I actually think Jason was in the right for hitting Dick. That situation was worth being angry about.
There was no reason i get he thought Dick was abandoning his father but that is not a good enough reason and he is a 13 yr old boy not an animal he could use his words.
It is editorial wish fulfilment at this point because Damian doesn't go around smacking people but with Dick it's twice now. It's BS.
Yes, solid reasons to be angry, vague to hit your family member. We talk about comics, considering what they experience on daily basis and what they deal with regularly it's hard to imagine that smaking someone is a better option, than to use words. And, excuse me for not supporting violence against family member in any form. Especially when it happens regularly.
Last edited by nightbird; 10-12-2017 at 01:04 AM.
I think they should all start knocking Tim's teeth out instead of Dick's.
Toddler Dick Grayson by https://kaylabeemarie.
It's disrespectful and I don't like. We all joke about it and we're becoming desensitised to it which we shouldn't.
Someone on the Damian thread joked that since Bruce is an abuser his kids are picking up the habit. However that too isn't okay. Damian has grown a lot and he has so much respect for Dick that he wouldn't just do that infact Damian has progressed beyond a kid who lashes out violently.
That scene was disrespectful to both characters.
Ideally violence is no better and I`m not defending it but I am saying it`s human to lash out in certain situations. Jason smacking one on Dick for lying about being dead, for having Bruce lie about it as well - when he actually died, isn`t a vague thing he decided to do the moment he woke up. He felt disrespectful and within reason. Dick went as far as saying in the same Exchange he wasn`t apologizing either. Eye foraneye.
Damian...well, he`s 13. He`s afraid he`s losing his father for good and the person he trusts the most in the world seemingly thinks that rescuing his father isn`t the way to do.
Potato-e potato-e.
Editorial didn`t even gave him an actual funeral issue but that doesn`t detract the point Seeley was trying making in that Annual.