RobbyB1982 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 04, 2018 10:58 am
Fianna wrote: ↑Mon Oct 01, 2018 4:39 pm
I think it's more a case that the writers wanted to tell a story questioning whether an organization like the Justice League should really be trusted with such vast power and no oversight, but realized that, in real life, the answer would be, "No, they shouldn't." Since that would kill the show, any of the proposed oversight that would curtail their power must be sufficiently corrupt that it's never a viable alternative to the League doing their usual superhero stuff.
That's pretty much the problem that plagued the Marvel Civil War comics as well. "Should all the vigilantie heroes be trained, monitored, held responsible for their actions.... but also be provided with backup and a paycheck (and merchandising rights!) for their work?" Absolutely, 1000%. That is entirely the correct answer and makes sense for the entire population of that world and all the civilians.
But that would mean giving up the rebel secret identity thing, so in order to make half the heroes right, everyone on the side of the government including Tony Stark and Reed Richards had to turn into full blown villains, using villains themselves to capture heroes, murdering folks, holding them in jail without trial, cloning, etc, and be so out of character the only explanation that made sense after their *decades* of working together was they had to be imposters. Except they actually weren't and it was a mess so their eventual way out of it was... to have a villain become president and corrupt the whole thing.
And, in the Cadmus Arc of JLU, they could have played it as Waller was right. But then they took the easy out and had her allied with Luthor, and had him just be straight up evil, because that then blankets the entire project as "evil" and you can swipe it under the rug with no more ambiguity and wrap it all up nicely with a bow. It's not that they had legitimate points, its that they were just misguided by one badguy. Lets never discuss the moral ambiguities again in the next season when Luthor just straight up makes a straight up superfriends Legion Of Doom, and don't have Cadmus be worried about *that* at all.
Nope, its eventually shown that in that universe that Cadmus created Doomsday, and guess what he shows up before Lex enters into a partnership with Cadmus. The real reason that Cadmus and League come to blows is that Cadmus goes too far in gathering forces to counter the Justice League. Torturing the Question, creating a clone of Supergirl to assassinate people, the Ultimen, besides the Question thing, these are actions that they did without any involvement from Luthor. All going too far to achieve their goals. It's not the Cadmus' goals that are wrong but their methods, after all, Superman gives Batman a Kryptonite ring, he understands failsafes in case of the worst scenario.
But also they didn't discredit Waller's opinion on the League, not fully, sure she shouldn't have allied with Luthor but this arc has several characters question how the League handles and how Cadmus is right to fear them. Lois brings some points, Captain Marvel and even Batman bring up these points. Something to consider here is that the League does change how it operates and it's not like Cadmus stops operating.
The Civil War arc in the other hand, well your not all wrong. There is a certain amount of truth to your statemate about out of character behavior but you're also ignoring that the US government in the Main Marvel Comics verse is kind of bad at everything. Like 90% of the time there if there is an issue its caused by them, remember they funded Robots to hunt down a certain amount of their population after all. Not a group that you can trust with power over an army of superhumans.
But also registration wouldn't have stopped what happened with Nitro, mainly because the New Warriors while not A-listers, have been around as a team for more than a decade, they had training and experience. Also, the main way to defeat Nitro up to that point is to blow him, over and over again until he loses his energy. It is how Iron Man has beaten him in the past.
Training and accountability while realistic, in real-life admittedly, wouldn't have stopped this issue because Nitro had a plot boost to his powers this arc, he had never been capable of doing before against other heroes. The worst thing about the Civil War arc was a lack of awareness on their part honestly because even with all those things you've listed Stark and Reed doing, they were meant to be the right side.