BrianWilly
Disciple of Whedon
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Was this really the case? Post-Crisis Luthor hasn't tried to destroy the world that many times, and the general public was certainly never aware of any of those instances. Any and all evidence of any other wrongdoing had always been covered up -- passed off as vague business dealings that may or may not have been corrupt -- and so all that the average voter ever heard about were indistinct accusations that were thrown out after formal investigations.a Presidential candidate tried to destroy the world (ya'know, just a couple of times)
Especially when you consider that the "clone" that we're talking about here looked and acted completely different from the Luthor that everyone knew. He wasn't even the right age! From everyone's perspective, Luthor the respected philanthropist-businessman disappeared one day to be replaced by some random redhead who claimed to be his son at first...and then turned out to be evil. Then another day out of the blue, the well-respected philanthropist-businessman that everyone knew and liked returned, the same as he's always been before he was mysteriously replaced by the guy who didn't seem or behave like him at all. I mean, even without the added clones angle, the fact that they were in fact two different people would be the default assumption from the general public, not that they were the same!
Fickle and stubborn? I don't think anyone can be both of those at the same time, what with them being antonyms and all.I mean look at this last election where several thousand voters, even after it had been proven otherwise, proudly touted that Barack Obama was in fact an illegal alien with no birth certificate. Admittedly this is a stupid position and probably fueled by racism but it also proves how fickle and stubborn the voting public is, once they make up their mind about a person it's very hard to change it and they will look to anything to justify their position.

And yet, in spite of such convincing and persuasive slights,
Same with Luthor (so to speak). Bad publicity is going to be bad publicity, yes that's true, but without any proof of any kind, no undecided voter is just going to go "Oh ****, I guess he really is a evil megalomaniac out to rule humanity," any more than they would arbitrarily think that he was a flawless saint who never had any shady business at all whatsoever. A bunch of unproven accusations are never going to tip the scale in ways that truly matter. See the thing is, you think the normative state of the DCU citizens at the time of Luthor's election was to root against him, and that the burden of proof was on him and his team to make himself look good. But that wasn't the case. The default state of the DCU at the time was to root for Luthor, their beloved and maligned leader, and the burden was on his detractors to prove the things they were saying about him.
. It's still a weak explanation used to shoehorn an otherwise good plotline into comic books. Probably even more cliche' than the Norman Osbourne storyline, because they went straight for the "evil clone did it" explanation.
), J.Jonah.Jameson commissioned a criminal to attack Spider-Man, Mystique and her brotherhood were employed by the Government after trying to assassinate Senator Kelly...etc, etc, etc. Are these small details too, or should I write off the last 60 years of comics as crap because of them? The only difference is, those storylines have past and because they were popular and well received, we give them a free pass. It doesn't matter that they don't make sense. Why would the Government employ Namor and trust Namor after what he did back in the 40s, that doesn't make sense? Why would the X-Men even tolerate the Phoenix's existence? Doesn't make sense. Why would the Government employ mutants who were the basis for their Sentinel program in the first place? Doesn't make sense. Although if the story turns out fine, which it did in those cases, people don't care about that.