Tales of the Parodyverse >> View Post
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Post By
CrazySugarFreakBoy!

Member Since: Sun Jan 04, 2004
Posts: 1,235
In Reply To
HH

Subj: How did I know you would say that?
Posted: Fri Apr 09, 2010 at 12:18:27 am EDT (Viewed 460 times)
Reply Subj: Noted.
Posted: Thu Apr 08, 2010 at 09:47:44 pm EDT (Viewed 6 times)

Previous Post


    Quote:
    I reject the premise that operating with an expanded (even global) roster necessarily requires the adoption of a military status. There are plenty of organizations that do good both on a worldwide scale and on a ground-level basis that are about as far removed from any sort of military operations or ethos as you can get.


Like the Catholic church?


    Quote:
    To a large extent, I suppose it depends on how you see the nature of a superhero team, because if you already see it as a superhuman (or even cosmic-level) extension of a law enforcement agency or "peace-keeping" military force to begin with, then the jurisdictional issues could be problematic, but if you see it as something like the Peace Corps or Doctors Without Borders (or even firefighters) with some superhuman muscle behind them, then it doesn't change the ethics of the thing at all. I suspect you see the Lair Legion as a Lawful Good team, whereas I see it as a Neutral Good team, which just so happens to have switched from a Lawful Good leader to a Chaotic Good leader.


The problem comes when the superhero team's primary function tends to be enforcing the law. If their main job was humanitatian aid or road building then a different paradigm would more naturally present itself.


    Quote:
    Bottom line, it comes down to a question of whether you see a superhero team as something that upholds order and rules (albeit benevolently intended ones), or whether you see it as something that should simply do good regardless of the rules.


A cogent defence of CSFB!'s viewpoint.


Except that I'm not necessarily sure that I see the Lair Legion's primary role as law enforcement, though; yes, that does often come into play against people who are committing crimes through superhuman means, but only because our team, including its superhuman and non-superhuman members alike, are uniquely qualified to stop those folks from doing damage and causing harm to others. If anything, we're more like firefighters, albeit in a world with a shitload of arsonists and, well, sentient fire. The acts of law enforcement that we perform are, if anything, merely incidental, and at most, they're the price that we pay for being allowed to save the world from threats that nobody else could fully combat. Of course, with a utopianist like Dream, real-world social injustice falls into that aforementioned threat category.



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