thewhitequeen
Diamonds.
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La The Darkman said:What in gods name are you smoking?![]()
truth
La The Darkman said:What in gods name are you smoking?![]()
Well cut it out, you know that stuff will rot your brain.thewhitequeen said:truth
Well he is doing things and the only reason thus far given is "I don't want to end up going to jail like my uncle". Which is definitely a cowardly and wimping stance to take. Reed has always placed his family and morals first. He has done things before, such as let Galactus live, that caused him great consequence...and even facing trail and emminent death he did not back down or cower, and that was the Sh'iar...not America.Sloth7d said:Well, this goes back all the way to the beggining. Starting with him cloning Thor. Yeah, Reeds been out of character lately, but this issue really didn't make him look like a wimp in my eyes.
Kitsune said:Well cut it out, you know that stuff will rot your brain.
Darthphere said:I thought Reed's justification that the law is the law and we should follow it, not that he was afraid to go to jail like his uncle.
thewhitequeen said:Ha! I didn't mean he was smoking truth, but rather "Truth" to what La The Darkman said about that guy's "rugged=cool and Reed's a cool/good guy" thing didn't make any sense.
BrianWilly said:Reed might not have always been a man's man, but throughout this event he has been systematically *****fied. It wasn't necessarily the begging part that was strange and irritating (though it was), it was the entire scene -- He is the brains behind Hill's career right now, and yet she gets to order him to make a prisoner suffer? -- and it was the entire scene in addition to all the other crap that's been going on.
A man stands up for his beliefs. He doesn't kowtow to the government because he's afraid of them. A man knows his own mind and defends his actions. He doesn't sigh and cower when his wife calls him a Nazi. A man isn't afraid to fight for what's right, even at the cost of his own well-being. He doesn't let traumatized patients be tortured further and tell us McCarthyism is good. These are all things that Reed didn't do before this event started, and now he's been systematically doing.
I've always thought that Reed was very manly...again, pre-Civil War. He was smart, and determined, and powerful, and proactive, and successful, a good friend, and had a supermodel actress wife who he loved and protected and had sex with him on a steady basis, and was a good father to his children. What other criterion do we need? And what's this lumberjack nonsense? Who actually looks at a lumberjack these days and thinks, "Now there's a man's man!"? People look at lumberjacks and laugh.
I wouldn't call Wolverine a man's man at all, I'd call him a thug. Sadly, it seems that not a lot of people can tell the difference most of the time.
Well, it sorta depends on who you like more: Millar/Jenkins, or JMS.Darthphere said:I thought Reed's justification that the law is the law and we should follow it, not that he was afraid to go to jail like his uncle.
Wow, you just combat everythingthewhitequeen said:Ha! I didn't mean he was smoking truth, but rather "Truth" to what La The Darkman said about that guy's "rugged=cool and Reed's a cool/good guy" thing didn't make any sense.
Unfortunately for Civil War they decided to write him as the "all science and numbers and no heart" Reed Richards. Which is totally out of character. Considering Reed's past actions he hardly just follows logic.Mistress Gluon said:I've already given a much more reasonable, realistic view for Richards that made sense with who he was, unfortunately, Marvel hardly has the understanding for such character's potential as Reed. They kind of just lump him in with normal people, which is truly unfortunate.
However this situation is nearly exactly the same if not less exposive than Mutant Registration and Genosha...both of which he did not support.Mistress Gluon said:Agreed. But that's kind of unfair to say. He was against the law because he felt it was unfair, though some of it was biased, since Bruce kept running from the law and friends, rather than staying with the heavier brained heros like Reed or Tony, and let them try to help him.
But still. Just because he went against the law once, doesn't mean he's always against the law in similar situations.
This is based on whether you have superpowers or not. Even Jewel, who was retired, was being forced to join in NA.Mistress Gluon said:Eh. Not really. One was registering them based on their genetic makeup.
There is nothing "voluntary" about join or go sit in a cell in the negative zone until you do.The original SHRA was about volunteerism.
In Marvel, the Government mobilized two mutant task forces to deal with Mutants. Mystique's Freedom Force and Cyclops' X-Factor...one was more benign (X-Factor...although turned out pretty underhanded)...so in fact it's pretty close to exactly the same.And the later SHRA was instituted to a draft in response to the growing anti-SHRA forces. So he's not really supporting the same thing. It just feels that way to some, I guess.
I'm saying that if the events within each individual war can be as different as night and day such as, say, Vietnam and WW2, then I don't think it's accurate to say that war causes polarization (which would be generalizing) so much as those individual events cause polarization (which would not be generalizing). Those individual events being exactly what you described: fighting friends, alienating spouses, betrayals, tough choices, etc etc. Which can be a result of war, but not always. War is tough and brings about a lot of bad things, but those "bad things" are as varied and myriad as the wars themselves are. So if the original point was that Marvel wanted to show that wars cause polarization, then it's a bit of a skewed point.Mistress Gluon said:Not really. It's escalated by the sheer intensity of the constant conflict. Hence, war. So the point isn't moot, the context just wasn't laid out correctly. If your point is not all wars change all people, you'd be right. But it wasn't the point. The point was THIS war changed him. It's like how in America, Vietnam vets had several more, and different, problems over WW2 vets.
I might just not understand, I've never really thought of war as the defining event of things, just the events within that determine it.But like I said, I might just not understand what you're trying to tell me.