Colossal Spoons said:Emma's been on a roll this week. What she said to both Carol and Tony have been spot on.
rjb182 said:I do love Emma, and her point is very good. I gave her kudos in the Civil War thread, and the scene with Ms. Marvel is even better.
Point of order, though: Aren't the writers kinda cheating, in making an issue of this? The real reason the Avengers haven't helped mutants much isn't because Captain America and Iron Man are racist. It's because different people write different books, and the writers of the Avengers have never had much reason to write about mutants. If they did, people would probably complain, because they say there are too many mutant/X-books already.
Now, for fictional purposes, the past is what it is. I'm not against using an existing situation to
a) Expand the drama,
b) Set the X-Men on the stance they should probably have anyway toward the SHRA, and
c) Make Emma look cool. Goodness knows, the gal takes enough flak for her snarkiness, it's nice to see everybody on her side for once.
But it's worth noting that the apparent pattern of racism she's complaining about is really just the result of a "stuff happens" kinda coincidence, a place where comic logic meets the real world and gets a bit derailed...
Harlekin said:Exactly. Let's say one of the heroes that has registered has gone rogue or the likes thereof. He either needs to be taken down, and as such, at least tracked. The government decides to hire a couple of villains to track the hero down (they've done this before) and they give them the full file (because after all, that's the best way to track a hero), and voila, people that shouldn't ordinarily have that kind of info have it. The government in the MU is laughably easily to break into. It's too much of a danger.
Ha ha... awesome.Zeu said:Well, the good thing about politicians is that they´d NEVER give away the name of a secret agent or hero (thus putting him/her and her family and friends in danger) to score a political goal.
Oh, wait......
What if they haven't got a hero or agent available?The Question said:Why does it have ti be villains, though? Why not their agents, or other heroes?
Yeah because there's no way a criminal's going to do something he's not supposed to do.The Question said:Okay. Recruiting criminals. That's not the same as handing over classified information and then allowing them to use it to harm innocent people. If they have badges, that means they're agents. And I doubt federal agents would be allowed to murder Spider-Man's family in their off hours without consiquences.
Lactophiliac said:Yeah because there's no way a criminal's going to do something he's not supposed to do.
Darthphere said:Ummm yeah Q, none of us said that. But to track down someone, they need the classified info to do so.
Darthphere said:What are you arguing again Q? It wouldnt be the first time a villain gets his hands on classified documents and does soemthing terrible with them. Logically speaking, what has happened before is bound to happen again.
Tropico said:If you pay attention you'll see that he brought up the point out of the blue. This is an old argument that was done to death when CW#2 came out. It's also in Question's style to keep arguing pointlessly even though he doesn't have proof of anything and all he can do is speculate. The best weapon is to not give him any fodder and that'll end it.
Tropico said:If you pay attention you'll see that he brought up the point out of the blue. This is an old argument that was done to death when CW#2 came out. It's also in Question's style to keep arguing pointlessly even though he doesn't have proof of anything and all he can do is speculate. The best weapon is to not give him any fodder and that'll end it.
The Question said:I brought it up because Emma seemed to be talking about that sort of thing happening. She did say "this is what happens when people know how to find mutants." I simply was wondering why it is assumed that everyone's IDs will become public knowlege.
Tropico said:When did she say that? It seems to me like that's what you assumed she implied when she showed what happened. Both Genosha and the Mansion are publicly known "nesting grounds" for mutants, it's not the same as the registration. Besides, you're taking the whole thing out of context. They gave those examples because they were trying to illustrate that mutants have gone through tragedies on their own. Neither Tony Stark nor Carol Danvers went to the X-Men to see if they could help them in some fashion, they went there to RECRUIT them for the Pro side. Why did the X-Men refuse? Not because of the ID thing, but rather because they know what it's like to be persecuted while doing the right thing (like Emma said).