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Reason: None provided.

There is one X-Men story where a teenager's power is turning anyone within a certain radius into ash. The first victims were his immediate family.

I don't recall if specified, but he probably unintentionally killed hundreds, thousands or more depending on radius of effect and population density where he lived.

Wolverine, who can regenerate faster than the kid can destroy him, goes to kill him and nobody can be allowed to know about it because it would give mutants a ''bad reputation'' and cause humans to respond with violence. ( perfectly warranted violence if you ask anyone with a brain ).

The overall message of the commic is that you have to accept recurent, frequent mass-casualty events rather than segregate mutants or exterminate them.

It's not rational. It's not even ethical.

It's the same suicidal retardation of ''peacefully coexisting'' with vampires in True Blood. If you extrapolate the % of the population killed annualy by vampires in a year, humans just won't make it for long. But the ''villains'' in the show are the humans organising against vampires. And most of the ''good guys'' vampires have a very long list of people they murdered, including recent ones. Accountability for the murders rarely happens.

129 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

There is one X-Men story where a teenager's power is turning anyone within a certain radius into ash. The first victims were his immediate family.

I don't recall if specified, but he probably unintentionally killed hundreds, thousands or more depending on radius of effect and population density where he lived.

Wolverine, who can regenerate faster than the kid can destroy him, goes to kill him and nobody can be allowed to know about it because it would give mutants a ''bad reputation'' and cause humans to respond with violence. ( perfectly warranted violence if you ask anyone with a brain ).

The overall message of the commic is that you have to accept recurent, frequent mass-casualty events rather than segregate mutants or exterminate them.

It's not rational. It's not even ethical.

It's the same suicidal retardation of ''peacefully coexisting'' with vampires in True Blood. If you extrapolate the % of the population killed annualy by vampires in a year, humans just won't make it for long. But the ''villains'' in the show are the humans organising against vampires. And most of the ''good guys'' vampires have a very long list of people they murdered, including recent ones.

129 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

There is one X-Men story where a teenager's power is turning anyone within a certain radius into ash. The first victims were his immediate family.

I don't recall if specified, but he probably unintentionally killed hundreds, thousands or more depending on radius of effect and population density where he lived.

Wolverine, who can regenerate faster than the kid can destroy him, goes to kill him and nobody can be allowed to know about it because it would give mutants a ''bad reputation'' and cause humans to respond with violence. ( perfectly warranted violence if you ask anyone with a brain ).

The overall message of the commic is that you have to accept recurent, frequent mass-casualty events rather than segregate mutants or exterminate them.

It's not rational. It's not even ethical.

It's the same suicidal retardation of ''peacefully coexisting'' with vampires in True Blood. If you extrapolate the % of the population killed annualy by vampires in a year, humans just won't make it for long. But the ''villains'' in the show are the humans organising against vampires.

129 days ago
2 score
Reason: Original

There is one X-Men story where a teenager's power is turning anyone within a certain radius into ash. The first victims were his immediate family.

I don't recall if specified, but he probably unintentionally killed hundreds, thousands or more depending on radius of effect and population density where he lived.

Wolverine, who can regenerate faster than the kid can destroy him, goes to kill him and nobody can be allowed to know about it because it would give mutants a ''bad reputation'' and cause humans to respond with violence. ( perfectly warranted violence if you ask anyone with a brain ).

The overall message of the commic is that you have to accept recurent, frequent mass-casualty events rather than segregate mutants or exterminate them.

It's not rational. It's not even ethical.

It's the same suicidal retardation of ''peacefully coexisting'' with vampires in True Blood. If you extrapolate the % of the population killed annualy by vampires in a year, humans just won't make it for long.

129 days ago
1 score