But was there a captain america sparking that order though?
That would have surely put some more minds at ease(no joke).
Ha! But too sad.
I've personally put no thought in to actual numbers, seeing as I have no experience with such things but I do know that the first building didn't go down till perry and his immediate group were seemingly out of their building. I assume that 911 didn't play out that way.
There are no certain numbers on this little fact, but it's believed there were about 5 to 7 thousand people in each tower when the attack started. Split the difference, and you've got about 12,000 vulnerable people that day.
When you look at the numbers of those killed, it's truly amazing. 2,606 people were killed in the towers and on the ground (the actual number of casualties that day were 2996, including the 17 terrorists).
A few factors played into so many people being able to survive that day; the point of impact, and the time that the buildings stood before they collapsed. Even when the towers collapsed, there were thousands of people on the ground who amazingly enough survived -- of the victims killed at the towers, only 107 people were actually on the ground.
I don't mean to reduce the seriousness of 9/11 by bringing that atrocity into a discussion about a super hero movie. But it is an excellent illustration of how many people can survive a situation that is so dangerous.
The people that day had no warning; the people of Metroplis had some inkling of the danger they were in. I think the moaning and complaining of 'tens of thousands', or 'millions of lives' lost in MOS is exaggerated at best, and just a whiny reason to fuss about the movie at worst.
Now, that's not to say that thousands of lives lost is not a sad moment. It really is, and I'm very sorry fictional people died in a super hero film. But I am not that sorry that the film didn't do a memorial for them, or that Superman didn't angst for ten minutes over it, or that he didn't waste time trying to reason with people bent on genocide.
It's a movie. Red shirts die. Time to move on.