So what? The cure is not a guarantee obviously. Her choice was a selfish and shallow one. Rogue would've ultimately realized that it was wrong and gone to Alcatraz to help the X-men.
A selfish and shallow one...in your eyes. Tell me, have you ever been in a position where something about you kept you from touching anyone without hurting them?
Of course you could say she might learn to control them down the road, she might learn how to fly if she flaps her arms really hard. But the fact remains that she saw things in the here and now, something that young people tend to do, and made a decision.
Yeah, let's not kid ourselves. Most older people see things in the here and now, too. Tell me, what exactly was Rogue supposed to see in her future? Controlling this power? That seems like a longshot to me.
Yes it does. It makes it a bad storyline because people actually THINK it's ok. It's ok that Rogue took something that was a symbol of hatred and prejudice AGAINST HER! Something that might only be temporary.
Will you please explain to me WHERE the cure as it intersects with Rogue becomes a symbol of hatred and prejudice? It's a symbol of assimilation. But it's not FORCED assimilation, it's completely voluntary. How does that become hatred and prejudice? Hatred and prejudice haven't even been a PART of Rogue's arc. FEAR...brought on by being different...has.
How does she cure herself if the cure wears off? Does she commit suicide? If not, sooner or later she's going to have to solve her problems without going for some stupid answer.
Exactly. Which makes the concept even better, because now it has social relevance. How does one assimilate when the method of assimiliation becomes void?
I also didn't buy her reasoning for taking it at all. She can't have sex? Join the club woman.
She can't TOUCH anyone. Period. When she does, she HURTS them. that is not the kind of thing one "gets over".
What Rogue did was NOT taking action.
What the hell are you talking about? If you mean "she didn't take the RIGHT action", say that. But she definitely "took action", by any definition of the phrase.
She continues to hide from herself.
Because what, her "self" is some random curse she has that keeps her from touching people? So, Rogue's "self" is her disease/affliction?
What about the part of herself that wants to reach out and TOUCH people? Why can't she embrace the part of herself she values most, instead of her powers/curse/gift aspects?
Taking action would've been stepping up to the plate and being an X-man and using her powers to help Wolverine who always watched out for her. Or Bobby if she truly loves him.
Huh? She had no clue the battle was even going to happen.
It's shallow because she was only concerned about HER OWN DESIRES!
Uh...being worried about hurting SOMEONE ELSE if you touch THEM is worrying about your OWN desires and how things affect YOU? Don't think so.
There's more to life than touching people for God's sake.
So?
I doubt Rogue didn't know about the freaking GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE being torn asunder. And Magneto being on the loose.
Since that happens while she's at the clinic, and she hasn't got an X-Jet with her...
No, the cure is not the symbol of prejudice in Rogue's case. That has never been part of Rogue's arc. FEAR and detacment has been part of Rogue's arc. And the cure has been a symbol of a way to assuade those fears and that detachment. It's a symbol of "You are different, and it prevents you from having normal relationships without hurting people or scaring them, so what are you going to do about it?" Ask anyone with a serious mental illness or a serious contagious disease about this concept, and you will start to see that it is a theme that exists in the real world.
Yes it is. It was made because an old guy hates mutants and is scared of them.
That is not at all what the cure is portrayed as.
So he had this cure produced because he hates and is scared of mutants.
Where? Show me the scene where Warren Worthington III is shown to hate and fear mutants?
"I only want to help your people".
And once again if the cure is in fact only temporary than I think it makes most of your arguments even more bull****.
Why? Details, please.
Hm, I guess this means black people could become normal by painting themselves white. Or Jews in the Inquisition could've become Catholic!
Yeah not a bad thing at all!
See, you just assume that Rogue symbolizes gays, or blacks, or what have you, when that is not neccessarily the case. Or that her taking the cure is the writers saying "You should all assimilate". That's also not the case. Look at Rogue as an example of say, serious mental illness, and the dynamic changes completely.
It is selfish. Rogue took the cure so she could have sex. Instead of actually stepping up to the plate and using her powers to save people.
Because god knows, everyone in the world has to find a way to twist their worst aspects to do great good. Or can.
OK, so she can take the cure that might only be temporary. Or she can kill herself. Or she can LEARN to live and accept these things and try to become better because of it. And actually use her powers for good things.
Wow. Just...wow. You realize that if she's MISERABLE and DEPRESSED because of a complete lack of human connection, she's not going to be able to find the DRIVE to use her powers for good on a regular basis, right?
All the more which shows that her having powers doesn't HAVE to be such a curse. She can use them for great things without the stupid cure.
The problem is, while her powers CAN be used for good, they still have a massive downside: they still DENY her what she values most: Human contact.
You keep assuming everything is black and white, or one way. It's hilarious.
And she reacted poorly and stupidly.
Why? Because she didn't choose what YOU value?
So, in the end she can choose a very limited combat role and be confined within a virtual prison, never being able to touch another person without harming them. Or, she can choose to give up her gift and know human affection. And we're not just talking about sex here. Not being able to touch someone you care for has to be a huge emotional and psychological strain on her. I understand why she did what she did.
She's not giving up her gift. She's hiding from it with what is probably a TEMPORTARY solution. So what if the cure wears off?
Problem is, YOU see it as a gift. SHE sees it as a curse, and she has every right to, because SHE has to live with it.
Here's the other problem, Rogue knows and does have human affection.
But how much? How developed can it be? And how much will she suffer knowing how far "behind" she is from everyone else?
His son was trying to do that to himself because he was scared of what his FATHER would think. Deep down Warren likes his wings, so his father can go piss on himself.
Did Warren strike you as completely liking his wings when he was trying to cut them off his back? If he had truly liked his wings, he wouldn't have tried to cut them off. He would have hidden them. He obviously resented them a great deal, even if he knew they were a part of him.