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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 4:35 am
Hey, im interested in talking about Civil War (Marvels Event this year) i dident see any threads that coverd this and thought id start one. If i missd it or if this is a repeat thread, feel free to lock it, Mods.
The Books spanning the Event:
Civil War, #1-7: Main Civil War Title. Civil War: Front Line, #1-10.
Amazing Spider-Man, #529-538 Black Panther, #18 Cable/Deadpool, #30-32 Captain America, #22-24 Civil War: X-Men, #1-4 Civil War: Young Avengers & Runaways #1-4 Fantastic Four, #536-543 Heroes for Hire, #1-3 Iron Man, #13-14 Ms.Marvel, #6-8 New Avengers, #21-25 New Avengers Illuminati Special Punnisher: War Journal, #1-3 She-Hulk, #8 Thunderbolts, #103-105 Wolverine, #42-47 X-Factor, #8-9
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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 4:39 am
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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 4:56 am
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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 10:07 am
The main problem I have with it is the "Stamford Incident." The New Warriors TV show was cancelled in the miniseries. If they brought the show back where are the members at? They brought Debrii in for the show where is she?
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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 10:34 am
According to She-Hulk, she was attacked at her home after her identity was made public.
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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 2:23 pm
Well she and the rest of the supporters of the Registration who make their identities public should have been wise enough to expect that.
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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 2:29 pm
rolleyes She DIDN'T make her ID public, that was the point of the issue. Someone inside the New Warriors was releasing their id's via the Internet, and the mobs took them by surprise.
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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 2:37 pm
Regardless, divulging something such as a secret identity does not justify unwarranted or random attacks. I understand that being a superhero has its own inherent perils, and I understand the reason that some heroes choose not to divulge their identites. However, it is ridiculous to assume that one should expect to be attacked if they reveal/are revealed to be a superhero and even more ridiculous to assume that said violence would be just and somehow the fault of the superhero.
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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 2:45 pm
Jonah Hex rolleyes She DIDN'T make her ID public, that was the point of the issue. Someone inside the New Warriors was releasing their id's via the Internet, and the mobs took them by surprise. Oh rolleyes right back to you. wink I don't read She-Hulk so that I didn't know. I was mainly referring to the heroes who chose to reveal their secret identities, such as Tony Stark. Personally speaking, I believe it was a foolish thing for him to do. If I was a superhero, and made violent, dangerous enemies, I'd have never revealed my secret identity and potentially place family and loved ones in the path of danger.
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Posted: Wed Jun 14, 2006 8:41 pm
Virgil Hawkins Regardless, divulging something such as a secret identity does not justify unwarranted or random attacks. I understand that being a superhero has its own inherent perils, and I understand the reason that some heroes choose not to divulge their identites. However, it is ridiculous to assume that one should expect to be attacked if they reveal/are revealed to be a superhero and even more ridiculous to assume that said violence would be just and somehow the fault of the superhero. i think that whole super heroes being attacked thing is related to what happened right after 9/11, alot of arab americans and people that just happened to look arab american were being beaten and attacked in New York City, it was all over the newspapers at the time.
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Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2006 6:14 pm
Maria Hill Virgil Hawkins Regardless, divulging something such as a secret identity does not justify unwarranted or random attacks. I understand that being a superhero has its own inherent perils, and I understand the reason that some heroes choose not to divulge their identites. However, it is ridiculous to assume that one should expect to be attacked if they reveal/are revealed to be a superhero and even more ridiculous to assume that said violence would be just and somehow the fault of the superhero. i think that whole super heroes being attacked thing is related to what happened right after 9/11, alot of arab americans and people that just happened to look arab american were being beaten and attacked in New York City, it was all over the newspapers at the time. Its a shame too. Superman did the 9/11 thing, but in a tasteful way. One of the times that stuck out to me was in Superman #178 (Mar 02), Superman got suckerpunched by Uncle Sam, who called Superman out on being an alien. Superman explained to Uncle Sam that he was being affected by an evil undercurrent in the Spirit of America, that of unjust discrimination and racism. Superman explained that it was wrong, and how he wished that it didnt take tragedies to bring out the best in us. Superman wished we didnt have to learn the same lessons over and over again. The Arabs, the Japanese, the Italians. Heck to me, everybody is an immigrant. Anyway, its nice to see real life reflected in comics now and then, as long as its done tastefully and respectfully.
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Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 4:54 pm
Jonah Hex rolleyes She DIDN'T make her ID public, that was the point of the issue. Someone inside the New Warriors was releasing their id's via the Internet, and the mobs took them by surprise. Carlton Lafroge(sp?) if I'm not mistaken, was the one who did that. He blackmailed his way into the New Warriors with similar methods. He wasn't the most beloved of Warriors. It's no surprise he'd do something underhanded to help out.
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