Now that I think about it all a bit, the mutant villains are pretty tame. Luckily they have those horrible humans to pose an actual threat!
But I'm honestly just messing around.
To be serious for a moment on this topic, I don't think that we have reason to believe that Orchis is in any way sanctioned. It seems made up of former members of many clandestine organizations. But is it actually answering to any world power? We have nothing that says it is. So therefore, anyone who is involved to the point where they are flown to Venus to board an orbital station where they are building weapons to curtail the mutant threat....well, they've made their decision, and I don't think any of them would be considered what we'd call innocent in that regard.
Having said that, however, I can't blame the X-Men for trying to hold life as precious. Even the lives of those that hate and fear them. It's kind of their thing, and kind of key if there is ever to be a de-escalation of hostilities. If they respond in kind, then all that happens is escalation, which continues until one side is dead.
It'll take one side to begin some kind of rolling back of hostilities.
Don't let anyone else hold the candle that lights the way to your future because only you can sustain the flame.
Number of People on my ignore list: 0
#conceptualthinking ^_^
#ByeMarvEN
Into the breach.
https://www.instagram.com/jartist27/
Yeah, something that gets ignored is that Namor was the Marvel public's first encounter with superhumans. When you're introduced to mutants by having them attempt to drown New York, it doesn't make a good first impression.
The humans didn't even know Namor's people existed. And making your existence known by declaring war is the worst way to air your grievances.
In the real world i would be BOTH pro registration and Pro mutant rights. Xavier and Trask were both right.
If you’re clever enough to make it on to that team then you’re clever enough to understand the moral implications. Logan had it right. Let ‘em burn.