Yeah, and now that I think about it more, J. Jonah Jameson's discriminatory attitude towards superpowered masked heroes (which is mainly Spider-Man, I know, but still extends towards the X-Men) has probably been more varied, consistently, and engagingly handled (complex even) in the writing than just about every other Earth-616 human that has discriminated towards heroes like the X-Men. And I'm not talking the obvious villains that are the leaders/masterminds behind conspiracies/organizations seeking to campaign against, enslave, or destroy mutants either, which felt tiresome to me after how often the way it was done after awhile. It's that characterizations like with Jameson's feel more refreshing, and perhaps even insightful, in getting to know how a person like him thinks, even when he's flat out wrong, but can help add more layers of worldbuilding which I think helps make the world of Marvel all the more interesting to explore and deserving of going back to. I've come to understand that Jameson is fearful, perhaps even too quick to be hateful, towards heroes like the X-Men, like he was talking about, but not on an inhuman level. He may get too arrogant and judgmental, but still has good intentions buried somewhere within him at the end of the day and desires for responsibility and humanity, which perhaps goes back to the solidarity you were talking about (X-Factor #217, 2011):