Actually, that GM gave me a flat out +10 morality bonus doing that.
"...You've cited Yoda correctly. That's exactly what your supposed to do."
His rule is "If you can back up your action with something Yoda, Obi Wan, or another famous jedi actually said in a movie (Anakin doesn't count, but Luke does....) you gain morality."
As a GM, that resolution would strike me as adherence to the letter but ignoring the spirit of the Code. It's the same as a lawful good Paladin refusing to break the law to accomplish a greater good. And it's not even like "killing a baby." It's more like "trespassing on someone's property to save a dying innocent." Compassion, I would argue, is at the heart of any good law. And acting without compassion is absolutely conflict-worthy in my game.
You're familiar with Jacen Solo's progression to Darth Caedus, yes, fellow EU junkie? At the beginning of the novel Betrayal , Jacen is rationalizing all these deaths that he's causing in light-side-Jedi terms. He's defending himself and Ben, and he basically tells himself that it's not a big deal that he's sending all these people shooting at him to their deaths. There is no death, there is the Force.
And then all throughout that series he kept praising Palpatine, of all people, for his adherence to the law, and how he went about gaining power through the appropriate channels. Eventually Jacen reaches the conclusion that the Rebel Alliance were the bad guys for breaking the law and throwing the galaxy into a Civil War. He slowly corrupted himself through his thought processes, all the while telling himself that he was the good guy. And finally he was able to drop all pretenses, divorce himself completely of the Jedi Code, and begin to act with impunity as a Sith Lord.
Someone here already mentioned Atris from KotOR II. This is another example of someone who has striven so hard to maintain the Jedi Order that she has completely lost sight of its heart.
I wouldn't use Jacen Solo's idiotic fall to the Dark Side to justify anything but the need for better writers of EU books.