My argument is about how terrorism hurts marginalised groups when a rogue group does it, this isn't about respectability politics its about the 9/11 attack being wrong and hurting rather than harming the people those terrorists supposedly "represent" because zealots think they speak for everyone. This is what Magneto and the rest of the mutant terrorists do. And of course there are a couple of psychopathic mutants who do this for their own agenda and don't care how their actions hurt their own kind, like Apocalypse.
Because I was interested in knowing if you'd get how big an even it was and how it changed the world in its aftermath. America doing worse is moving the goal posts, mutants like Magneto aren't doing what they do for America they've doing it for the same reasons Al Queada was. You know how bad 9/11 was, now picture that happening all over the world simultaneously - now picture a mutant claiming responsibility for it and it won't end until the worlds governments give in. That's what Magneto did in "Magneto War." And now he's a statesman for Krakoa, the current country for mutants. All that won't just negatively impact how mutants world-wide are seen, it'll extent to Krakao because they willingly made him a head go government and their face to the world.
The argument for this is what Al Quaeda did was wrong, and so was any mutant who did the same thing in Marvel's world.
It took an organization months (?...not exactly sure how long) of planning, and money, to pull off something like 911.
Magneto could do worse damage with a few flicks of the wrist.
Not comparable.
My point was that it was organised terrorism and that acts like are bad when he did it, since it would harm how mutant kind are seen in his world. The fact him doing that would be on a far larger scale only makes what he does even worse how he, and mutant terrorists like him, would be perceived. Same goal, differing methods.
Magneto was head of a country (Genosha), and fully acknowledged as such by the rest of the world.
“Strength is the lot of but a few privileged men; but austere perseverance, harsh and continuous, may be employed by the smallest of us and rarely fails of its purpose, for its silent power grows irresistibly greater with time.” Goethe
I can... Magneto's personal background and history is revealed in Uncanny X-Men #150 (Aug. 1981) -- But, Erik's very first act of terrorism can be seen in The X-Men #1 (Sept. 1963).