TheCorpulent1
SHAZAM!
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Dr. Doom has a long history of trying to kill people. Thor doesn't. Every one of his actions went towards his idea of bettering mankind, including the power plant.Yeah, he implemented a whole new powersource that was absolutely untested and unrated by anybody other than him WITHOUT government approval. That's the equivalent of Tony Stark just shoving a superhuman team to solve problems in a city without anybody's approval.
Had Doctor Doom done the same thing, you'd have felt that Tony Stark's suspicions would be well placed. The moment you decide that people are exempt from rules, you introduce corrpution. And corruption is not a good thing.
Also, you don't know that it wasn't tested. For all you or I know, the greatest minds of Asgard had given it the stamp of approval, and/or Thor had performed the exact same procedure on Asgard a dozen or a hundred times. Certainly, he's imbued things with a sliver of the Odinforce before, which is really all he did with the power plant in Cincinnati--channeled a bit of the Odinforce into an artifact that would turn it into clean, uninterrupted power for at least a decade. Outside of the fact that we know he did that, we don't know the first thing about any preparations he may or may not have made for it beforehand, so any argument built on that basis is totally speculative.
Government approval has never been high on anyone's checklist, including Tony's. He's flouted the government and placed himself above the law on numerous occasions, including several times before and during the Civil War.
Thor never considered himself king of the human race before "The Reigning." He considered the human race a flock of sheep who had gone astray because, once again, mystically stripped of humanity. I wasn't talking about Blake, either; Don Blake was never Thor's humanity, he was just a mortal shell that Thor inhabited for a while. The Jake Olson we see throughout Thor vol. 2 literally was Thor's humanity given physical form because the real Jake Olson had died and moved on to Heaven already. When Odin separated Olson and Thor into 2 beings, Olson took the humanity and Thor took the power and godhood. Thor, for all of the good he did without Olson, was incapable of connecting with the humans he sought to help on any meaningful level and thus incapable of understanding what they really needed. I'd say that's a pretty good excuse, especially since it was shown pretty clearly in the denouement to "The Reigning," after Thor regained his humanity, immediately recognized the error of his ways, pulled Asgard out of the mortal realm, and stopped messing with mankind's affairs.And Thor has no excuse. If he's a king trying to do right by his subjects, he has to actually...you know...consider them, unless he feels he's above them (which then rolls right back around to Tony planning out for the inevitable that Thor will eventually involve himself in bigger matters, because he feels he's above humans). Thor's shown without Blake that he can be just as good. Stark hasn't really DONE that much wrong (aside from attacking Cage on minute one really. That was unexcusable) Even the assault on Captain America by Maria Hill was perfectly reasonable. I really don't know why people think Stark is really such a bad person. Outside a few irrational people on this board, I'm sure you don't honestly think Stark is that horrible of a person. Likeable? Probably not. But not a horrible person by any means.