Does Rogers have paternal rights under Karakoan law?
Also thank God for the ressurection process Namor can just assume Shaw was resurrected
Last edited by ExodusCloak; 10-02-2019 at 03:02 PM.
I’d like to see a mutant freak out over being resurrected. What if a depressed mutant commits suicide? Isn’t that his right to die? We know heaven and hell exist in the MU(Aaron’s Amazing X-Men). Wouldn’t you be pissed if you were ripped away from heaven to be made use of for Xavier’s agenda?
About Xavier and what's under the helmet, I think it relates to what we've seen in X^3, and the reason we haven't been shown yet is because it hasn't been explained how that future relates to the present. I'm thinking it will connect to The Librarian, so either the symbol that's on his cheek but in a different placement, or some incorporation of machine parts that indicate how they used the information from that timeline to better this one.
*googles Qwerty*
Holy ****, I’ve never felt so represented.Strength level
Weak human
Weaknesses
Incapable of functioning as a normal person. Her power made her mind get lost in the chaos of multiple futures. Spent most of her time in what appeared to be a vegetative coma, but really wasn't. Her mind was simply too active to pay attention to her body.
Exactly! Creed behaved like a fucking barbarian and received his just dessert. I feel no sympathy for him and as Storm said it was a long time coming. Any mutant that steps out of line the way he did should meet the same fate
Fun fact: The execution music from Danganronpa started playing in my head during Creed's trial and punishment
Yara Flor & Emma "Mama" Frost stan account
Which would be tragically reflective of real life. As Martin Luther King, Jr. said at one point, "There comes a time, when silence is betrayal," and then there was "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" in which he lamented lukewarm understanding from would-be allies as being worse than the violence and hostility from actual enemies. By virtue of their silence in the face of human genocidal aggression toward mutants, the Avengers long ago betrayed their erstwhile allies in the X-Men, and on that note, no wonder the Unity Squad never really worked. The Avengers were never willing to admit that the status quo they fought to preserve for so long was a fundamentally unjust one for mutants or commit to meaningful reforms in order to make it more just.
Of course, that's generally the problem with the superhero mythos --- what do they do with all that great power and great responsibility when the world they inhabit is fundamentally corrupt, if not broken, and the extant status quo tramples on or makes lies out of their high-minded ideals? Perhaps phrasing it another way, "What happens to superheroes when the world they're trying to protect isn't worth it? Do they try to make it better, even if it makes them the villain(s) in the eyes of those too comfortable with the status quo and those who have benefited too much from the status quo to give it up? Or do they do what little good they can on the periphery while the status quo continues to inflict pain and suffering on so many because 'you can't punch a corrupt society in the face'?"
The spider is always on the hunt.
"I wish I could live life five times over!
Then I’d be born in five different places,
and I’d stuff myself with different food from around the world.
I’d live five different lives with five different occupations...
and then, for those five times...
I’d fall in love with the same person..."
- Orihime Inoue