The Overlord
Superhero
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2002
- Messages
- 8,946
- Reaction score
- 241
- Points
- 73
The truth about Marvel's U.S. Government is they have always been more patient with super-villains than they often are with superheroes. Routinely, and for at least twenty years, any villain who was offered to "work for the government/military/black ops/etc." in order to work off any sentence or crime, whether theft or even murders, has usually been rubber stamped without much resistance. Examples include the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants (back when they called themselves that; Mystique, Blob, Pyro, Avalanche, Destiny, and they'd only attempted to ASSASSINATE A SENATOR among their various offenses, both seperate and collective), Puppet Master (who has gone on to become a serial killer/white slaver), Eddie Brock/Venom (whose murders include security officers and even a cop or two), and likely others I have forgotten. They also have created a good score of monsters/threats in attempts to re-create "controllable" (re: mindlessly obedient) versions of Hulk and Capt. America, with more bad results than good. They also have had secret cabals or up front efforts to make mutant killing robots and whatnot. The Marvel U.S. government has usually been depicted as corrupt and rotten, sometimes even moreso than the real one.
So with that in mind, the concept of the CSA having nannite controlled freaks and psychos as stormtroopers is hardly unfounded. The shocking part came when Iron Man embraced them to go after his own friends, and so few of his allies objected. But that's water under the bridge at this point.
We all know the saying" Those who would exchange liberity for security, deserve neither."
Well there should be new saying: "Those who would exchange Captain America with Bullseye are stupid and deserve a punch in the face."

