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Blackcyclops
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Topic: Let's Talk The Jean Grey School Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 6:04pm |
The discussion so far:
Originally posted by Kipe
But he should let them defend themselves if they want to. What happens if a villain makes it all the way through the X-Men and teachers? Then it's just the kids left with no veterans to help as opposed to the kids who want to fight helping the X-Men/teachers get the upper hand.
His side would make more sense if he just gave the student's choice.
[it's about bringing them up in an environment more suited to children, and, to an extent, letting them grow into who they want to be. |
This is all well and good, but what about the students that want to be heroes but not live in an army or on Utopia in whatever condition it's in. What if they wanted more time to focus on school but also be a hero (a la Spiderman)? They don't get left with much of a choice do they?
The kids have been screwed by Schism more than anybody. They were only given two choices, and they aren't like the other mutants on Utopia who could simply go off and take care of themselves. Most of them aren't legally able to do so.
So they have two choices, and both kinda suck: Live on an Island with no vegetation and bombed out ruins and be part of an Army where you only have a voice if you're useful OR go to a school that gets attacked on a regular basis and get locked in another dimension every time said school is attacked and have no option of defending yourself ever.
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Originally posted by Blackcyclops
Well wasn't that the point of Logan's first arc was getting the school approved? I mean we have to assume the school was accredited under Xavier right? So that's the same thing Logan just did. SO I'm not sure how all of it is Logan's fault. He's following a school precedent, which since BEast and Iceman had jobs, must mean was accredited.
If you want to point the finger at people for sequestering away teens from the real world, then look back at good ol'Chuck for starting the trend.
Also, we don't know if all the kid's parents have abandoned them or if they actually are still in contact with them (hell Teon's parents tried to take him back recently). Unless that information is known, its not possible to say with certainty that every student at Logan's school can't opt out and go home. OR that they all didn't just choose to go to the school (like the numerous of X-Men and New Mutants, Generation X,etc before them).
And I don't think you can compare Logan's paradigm to Cyclops' in that regard. But this is supposed to be the random thought thread lol, the one place where I can escape X-Men debates lol. I say create a thread and let's weigh in on it though, if you do feel strongly about it.
Edit:
Lucy Liu as Watson |
Originally posted by Kipe
What does Logan tryingto get accreditation for the school now have to do with anything? Are they getting credits for the classes we saw them receive on Utopia (ie: Emma's classes as shown in GenH)? We saw some students attend classes in San Fran but do we know how many did? It's just as logical to assume that a good portion of the kids weren't even getting any credited education (since we didn't see it)in the year that they lived on Utopia. Have they had any credited education since M-Day? Are they two-three years behind on graduating from a normal public school now? Did you see Amara trying to get a job? She's one of the pretty mutants. If Bling or Match went job hunting how do you think it would go?
And we do know for a fact that at least Hellion, Blindfold, Quentin Quire, Ernst, Surge, The Cuckoos, and Dust have nobody else to take them in.
So Logan is trying to get accreditation. Great. They still can either live on Utopia or go to this school that they might be able to graduate from maybe close to on time because if they go to public or private high schools they will graduate when they're twenty. |
All great questions. But until information is provided one way or the other your assumptions are just as good as anyone elses.
And I never once in my entire argument said anything about Utopia. Oh wait I did, I said that Cyclops' paradigm is vastly different than Logan's. But besides that, I was in no way saying anything about what is learned on Utopia as going towards a "normal" life. Because Utopia isn't trying to teach kids to be lawyers or doctors, its teaching them to be soldiers in the former Xavier, now Cyclops mutant paramilitary organization.
We do know that Logan's school is now accredited, following the last arc. So it will take some actual information to say what level their education will take them to. Its very possible that in the MU with so much exotic knowledge being around, that businesses (like say Roxxon or Stark whatever) will hire someone with a non-traditional education.
Edited by Blackcyclops - 28-Feb-2012 at 6:06pm
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"And someone's mom wants to eat all their souls. As a mom, I was offended. Moms should get to be role models, too."-Savant
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 6:22pm |
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I don't think you're getting my point at all. This isn't about the JGS. It's about the Schism. It's about whether any of the kids really have a choice but to go to one of the two places despite Logan or Scott saying they can do anything they want.
They cannot realistically do anything they want.
They don't have a realistic choice in any conceivable way. Schism leaves most of the kids still screwed (Hellion, Blindfold, Quentin Quire, Ernst, Surge, The Cuckoos, and Dust literally don't have a choice).
All the information/evidence provided shows that at least half of the mutant kids are in no way prepared to live on their own and we only know of a handful who have been shown on panel or in dialogue as still accepted/welcomed by their family.
They have a choice, in the "not under orders" and philosophical/theological sense. As far as the realities of life for at least most of them goes, Utopia/San Fran or the Jean Grey school are the only choices that don't end in starvation, still being in high school at 21, or their human family being murdered.
But now I'm clamoring for a mini-series about Bling! the Construction Worker, Martha the Receptionist, and Hellion the Handless Waiter trying to put food on the table for Ernst, Blindfold, and Match.
This should so be the title that replaces Generation Hope.
Edited by Kipe - 28-Feb-2012 at 6:28pm
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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Blackcyclops
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 6:36pm |
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Well I think it is about the JGS, because no one is arguing against what you are saying about Utopia. I mean I've stated it right above you. The students at Utopia are there to train to be soldiers in the new paramilitary. It isn't about a normal life, so all those concerns you have don't mean anything for them since that's kinda the life they signed up for staying there.
Logan's school is under similar principles as Xavier's school. The kids acquire skills and knowledge there so that they can go out and live lives. Now are you saying that some of them actually want to be there and thus are choosing to stay there or be in some sort of povery? Or are you saying, IF they didn't want to be there where would they go?
And really would under 18 year old teens live on their own not in poverty/lower working class conditions anyway? I mean outside of the few exceptions. Most of the runaway population is under 18 yr olds in impoverish situations. So I'm not sure if the living on JGS is worse than that in those regards.
Family being murdered is a possibility for all of them just because there mutants or are you saying that's also the fault of Logan at the JGS?
And how is what Logan post-Schism doing any different than what others have done, at least in the regard of sequestering mutant teens away from the world and giving them a different kind of training?
Really your argument against the school is really a potentially strong one against the whole X-School as a vehicle of change idea since Xavier first started the school and re-opened it bigger under Morrison. But its become burned into the psyche of fans. So much so that when the X-Men start to adventure too much and not have that school element, many hardcore fans do not like it.
Edited by Blackcyclops - 28-Feb-2012 at 6:53pm
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"And someone's mom wants to eat all their souls. As a mom, I was offended. Moms should get to be role models, too."-Savant
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 6:53pm |
OF COURSE THEY DON'T WANT TO LIVE AS IMPOVERISHED RUNAWAYS!
You're like making my point for me and not even realizing it.
I'm not arguing that some of the kids aren't happy with what they chose. But they only had two choices despite what rhetoric Logan and Scott have spouted off. They can live in a refugee army on a small island nation on shaky terms with the majority of the planet's nations or go to a school run by the planet's biggest single trouble magnet Wolverine. There are kids happy with their decisions. Prodigy, Anole, and Rockslide seem to be among them. But Schism still sucks because these are the only realistically possible options for any mutant child now not because of their own actions but because of decisions made by people like Logan, Scott, Magneto, and Xavier.
Yes, at least the kids have an option now besides living on Utopia. Yay. They still only have two options in life. That sucks for any child or teenager.
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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Blackcyclops
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 6:54pm |
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Re-posted for emphasis:
Really your argument against the school is really a potentially strong one against the whole X-School as a vehicle of change idea since Xavier first started the school and re-opened it bigger under Morrison. But its become burned into the psyche of fans. So much so that when the X-Men start to adventure too much and not have that school element, many hardcore fans do not like it.
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"And someone's mom wants to eat all their souls. As a mom, I was offended. Moms should get to be role models, too."-Savant
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 7:01pm |
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Re-posted for emphasis:
YOU STILL DON'T GET IT! I'M NOT ARGUING AGAINST THE SCHOOL!
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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Charles
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 7:01pm |
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BC you're missing the point. He's not arguing the literary fallacy of having a school set-up in an action comic. From how I read it, he's simply saying that if any of us was a X-kid right now, we'd feel like we're getting a pretty raw deal with the two choices available to us.
Edited by Charles - 28-Feb-2012 at 7:03pm
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 7:11pm |
You didn't even put the entire argument in here.
Me:
I didn't mean the students don't have a choice in the "free will" sense. I know that Cyclops and Wolverine aren't pointing guns at the kids' heads. But they have both convinced the kids that the world is pointing a gun at their heads. They've hammered into these kids' heads that they're this close to extinction.Most of the students are minors without legal guardians. What exactly are these kids supposed to do? Is any of their schooling even accredited? Can they graduate public High School with credits from the Xavier Institute? Who is going to hire Bling! as a construction worker or waitress so that she can support Blindfold and Ernst? The X-Men severed the ability of the kids to live in the real world when they gathered all of mutantkind together on a reservation under watch of Sentinels. What exactly are the kids going to do besides live on Utopia/San Fran or go to the school?
They don't have any other "realistic" options. Logistically, they don't have a choice.
The New Mutants should have at least offered to let some of the more vulnerable children come live with them in their new not-attacked-every-single-day-apartment. |
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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Blackcyclops
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 7:21pm |
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Oh I know the intention of Kipe's arguments are not against the school. He's arguing about the lifestyle/life choices available to the students because of the circumstances placed on them. I got that, unless I'm wrong there.
My argument became, after our initial conversation:
1) The argument isn't as poignant when it relates to the Utopia kids because its like they've already chosen that type of life. The JGS kids are the ones who probably (this is my assuming of course) have wishes of doing something else, so I felt they were the important focus on the discussion. Not the kids who really give no care about having another option it seems.
2) Following the exclusion of the Utopia kids (which leaves with Logan's kids): Logan's school is running the same basis ideology as Xavier's. THat the best (read: only) way for mutant kids to survive is to join this "school".
3) I then kinda went off tangentially discussing the faults of living on your own. And asked some questions that I should have addressed as being generally and not just at Kipe. So I apologize.
4) Then I ended (the repost) with saying that Kipe has actually made potential points (I'm sorry if it came off like I was saying he intentionally made them, moreso it was me growing something from them) arguing against the concept of the X-school. Because his argument that they have a raw deal in life, part of it stems from this original notion created by Xavier that mutants to be safe have to be taught in this special environment. Of course Xavier thought they should be traind as a paramilitary force too, which differs from Logan's thinking. But the general idea is the same.
So yes I got what Kipe was saying, I wasn't so much trying to argue with him, as take his ideas a step further.
There I hope that clears it up so I don't get anymore all-caps LOL
Edited by Blackcyclops - 28-Feb-2012 at 7:24pm
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"And someone's mom wants to eat all their souls. As a mom, I was offended. Moms should get to be role models, too."-Savant
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 7:44pm |
| 1) The argument isn't as poignant when it relates to the Utopia kids because its like they've already chosen that type of life. The JGS kids are the ones who probably (this is my assuming of course) have wishes of doing something else, so I felt they were the important focus on the discussion. Not the kids who really give no care about having another option it seems. |
Choosing Utopia over going to school with Wolverine doesn't make it the only place in the world they want to be. Just because they didn't go to the school doesn't mean there aren't other things they might want to do with their life. They could have just preferred it to going back to school and being treated like children.
| 2) Following the exclusion of the Utopia kids (which leaves with Logan's kids): Logan's school is running the same basis ideology as Xavier's. THat the best (read: only) way for mutant kids to survive is to join this "school" |
Let's not exclude Utopia kids since you haven't proven that Utopia/San Fran is what they want to do with their life.
This has nothing to do with the Xavier School or Lee, Claremont, or Morrison's interpretations of it. Mutants were far more able to live in the world outside of the Xavier/Magneto paradigm at the time. Yes, it's still a mutant school but it's a mutant school surrounded by entirely different political, cultural, and geographical circumstances. Xavier's and Genosha weren't the only two places to go for a mutant kid.
3) I then kinda went off tangentially discussing the faults of living on your own. And asked some questions that I should have addressed as being generally and not just at Kipe. So I apologize. |
Accepted.
| I'm sorry if it came off like I was saying he intentionally made them, moreso it was me growing something from them |
Whatever.
Because his argument that they have a raw deal in life, part of it stems from this original notion created by Xavier that mutants to be safe have to be taught in this special environment. Of course Xavier thought they should be traind as a paramilitary force too, which differs from Logan's thinking. But the general idea is the same. |
I don't think you can analyze the School under Logan properly by using Xavier or Scott/Emma as a precedent. The World-wide circumstances for mutants were entirely different then. This makes the fact that Logan has a no-students-can-defend-themselves-even-voluntarily-policy even more glaring. Xavier, Scott, and Emma encouraged their students to defend themselves/the school even when mutankind wasn't in the direst of straights. It's just strange. That's really my only issue with the school. Otherwise, as you all know, I love this interpretation of the school and WatX.
I can enjoy the direction and still feel like Logan is taking some of the wrong stances and actions. In fact it makes it a little more enjoyable.
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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Charles
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 7:47pm |
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The Utopia kids absolutely belong in this conversation, because with either side, the kids have to deal with an everyday life that involves being attacked by ridiculous enemies wanting to destroy them. Even though the JGS kids want to avoid that, they ironically seem to be even bigger targets than the Utopia kids. Just because the Utopia kids made the the clearer unpopular choice, as you pointed out, doesn't invalidate Kipe's point that it is a sucky choice.
Hence, my reiteration of Kipe's point: Choose between a military base that prepares you to be attacked at anytime or a school that avoids it but ultimately gets attacked more as a result. Woo-hoo, where do I sign up?
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EphemeristX
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 7:55pm |
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Well, there's a third option available. Avengers Academy. Laura chose it.
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 7:58pm |
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Paramilitary training + attacked on a regular basis. A nice blend of Utopia/JGS. It's almost the same option.
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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EphemeristX
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:02pm |
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The difference being, though, that they're backed by the Avengers and the US Government rather than an outcast, dwindling sub species group occasionally labeled as terrorists.
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:04pm |
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They can be Superheroes, be in the Army, or go to boarding school.
Why are any of the kids even on Utopia or at Westchester?
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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medium13
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:04pm |
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To be accepted to Avengers Academy, don't you have to be profiled as one of the people most likely to attack the school and/or Utopia in the future to begin with?
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:05pm |
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Not anymore. They're accepting all super-powered students. The originals are the "special class" of potential-super-villains now.
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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medium13
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:08pm |
Oh, how I love "special" classes.
BTW Kipe, points for giving me the mental picture of Amara interviewing for a job.
"So Amara, where are you from?"
Anyway, I still feel the school is even less effective for students than either of its previous incarnations. At least before, the student body was learning to control their varied powersets and principals of peaceful coexistence.
Edited by medium13 - 28-Feb-2012 at 8:09pm
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:10pm |
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Did you miss that issue of New Mutants? It was the last one I read before dropping the title. It's the first issue of the Blink arc. Amara has NO work history. Or any history that she can put on an application for that matter.
I wonder what X-Corporations looks like on a job app.
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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medium13
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:11pm |
I haven't followed New Mutants for some time. I thought that was an original example. Now I'll have to go back and find it.
Edited by medium13 - 28-Feb-2012 at 8:12pm
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EphemeristX
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:13pm |
Originally posted by Kipe
They can be Superheroes, be in the Army, or go to boarding school.
Why are any of the kids even on Utopia or at Westchester? |
Probably because there's a serious trust issue with how the government has dealt with mutants in the past.
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Kipe
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:15pm |
It has a better track record at keeping mutants alive than the X-Men.
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"I'm a prisoner. I have to be a prisoner. I'm a political prisoner. I'm not going to let them turn me into a criminal."
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:17pm |
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You let ONE bus full of children explode...
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XtremeOne1
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:18pm |
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It's like when your parents get divorced, you don't really have a choice in the matter. You just go with the best option available and grow increasingly resentful towards both your parents. Eventually one of your parents will remarry and have a bunch of new kids...including an "adorable" red head who steals all your thunder and acts like a brat and may or may not be an evil self-righteous psychopath.
What the X-Kids need most is a good social worker and a therapist.
Edited by XtremeOne1 - 28-Feb-2012 at 8:33pm
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Charles
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Posted: 28-Feb-2012 at 8:19pm |
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@Kipe I was thinking the exact same thing.
Although I'm surprised not one mutant has actively given the finger to both Utopia and JGS and decided to take his/her chances at a relatively normal life away from the groups in the spotlight. I could totally see Chamber doing this.
Edited by Charles - 28-Feb-2012 at 8:22pm
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