fears/beliefs. Nonetheless, even with this qualification in mind, it does not resolve the tension you mentioned, in the sense that even if her people agreed to her "accept suffering" mantra, if dynamis is an overarching concern, wouldn't she want to sunder them anyway?
So, agreed, I don't think either of these two points stand on particularly strong footing (could they not figure out a way to manipulate dynamis, even if indirectly, and make changes if their path would potentially doom them/their star?) and I believe that is why they threw in the time loop, which can be interpreted as her favouring the WoL's timeline (the possibility of AUs in this setting throws a wrench into this but how well that is understood by the characters in question is another matter.) Yoshi's Q&A answers does offer her trying to preserve the timeline as a possible motive, and it is by design she tries to spare Emet, which is consistent with such an interpretation. All this complexity and opacity around her motives is there because they're not very good if scrutinised, so we get the final Yoshi line of defence "She's an ancient, huh, doing ancient things."A position I can only arrive at by completely ignoring 99% of what they showed us about them elsewhere.
Anyway, agree with both you and Cutes in how morally fraught this ends up being. It really needed more than the tack-on Omega quest dialogue options given the very strongly positive leaning narrative she benefits from in EW.



A position I can only arrive at by completely ignoring 99% of what they showed us about them elsewhere.
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I just can't take the Plenty seriously on any level, because what they are presenting me with shows a supposedly very sophisticated people, who just didn't plan ahead much and then were hit with a dread ennui. Doesn't really seem much like the ancients, and even after the Final Days, the Convocation's aim in realising the final sacrifice was for them to resume custody of their star. They were aware of the risks of becoming stagnant, as per one of the Amaurotine shades' dialogue. Given the lens through which they evaluate decisions, if they became apprised of either the fate of the Ea or the Plenty strawmen (did they suffer an existential crisis if they touched grass? too similar to what they're made of?), they were not compelling ultimate destinations for their society. After the Plenty, I pretty much exited the game and did not come back for two weeks or so, because it was so utterly contrived and stupid in what it tried to do.



