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Fanboys are Really Annoying Me

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Republibot 3.0
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Didja' notice?

Didja' notice the annoying fanboys are all complaining about Marvel stuff, and not DC stuff? I think this is a litmus of the difference between people who are fundamentally Marvel fans (Basement-dwellers) and people who are fundamentally DC fans (People with jobs). The former is more likely to get all worked up over the dauntingly complex canon that is the Marvel universe, whereas the DC Universe has been rebooted so many times that basically you just focus on the characters you like, and ignore the fact that Superman should be like 126 now, or that Captain Atom fought in Vietnam except all of a sudden one day he didn't.

Leaving that highly insulting off-the-cuff observation aside, when asked why "Batman" in the 80s differed so much from the source material, Tim Burton said (Eventually) 'I wasn't copying someone else's story, I was telling my own story.' I think this is fair. If I were doing a superhero movie, I most certainly would *not* use an existing one, though I would use existing characters. Why? Because a movie is not a comic book. It has different sensibilities, and there's no point making a movie if you're just gonna' use the source material as a storyboard. Why bother if you're not going to bring something new to it?

Which was ultimately my problem with Watchmen: It *did* use the source material as a storyboard (Excepting the lame ending), and as a result it was stately, ponderous, boring, and had no life of it's own. It was a stale regurgitation of a tale we all already knew way too well, and frankly it was a waste of time to film it.

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neorandomizer
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Psychosis and fandom

R3 is right most books or comics if made word for word into a movie would suck, be bad or boring.

The problem with fanboys is they get too emotional attached to a story or person that is not real. This is usually because they lack real world relationships or have a hard time with relating to real people. The fictional people they become attached to never have a bad day or say something without thinking so they can not hurt the fanboy.

It is alright to be inspired by a fictional character even to the point of naming your children after them but it is not alright to forget that in the end they are still fictional and not real.

Republibot 3.0
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You're aware...

>>>It is alright to be inspired by a fictional character even to the point of naming your children after them but it is not alright to forget that in the end they are still fictional and not real.<<<

You're aware that Sheldon's kids are all named after DC characters, right? But there's nothing wrong with that. Some of my kids are named after fictional characters, some are named after musicians. You go with where your inspiration is. As long as they don't have names like "G'nort" or "Zathras" it's cool.

But, yes, I think it's an obsession with the story as written, and I think also it's probably a lack of broader exposure to different kinds of stories. Making a novel into a movie is easier because novels are really long (In script terms, your average Hardy Boys novel would clock in at about 2 hours, "Juggler of Worlds" would clock in at four and change, and "Atlas Shrugged" would come in at about 11 hours) so everyone knows you're going to have to drop tons of stuff to fit it into 90, 120, or 180 minutes. Also, being that it's written, everyone has a different idea of what characters and things look like, so most people are more likely to accept a new visualization of those things.

In the case of comics, you've got a very set visual style, and departure from that can be jarring. Ditto the characters, and their backstory, personalities, etc. If you're a fanboy, that's *all* you have to go on, and any deviation from that becomes kind of an unacceptable sin to the thing you love.

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SheldonCooper
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Here's What Happened

>>You're aware that Sheldon's kids are all named after DC characters, right?<<

First of all, I am not ashamed of my kids' names, nor do I believe anyone here would expect me to be. But there is a story behind it. I loved my grandfather, who passed away the day I shipped out to Basic Training and I always wanted to honor him by naming my first born after him. Flash forward several years, and my wife hates my grandpa's name, John. She liked Jonathan, but that wasn't the dude's name, so what's the point? So I, in my infinite wisdom and deviousness, brought up naming him Kal-El hoping she would renig on her John rejection. Her response? "Anything's better than John." So we had our first comic book name. In picking a name for our next child she thought it would be cute to have another comic book name, so we went through many names, I was championing for Harold Jordan so we could have Kal and Hal, but I was vetoed. I also brought up the name Spock and was shot down there too. We seriously considered the name Logan and possibly Scott as a middle name. She also like Jordan and so we thought about Kyle Jordan (2 Green Lanterns), but eventually we agreed on Jason Todd. There wasn't a DC theme at first, it just ended up that way. When we finally got our girl this past year we knew it had to be a DC name since the other 2 were, completely by chance. We talked about Selina and Harley Quinn, but she wanted to use her middle name Ann so we decided Shiera sounds good with Ann and that's how it happened. Interesting story.

Back to the subject, R3 mentioned that movies based entirely on a graphic novel or certain story arc are mostly going to be bad. I respectfully disagree. I rather enjoyed how true Watchmen stayed, and the DC Animated movies based directly on storylines, while streamlined for time, are usually quite true to the source and quite good. But it is nice to see someone take something and do their own thing with it. That's what I loved about Smallville. It stayed true to Superman while doing its own thing and it was an approach we had never seen before. Richard Donner didn't stay true to the comics of the time, in fact the comics adapted to incorporate the Donnerverse elements into the stories. And it isn't only Marvel fans who are rabid and need put down. This was the basis for most of the Smallville hate too, that it deviated from the mythology. And Green Lantern stays truer to the mythology than I envisioned it when I was working on a treatment way back in 03. So that could be why the idiots are leaving it alone.

Remember, there was complaints about the changes in Wonder Woman's costume and storyline in the failed television series pilot, so the DC guys are just as rabid as the Marvel guys. i can't give them a pass just because I'm one of them.

One lab accident away from being a supervillain! Bazinga!

Republibot 3.0
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Marvel fans drive like this, while DC fans drive like THIS

>>>First of all, I am not ashamed of my kids' names, nor do I believe anyone here would expect me to be.<<<

Certainly not! Just seemed apropos to bring it up right there.

>>>my wife hates my grandpa's name, John. She liked Jonathan, but that wasn't the dude's name, so what's the point?<<<

It's the single most popular name in the world! Boring, yes. Hate? That seems a bit extreme. Is there a story behind that, or just an aesthetic thing? ("It was on this very night, fifteen years ago, when a guy named set fire to my Barbie Dream House.")

>>>We talked about Selina and Harley Quinn, but she wanted to use her middle name Ann so we decided Shiera sounds good with Ann and that's how it happened. Interesting story.<<<

Yeah, probably a good call on your wife's part there. Probably not a good idea to name a daughter after a prostitute and/or psycho killer.

>>>Back to the subject, R3 mentioned that movies based entirely on a graphic novel or certain story arc are mostly going to be bad. I respectfully disagree. I rather enjoyed how true Watchmen stayed, and the DC Animated movies based directly on storylines, while streamlined for time, are usually quite true to the source and quite good.<<<

I find them kind of a mixed bag, about 30% good, 30% bad, and 30% meh. The remaining 10% are ones I haven't seen. I also find them frustrating because what I really like about DC stuff is the continuing story lines. Mostly, to me, they don't feel like movies (Though I know they are), they all feel like unsold pilots for TV series. Frustrating.

>>>But it is nice to see someone take something and do their own thing with it. That's what I loved about Smallville. It stayed true to Superman while doing its own thing and it was an approach we had never seen before. Richard Donner didn't stay true to the comics of the time, in fact the comics adapted to incorporate the Donnerverse elements into the stories.<<<

Burton, too, though I generally didn't care for his take on things. But, yes, when you're dealing with what is effectively a mythological character, the character is more important than the myth. That's why there are eleventy kerjillion retellings of King Arthur, most of which have only a vague resemblance to each other apart from some obvious touchstones they have to hit. I know a lot of people didn't like the Elseworlds, but I totally dug 'em. I liked how the character was (generally) the same, but in a completely different universe. In a lot of ways, that was liberating, freeing them of 30 or 60 years of backstory and letting the person come out. (That's not to say that a lot of Elseworlds didn't suck out loud, they certainly did, but...) So, while I never watched Smallville, conceptually I really liked the spin they put on the continuity. Can you have Superman without Batman? Apparently, but it takes longer for him to cook. In the absence of Batman, who fills that evolutionary niche? I wouldn't have picked Ollie Queen, but, hey, in retrospect that was kinda' shway!

>>And it isn't only Marvel fans who are rabid and need put down. This was the basis for most of the Smallville hate too, that it deviated from the mythology.<<<

Yes, I know. In scientific circles, these kinds of people are called "Stupid."

>>>And Green Lantern stays truer to the mythology than I envisioned it when I was working on a treatment way back in 03. So that could be why the idiots are leaving it alone.<<<

The only reason they're leaving it (Comparatively) alone is that they/we almost got saddled with Jack Black as GL, in a lame comedy version.

>>i can't give them a pass just because I'm one of them.<<<

Oh, I can. DC fans are much less annoying. Also better looking, more popular with women, and better paid.

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SheldonCooper
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Elseworlds

>>It's the single most popular name in the world! Boring, yes. Hate? That seems a bit extreme. Is there a story behind that, or just an aesthetic thing?<<

Purely aesthetic. She just thinks it's an ugly name. Same reason she vetoed Harold (Hal).

>>I know a lot of people didn't like the Elseworlds, but I totally dug 'em. I liked how the character was (generally) the same, but in a completely different universe. In a lot of ways, that was liberating, freeing them of 30 or 60 years of backstory and letting the person come out.<<

I loved Elseworlds. I hate that with the re-establishment of the multiverse that they did away with the Elseworlds line. Especially since in the 5 years since Infinite Crisis and 52 they have largely ignored the multiverse. Elseworlds was great because you could do absolutely anything you wanted and tell any story. Now you're limited to 52 universes and those are mostly taken up by things that just don't fit into the main DCU like Frank Miller Land and Watchmen World and so forth. Just cheeses me off. I hate Geoff Johns and Dan DiDio for basically destroying all the evolution that's happened and, not doing anything really new, but putting everything back the way it was before the original Crisis. I mean, did anyone really miss Barry Allen?!

>>Apparently, but it takes longer for him to cook. In the absence of Batman, who fills that evolutionary niche? I wouldn't have picked Ollie Queen, but, hey, in retrospect that was kinda' shway!<<

It was a logical default choice, I thought. Green Arrow has always been the poor man's Batman with his Arrow Cave and Arrow Plane and Speedy (which really should have been Wally West's code name). Also, Smallville made Green Arrow cool, at least to me. I never cared about Green Arrow. The Denny O'Neill GL run annoyed me because Arrow was tagging along. Then I saw what Smallville did with him and then I happened upon Mike Grell's amazing GA Longbow Hunters and now I'm a fan. I'm mostly a fan of the Mike Grell stuff but Kevin Smith's 2 arcs were amazing too, especially Quiver.

One lab accident away from being a supervillain! Bazinga!

10000li
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GA = Errol Flynn

Green Arrow was created with a definite wink towards the Errol Flynn version of Robin Hood, so what's not to love?

It also seems, per the Wikipedia article on GA, that he was developed and has been used as a stand-in for Batman in that Ollie was originally a rich dude who used his money and talents to create cool gadgetry for his crime-fighting persona.

The big difference, however, seems to be that Ollie is definitely a lefty, whereas I've never seen, in my limited exposure to actual "Batman" comics, that Bats/Wayne has ever been portrayed with any kind of political leanings.

***************

It seems strange the Marvel fans tend to be more rabid about canon. I always preferred Marvel characters because they seemed more three-dimensional. Whenever I think of DC characters, my list pretty much consists of Supes, Bats, and WW. My Marvel list starts with Spidey, of course, and Capt. America, the X-men that I know (about 20 off the top of my head), the Fantastic 4, the Sub-Mariner, Thor, Daredevil, Iron Man, Hulk, and my all-time favorite Marvel title "Werewolf by Night."

SheldonCooper
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Superhero Politics

>>The big difference, however, seems to be that Ollie is definitely a lefty, whereas I've never seen, in my limited exposure to actual "Batman" comics, that Bats/Wayne has ever been portrayed with any kind of political leanings.<<

Oliver wasn't originally a leftist. That came about when the communist pig Denny O'Neil took over the character in the Green Lantern book with Neal Adams. And while I do consider many of the things O'Neil was saying in the book to be suspect, I don't necessarily have anything against the decision to make Ollie a lefty. It was done mostly to distance him from Batman. O'Neil also took away his money, and Ollie stayed relatively poor for the rest of his life, then got his money back sometime after his ressurection in Quiver. I like that they gave him a personality and made him unique.

I wrote an essay once about the political leanings of various superheroes. If anyone is interested in reading it, and if I can find it (it was for a political science class in college which was a good 10 years ago now) maybe I'll see if R3 is interested in publishing it to the site. Anyway, in my essay I broke down about 10 of the most popular heroes from both companies I could think of and I examined their political leanings (which really are beneath the surface for most of them). Anyway, I cited Batman's anti gum opinions (which are pretty understandable) and the fact that he's against killing villains but also that he's a philanthropic billionaire and he does seem to be a military supporter since Wayne Enterprises does hold many military contracts (for non-lethal equipment, not weapons). I decided that he showed both right and left leaning traits, and therefore was a centrist, possibly a Libertatian.

Also, if anyone has any doubts, Superman is a Republican. He fights for truth, justice and the American way; he cherishes all life and so he is probably anti-abortion; he grew up on a farm in Kansas (a red state) and his reputation as a big blue boy scout has conservative written all over it. Writers have tried to make Superman liberal, and it never works. It is always obviously out of character, just as it would be wrong to make Ollie a Republican. The closest they ever came to making Ollie lean more to the right was in Mike Grell's run when they made him kinda libertarian, and that was sorta iffie as far as being believable

One lab accident away from being a supervillain! Bazinga!

10000li
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I'd like to see your take on

I'd like to see your take on superheroes' political leanings, if you can find it.

Thanks,

ME

Republibot 3.0
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Mike Grell

>>>Especially since in the 5 years since Infinite Crisis and 52 they have largely ignored the multiverse.<<<

Yeah, I kept waiting for something big, or at least significant to happen. At first it was like, "Ooooh! The multiverse is back! Cool! Evil Superman! The doors have just been blown off, baby!" and certainly they were sending the vibe that that was the case. But then, nothing. And to follow it up, more nothing.

Well, not entirely nothing: The comics are a lot more mean-spirited nowadays. Like that flamingo dude in Batman who eats people's faces. Who the hell thinks that's appropriate for a comic that's going to be read by kids? (Yeah, I know, "Mature audiences." My ass: It's *GOING* to be read by kids because it's Bat freakin' Man.)

>>>I mean, did anyone really miss Barry Allen?!<<<

A little bit, yeah.

>>>It was a logical default choice, I thought. Green Arrow has always been the poor man's Batman with his Arrow Cave and Arrow Plane and Speedy (which really should have been Wally West's code name). Also, Smallville made Green Arrow cool, at least to me<<<

And there's the problem: GA was never cool, hence I wouldn't have thought of him. I probably would have gone with The Question (The pre-cancer death one)

>>>I happened upon Mike Grell's amazing GA Longbow Hunters and now I'm a fan. I'm mostly a fan of the Mike Grell stuff<<<

I first discovered Mike Grell's art in a strip called "Just Imagine, Jeanie" which ran in "Starburst," a late-70s SF mag. The story was by Forrest Ackerman. I could never quite figure out what the heck the story was supposed to be about. It revolved around a frequently-mostly-naked girl who seemed to be jumping from SF movie to SF movie, playing the part of the female lead in all of 'em. Weird.

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Republibot 3.0
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"Rob from the rich"

>>>Green Arrow was created with a definite wink towards the Errol Flynn version of Robin Hood, so what's not to love? [...] The big difference, however, seems to be that Ollie is definitely a lefty, whereas I've never seen, in my limited exposure to actual "Batman" comics, that Bats/Wayne has ever been portrayed with any kind of political leanings."

Well, obviously. There's the whole "Rob from the rich, give to the poor" thing inherent in Robin Hood...

>>>It seems strange the Marvel fans tend to be more rabid about canon. I always preferred Marvel characters because they seemed more three-dimensional. Whenever I think of DC characters, my list pretty much consists of Supes, Bats, and WW. My Marvel list starts with Spidey, of course, and Capt. America, the X-men that I know (about 20 off the top of my head), the Fantastic 4, the Sub-Mariner, Thor, Daredevil, Iron Man, Hulk, and my all-time favorite Marvel title "Werewolf by Night."<<<

Here's the problem for me: In the DC universe, superpowers are a blessing. In the Marvel universe, they're a curse. Everyone is always 'oh, what this has cost me.' Theres' no swashbuckling in it. Also: DC has better art, I think. Marvel art (Apart from the first couple years of "The Ultimates") just fills me with the uncontrolable urge to yawn. There are a few Marvel characters I like: Iron Man is at the top of that list, but realistic or no, I just find I don't care much.

They did an experiment some years back where Stan Lee did DC characters written and drawn as though they were Marvel characters, and it just sucked beyond believing. Anyone else remember that?

Conversely, I mostly really liked the Amalgam stuff.

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Republibot 3.0
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Heck yeah!

>>> I can find it (it was for a political science class in college which was a good 10 years ago now) maybe I'll see if R3 is interested in publishing it to the site.<<<

Heck yeah!

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SheldonCooper
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Just Imagine...

>>They did an experiment some years back where Stan Lee did DC characters written and drawn as though they were Marvel characters, and it just sucked beyond believing. Anyone else remember that?<<

I liked the Just Imagine Stan Lee Creating... series. It was fun and interesting. The Marvelized Green Lantern was my favorite character of the bunch, but I didn't prefer it over the Green Lantern in the main DCU. But I liked it for all the reasons I liked Elseworlds. It was different and exciting.

One lab accident away from being a supervillain! Bazinga!

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Not the One I Know

>>Well, obviously. There's the whole "Rob from the rich, give to the poor" thing inherent in Robin Hood...<<

This is a common misconception surrounding the Robin Hood mythology, and it annoys me when liberals use this as a metaphor for their redistribution of wealth agenda. Robin Hood did NOT, and I'll say it one more time for effect, he DID NOT rob from the rich and give to the poor. Robin Hood, and Zorro to boot, stole money from the government and gave it back to the over taxed, under paid citizens the cash originally belonged to in the first place. Yes, the government is rich and the people are poor, but this is a very important part of te story that's overlooked when the left is comparing themselves to these heroic icons. So stick that in your pipe and smoke it, Emperor Obama!

One lab accident away from being a supervillain! Bazinga!

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I know that, and you know that, but...

>>> Robin Hood did NOT, and I'll say it one more time for effect, he DID NOT rob from the rich and give to the poor. <<<

Well, I know that, and you know that, but the average person hasn't read the stories, or even seen 'em (Who do you know under 30 who's even *watched* an Errol Flynn movie?), so they're basing their opinions on popular wisdom. Popular wisdom is notoriously illiterate.

Robin and Don Diego (Since you brought him up) were both fighting against oppressive governments, and in Robin's case an only-questionably-legal-one to boot. They weren't even robbing from all the rich, just the ones who were conspicuously benefiting under the oppressive regimes. Cronies of the local dictators.

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10000li
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Ragnar Danneskjöld

'nuff said.

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Evidently not

Evidently not, since I don't see how it applies. Whatchutalkin'bout, Mr. Li?

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Searching for Ragnar Danneskjöld

Quote:

If there is a theme to Tuccille's book, it is his search for Ragnar Danneskjöld, the pirate in Rand's Atlas Shrugged who takes money from the corrupt government and gives it back to its victims. The Ragnar character is a recurring archetype in libertarian literature. He is Mike in The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, he is Henry Bowman of Unintended Consequences. He's the guy who fucks with the oppressive state in the name of righteousness and never gets caught.

Trouble is, in the nonfiction world the morgues and the prisons are filled with Ragnar Danneskjöld.

And the people who think they're Ragnar really aren't. "Ragnar, you son of a bitch, you let me down again!" (129)

Tuccille throws a cold cup of reality in the faces of the black-flag wavers. For one thing, the scary fringe alienates Middle America, and the "eventual success of the radical movement, in terms of actually reversing America's push toward the total state, depends to a large extent on middle-class cooperation" (187). What a wry Tuccille is looking for is a "responsible anarchist center" (88).

But Ragnar isn't dead, yet. Tuccille mentions three tactics for changing society for the better: "education, reform, and revolution" (191). By education, Tuccille means "books, articles, essays, and radio-and-television exposure promoting the libertarian point of view." Reform means political reform, changing the system from within. But "[t]he major changes will come about through the use of revolutionary strategy" (192), by which Tuccille means nonviolent civil disobedience. Hey, Gandhi was Ragnar, too.

"Ragnar, you crazy bastard! You may turn out to be a Jewish Mother with a New York accent," Tuccille writes (196). Every libertarian -- every human being with a conscience -- needs a touch of the Ragnarian spirit. Ragnar Danneskjöld hid Jews in the attic to protect them from the Nazis. He spent the night in jail to protest unjust taxation. He helped blacks escape on the underground railroad. He refused to convict somebody for printing the truth about the government, and the judge be damned. He bought Boston's Gun Bible and a .308, just in case. He homeschooled even when the educrats told him he couldn't. He sold illegal marijuana to the sick and dying to relieve their pain. In America, Ragnar Danneskjöld is also spelled, "John Hancock."

Where Ragnar walks among the people, no government grows too oppressive. The power freaks always will push for more, but Ragnar pushes back. Like Gandalf, Ragnar stands firm, strikes his staff on the trail [sic] and cries, "You cannot pass!" Ragnar might feel his heart drop to the bottom of his stomach, but he will not avert his eyes.

But when Ragnar is cast out -- well, we dare not let that happen.

Tuccille reminded me that I am part of a long history. And you know, we don't have to be perfect to make a positive difference -- sometimes we can get it wrong (as Ayn Rand did). What tales will they tell of us, when we are old and finally dead?

Libertarians will continue to make the world safer for freedom so long as each of us can say with Ragnar, "[W]e all choose different ways to fight the same battle -- and this is mine."

End Quote

From Searching for Ragnar Danneskjöld
by Ari Armstrong
a review of Jerome Tucille's classic:
It Usually Begins with Ayn Rand

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Neat article

Neat article!

I'd quibble with some of the specifics: Ragnar didn't actually give anything to the oppressed, he just sank it and/or hoarded it. The only thing he gives anyone in book is a brick of gold to a guy who doesn't need it. And I wouldn't compare him to Mike from Moon, simply because Ragnar - underdeveloped, offstage, and eliptical as he is - is sorta' cool, whereas having recently re-read Moon, and having thought about it a lot lately, frankly, Mike is a narrative cheat on every freakin' level.

But it's a metaphor, and such things don't bear close examination, so ignore that stuff, it's not pertinent to the point the author was trying to get across. And in fact, I agree with it, mostly. I don't think a single party has a monopoly on Gandalfism, but let that slide: the piece's heart is in the right place. I agree with the sentiment, but I'm not sure about the example.

Let's extend the metaphor a bit, though: Ragnar's entire purpose was to sink all government aid shipments from the US to anywhere in the world. Grain for starving Ethiopians, relief supplies for Haiti, doctors and medicine for Japan, etc. If the government is *giving* anything to anyone, he stops it. The book gives us no reason to believe he makes any distinction between humanitarian aid and chronic moocherism (Rand certainly never does), so Ragnar is sinking food shipments fully knowing that assloads of people will die from him doing so. He does this to make a point.

His point is that the government is bad...because...uhm...it's trying to...uhm...help keep people from...starving? And that's a bad thing because why, exactly? Oh, right, taxation is theft. I'm right there with ya, brother. But the old saw has always been that taxation is bad because we get no return on the taxes we pay out. Ok, sure, but here's the government using taxes to feel starving people, and buying the grain from American farmers. Soooo, again, I fail to see how Ragnar's arcane considerations about the theoretical basis of lassies fare capitalism really have much basis in actual practice. He's killing people (Indirectly) to make a point, and he doesn't care how many people die in order to make it.

Ragnar's stated purpose is to interfere with government aid shipments and thereby hasten the collapse of the international economy. Again: Economies fail, people die, generally in massive numbers. Look at Wiemar Germany, or the last days of Imperial Russia, or the South after the Civil War. Then the scapegoating starts, and a whole lot more people die. It's estimated that 3.5 billion people are primarily dependent upon food we ship overseas. Most of it is sold, though much is given away (Which basically means it's sold here, and the purchaser does whatever he damn well pleases with it). If the international economy collapses, how many of those billions die? Half? That seems reasonable, since most of 'em are only barely subsisting as it is.

Again: Ragnar is doing this to make a point, as is John Galt, and Frisco. He's killing billions of people just so he can say "My untested abstract philosophy is right, and your lives are meaningless before it." This makes him a sociopath. Every major 'good guy' character in the book is a sociopath, excepting Rearden, who's got high functioning Aspergers. Everyone in the book who *isn't* a sociopath is portrayed as stupid, lazy, and/or flat out evil, and hence they deserve to be ruined and/or killed. Which, of course, is a hallmark of sociopathy: you mean nothing to me, and you had it coming anyway. The final scene, when everyone is in their mountain hidey-hole, plotting their capture of the world and the onset of their final solution through social engineering is chilling. It isn't supposed to be, but it is.

Ragnar isn't really a pirate, he isn't Robin Hood, he's more like Alex the Droog if Alex were concerned at all about justifying his actions. Refreshingly he isn't, so Alex is a thug, but at least he's honest. Ragnar ain't. He's a devil insisting he's an angel. The worst kind: the one that actually believes it.

I'm not sure the "Robin Hood" thing scales up, really. Robin was going after one corrupt and slightly-questionably-legitimate ruler. He didn't go all over England, he didn't attempt to overthrow the world, he was just a freedom fighter. A John Hancock, if you will. Ragnar is lacking the moral compass of a Viking.

I said the character is kinda' cool, and he is. But he's cool in the same way Darth Vader is cool: Mad, bad, and dangerous to know. I can't imagine the Libertarian party would want to be associated with that kind of genocide.

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10000li
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Real Life Hero

Here's an interview on the BBC with a real person who stood up to the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad and went to prison for it:

"I said, 'No'"

So let's dispense with the fictional "heroes" and keep our eyes peeled for the real ones.

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She's called "MJ" for a reason

I was listening to "Fresh Air" with Terry Gross this morning. It was a rebroadcast of her interview with Daniel Okrent who wrote a popular history and analysis of alcohol Prohibition,

Last Call

Of course, the conversation turned to the evential decriminalization of marijuana - which gave me an important insight:

Which love interest of a DC superhero is named after the author's favorite "muse"?

sysadmin 2.0
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Uh, that's not DC

Spider-man's main squeeze is Mary Jane Watson, but he's Marvel.

10000li
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Sorry, not clear

Yes. I was attempting to continue the discussion of the differences between Marvel characters and DC. I meant that the Marvel boys may have - who knows if it is true? - chosen MJ as a name because of the association with MJ. So my question, following on from the assertion that the DC writers had more middle-American sensibilities, was if any DC love interest ever seemed to be thusly inspired.

As a negative against Marvel, or perhaps a positive in that they portrayed a problem that DC wouldn't look at, we have

Reed Richards, Wife Beater
Hank Pym, Wife Beater
Peter Parker, Wife Beater

(and the literature makes a big deal about how much of a big deal it has been for Hank Pym compared to the other two)

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