Hm.
I think people might be missing just how ...impactful the uneven distribution of justice can be.
Imagine you and your family moving to a town where everyone immediately hates you.
Then, someone sets fire to your house and kills most of your family.
The fire and the murders go uninvestigated, and their deaths go unavenged.
Then, you find out it was a police officer who set the fire.
You go to bring them to justice, to face the consequences of their actions.
You're told to go home - that they take care of their own.
You leave. They never face consequences.
You move to a new house.
The townfolk continue to attack you, killing more loved ones - the police do nothing.
All of a sudden, there's an emergency and they need one of your family members.
Rather than talking to you about it, the entire police force surrounds your house.
They start making demands. You defend yourself, your house, and your family.
They take your family member anyway.
Later, one of your family members is arrested after being involved in an altercation.
Rightfully doubting the ability of the town to give them a fair trail, they run.
The police now use every resource to hunt them down to the ends of the earth.
The Avengers are billed as Earth's Mightiest Heroes.
They are supposed to be the top, the zenith of super heroes. They are government sanctioned, they have untold resources, access, and approval. All of Earth is under their protection.
Yet time after time, they either fail to or
refuse to extend that protection to mutants. And, in doing so,
actively contribute to their persecution.
That's not even counting the times they've taken direct actions against mutants, for which they refuse to take responsibility.
And we're supposed to just forget about this? To look the other way?
Just because Marvel can't stop peddling bad VS. events?
No, thanks.