Sherlock Holmes: ''A bank vault was broken into without anyone actually dynamiting the doors off, stealing the keys, holding up the clerk, stealing the password, without being caught on camera or actually breaking through any of the connecting doors that lead to it. I mean... it seems to me... just to me you understand... that really does sound like the girl who can walk through solid matter who lives just down the road.''Nealithi wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 8:21 pmFair point. What is the counter to Kitty Pryde? And you have her on a list and presumably know where she lives. So I ask again, things get stolen. Do they start with someone with potential but no criminal background. Or do they perform proper investigations?Fianna wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 7:52 pmSince each mutant has a different power (for the most part) what security measures (if any) are needed would be different depending on each individual mutant. If there's a mutant who can alter people's memories, then you need to develop some procedure to detect memory alterations, and hopefully to guard against them. But you can't do that if you don't know the memory altering mutant exists in the first place.Nealithi wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 12:53 am 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.
I mean, that's why Magneto was able to build a helmet that protects him from Xavier's telepathy, while most everyone else is helpless before him: because Mags knew Charles, and so knew that some sort of countermeasure was needed.
I ask these questions because the general rule I see often enough is that there is potential for harm. Therefore we need to register and track people. And it always sounds both too far and not enough at the same time. What can such a list be used for? It would be like a sex offenders list. 'Is there a mutie near you?' And it would begin and end at mutant. How do you differentiate Xavier and Magnus from some kid that can change the colour of his hair?
Watson: ''But Detective, she has no criminal record!!''
Sherlock Holmes: ''Whenever you eliminate the impossible, what remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth. Or in this case, when it walks, talks and flaps like a duck, then it probably is a duck.''
BTW, I'm sensing a cultural divide here. Y'see, in Britain, we only allow certain people who need to have a gun (such as farmers) to actually have a gun as we believe that everyone has the potential to use a gun to kill someone. Americans believe that everyone should have a gun because its ''the finger that kills and not the gun.''
Britain would absolutely not allow someone who can blow up your head with a thought to go without at least the local police force and MI5 knowing about it. The other possibility would be like the universe of My Hero Academia where Quirks (mutant powers) are all illegal by default apart from trained superheroes. That is how you stop Shadowcat, you make it so that the first wall she walks through is her last.