Rhodey once offered Tony a doobie in Vietnam, but when Tony attempted to take it from him his Iron Man fingers crunched it.
(I kid you not ... I read it in "The Many Armors of Iron Man" TPB)
"What would you prefer? Yellow spandex?" – Scott Summers, 2000
i have to worry that sort of lifestyle wouldn't mesh well with the dangers presented by super heroes
The reason you were uncomfortable was because you were doing something illegal. It's like a guy who robs banks on the weekend wondering when someone at his job will recognize him from security footage. So, yes, I'd say trying to equate your hobby to the persecution certain law-abiding citizens face/have faced or the civil rights movement is poor form.
Was there a "getting high" joke in one of the superhero parody movies so far? Epic Movie? Superhero Movie?Actually, that would be dumb, but would be funny if they ever make an Avengers parody film.
They wont even let Howard the Duck smoke Cigars anymore.
Not really, when being gay used to be illegal (strict sodomy laws) and anyone who dared break them would have also been compared to bank robbers by people like you, who would say "I don't know why those dudes need to shag other dudes. Don't they know it is against the law!?! They should just go get loveless marriages and bratty kids like I did!" Also, the black civil rights movement had to become what you would call lawbreakers as well to bring change. Rosa Parks would be considered a criminal to you, because it was THE LAW that she had to sit in back. She wasn't a law abiding citizen facing persecution, she was a criminal like me, daring to break a moronic law. MLK also had to spend many a night in jail, because he had to break laws to prove how messed up the laws were in the first place. Interracial marriage was illegal, even. Not all laws should be taken at face value, Captain America and Superman have confronted unjust laws before as opposed to hurting good people by enforcing antiquated laws various times. Our government breaks worse laws than I ever have, so it is hard to feel guilty. I've at least never tortured anyone or falsified evidence to justify invading a country before. And by legalizing, they are essentially admitting that I was right to break that law all along, as it was a silly law. By the time they had legalized it, it was already decriminalized and the penalty was a ticket that cost less than a speeding ticket. Would you compare someone who gets a speeding ticket to a bank robber, too?
To all the people jumping down the OP's throat for his remarks about minorities: all s/he said wasNOT stoners are minorities, or stoners have it just as bad as minorities, or stoners are exactly the same as minorities.I think you have some degree of understanding the minority experience
All s/he is doing is pointing out that both groups have some common experience in terms of facing persecution, ostracism, injustice and indignity simply for living their lives in a way that effects no one else, which is 100% true.
The fact that one group faces more persecution than the other is neither here nor there.
Homosexuality and miscegenation used to be illegal. I guess people who practiced either were comparable to 'a guy who robs banks on the weekend wondering when someone at his job will recognize him from security footage' too, huh?
The law is not infallible, nor always in the right, and simply breaking the law does not mean you are a bad person.
Back to the topic at hand. I would love to see more progressive portrayals, not just of weed smoking, but all drug use. I can't think of a single example from comics where drug use hasn't been portrayed as a one way instant ticket to addiction (usually accompanied by violence, insanity, death etc.).