Sarudahiko looked at his sister and could see that she was damn serious. He could tell that she meant what she said; she was indeed hurt by the state he was in, and she wanted him to rest in peace.
"I'm sorry, sister," he said to her. "But I can't just stand by and watch those humans overthrow the gods."
"I see," she replied. "Why must that be taken as a bad thing?" "Wouldn't elevating themselves to that position also make them gods themselves?"
"The deification of the humans over the celestials would mark the end of all the present gods as we know them, and that includes you," he said to her. "Though it might be a paradise for them, it would be hell for us."
"What makes you so sure of that?" she asked. "What reason would they have to make us suffer like that?"
"What else do you expect?" he asked her. "The gods abandoned them and wanted them exterminated." After they fight back and win, do you think they would let those same gods roam around scot-free? I don't think so."