Nealithi wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 8:14 pm
Jonathan101 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 4:57 pm
Nealithi wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 12:53 am
clearspira wrote: ↑Sat Apr 10, 2021 4:01 pm
BTW, on a general note about shape-shifting, have you noticed how casually people in these universes always take this power? There is someone out there who can commit perfect identity fraud. They can literally kill you and replace you and everyone is fine with that. They can take nude photographs of you whenever they wish. They could commit any crime whatsoever and have you go down for it.
This is the same bullshit where everyone is fine with telepaths despite the horrific shit that they could get away with effortlessly.
In real life, Bestor from Babylon 5 and the PsiCorp would absolutely exist to monitor telepaths, and there would absolutely be an organisation or movement to police or stop shape-shifters.
Kind of also reminds me of the Mutant Registration Act in the first X-Men film and how I was clearly supposed to side with the mutants over Senator Kelly despite his very reasonable point that people who can walk through bank vaults and kill people with their mind is something that cannot go unchecked. And the amusing thing is that every X-Men film after that seemed to go out of its way to try and prove Senator Kelly right given the amount of carnage mutantkind would cause in literally every single film - starting with X2 where Nightcrawler got within a foot of killing the president.
I said my piece on the episode itself. But here you bring up personal power and the mutant issue in Marvel. What is the point of the Registration Act? So we have a list of who you are and what you can do.
So what? If the bank loses money out of the vault do they go check out the highschool student first because she can walk through walls? Or maybe check the bank manager who has the combination to the safe and keys to the security system?
Ability does not automatically equal desire. So to do anything you need to do something with this subset. Lock them up because they potentially could cause harm? Kill them, same motive?
Hey lets see them as weapons and train them for national defense while we distrust them. That has no chance of backfiring.
Do people with powers have the potential to cause great harm. Yes.
But you need a better answer than put their names on a list.
That falls a bit flat when they do in fact cause great harm, which happens often, and in many cases (such as Rogue) the abilities are inherently harmful. They are as dangerous to other mutants as they are to humans- I think most people would want to know that there is a bald man out there who could easily kill everybody on Earth if he literally just put his mind to it, and the same man regularly invades the privacy of people across the planet.
Worse than that though, Xavier has his own list of mutants and what they can do drawn up without the consent of anyone. He can identify mutants who don't even know they are mutants. Senator Kelly is obviously a fearmongering, short-sighted politician, but the reality is that even Magneto and the X-Men already do what he is proposing the government does, and the already turn mutants into weapons (so does the US and Canadian governments, mind).
It's more of a problem in the third movie where the mutant cure is treated as a bad thing even though, yeah, many mutants are basically walking talking arsenals, and Magneto and Phoenix both cause MASSIVE amounts of damage and kill lots of people, human and mutant alike. Given how unpredictable mutant powers are and how much personality and moral character of most mutants is a life-or-death matter, it is not unreasonable at all.
First, Professor Xavier does not have the power to wipe out the people of the planet inherently. He has a massive machine to amplify his ability that gives that as a danger. This tool turns him into such a huge danger. And while it was another telepath that set him on this destructive path. Who set that mutant to work? A human tormenting his own son and leading armed men to assault a school.
Rogue has an uncontrollable power, yes. And one thing I wish they went deeper into was the cure to her was extremely attractive because it could and did repair her life. So as an option, all for it.
The problem is exactly what the comics have been pointing out though. Mutants are born with random abilities and strengths. Whether it is magnetic, telepathic, or just grew scales. They had no choice in that. So force them to undergo treatments because the government considers you different or a potential threat? So why not 'cure' skin colour or register your gender identification? The slippery slope. Though I am vague on the Phoenix issue for the third movie. If it follows the comics, it is an extraterrestrial entity that possesses a body. No mutant registration could catch that. So in theory any person on Earth could carry that.
Heck the Nightcrawler issue against the President was not his free will. A regular human used a drug to make him a weapon. What list would prevent that?
It was Xavier who built the machine and he knows full well what it is capable of, especially afterwards. That's like building a nuclear bomb (actually a million times worse) and saying "well,
I would never us it, unless someone else forced me to, so what is the problem?" The problem is that Xavier is worried about the government having the power to register mutants, yet he has personally built a machine that gives him WAY more power than that and isn't telling anyone- he is the most powerful man in the world, and nobody knows it.
The fact that someone else could abuse it doesn't make it okay for him to have it, especially since its primary purpose is essentially to spy on people and that is bad enough in itself. Even without Cerebro, he frequently uses his powers to look into peoples' minds without any permission (which is a break from other versions of the character mind), and even freeze hundreds of people in place at once, both of which are extremely invasive and mind-rapey.
And let's not forget that the human in question was driven to extremism because his own son was a piece of work who drove his mother to suicide with his own mutant powers, and that after his evil plan was foiled Magneto and Mystique came along and turned Xavier against every single human, with the super-flimsy justification that the actions of Stryker condemn the entire human race.
It doesn't matter if mutants didn't have a choice in it- it is unreasonable to expect them to not use their powers except in very restrictive ways, especially those powers- like telepathy- that innately involve violating the rights of other people in most cases. Skin colour and gender identity do not brainwash people, drain their life force or destroy buildings on the onset on puberty- your slippery slope argument is fallacious because mutant powers are completely different.
Phoenix in the 3rd movie does not follow the comic. It is established that this is just an alternate personality of Jean (at least regarding that movie) that was dangerous and out-of-control. Again, the issue is that she has the power to vaporise people (human and mutant alike), and nobody knew about it because Xavier covered it up- with disastrous results.
I'm not saying that mutant registration would have stopped the Nightcrawler attack (that is really a failure of military police and politics), but certainly that wouldn't have been possible if Nightcrawler wasn't capable of those things to begin with, and we are lucky that Nightcrawler wasn't like his dad who use those same powers to help try and start World War III of his own free will.
The point is that tracking and listing is pretty much essential and inevitable, whether mutants are registered or not, and the X-Men and Magneto are hypocrites for opposing anything like that because that is exactly what they do without anyone knowing about it, because the know the idea is sensible and has merit. Dangerous mutants are as much a threat to other mutants as they are to humans, as i keep reiterating, and the human / mutant conflict is a false dichotomy.