I think erasing a longstanding character's innate Jewishness is a really bad idea and sends really bad messages.A few questions,
Is it an integral part of his character to have survived a Genocide?
Does it have to be the Jewish Holocaust? or could it be something like the Rwandan? Or the Uyghur?
The biggest issue with keeping him linked to the holocaust(and I assume what prompted the question) is the sliding scale of time in comics. In 20 years, everyone who was alive at that time will be in extreme old age or have passed on, barring some science miracle. The sliding scale of time that lets them keep using characters that should be all rights be too old by this point in the modern day, means Magneto will still be around, but a 100 year old Magneto(who looks 40-60) won't pass muster for a lot of folks. So unless they throw in time travel, have him "reborn" in a younger body, or really change up events in the timeline, what will they do with that bit of Magneto's background then? Particularly if there's yet another reboot and they need to re-establish him fresh?
(And of note, when they add him into the MCU, he should already be at least 80 or so, since we know WW2 happened at the right time due to Cap, and the MCU seems to try to stay roughly in sync with real time)
Someone who was young during WWII being virile and kickass in the present day in the Marvel universe? Insanity.
I'm just tired of there always being an asterisk next to the noble attempt to increase representation in comics that reads "doesn't apply to Jews."
Magneto is someone who those of us who had relatives who died in the Holocaust, those that managed to survive, could find some representation in. He's someone whose Jewishness is at the core of who he is, not because he's a zealot, but because the world forced him to cling to that part of him. He's someone whose motivations regarding Mutants become understandable, and it's a lesson that we cannot let the fear and hatred the Holocaust wrought on our people consume us.
He's one of the very best Jewish comic book characters, period. Hero or villain. And in an age when we want to increase representation in media and shine lights on historical injustices in the hope that it'll lead to a better future for all... in that environment... ya wanna strip Magneto of his Jewish identity and the role the Holocaust played in making him who he is?
No. F'ing. Thank you.
Another thing... this doesn't just apply to Magneto. How long has Peter Parker been Spider-Man? How long has Bruce Wayne been Batman?Pulling a Batman and just hand-waving it may be an option too as mentioned, but a bit harder one with how tightly the Marvel continuinty ties into itself, unless they do the same across the board
That's exactly the sliding timescale thing I was talking about. Something that happened to him in the comics in the 70s, is referanced as happening 8 years ago in the 90s, then maybe in a 2010s comic it now happened 10 years ago. Events int he past are naturally moved up SO they can keep these heroes around wihtout explaining their age.Another thing... this doesn't just apply to Magneto. How long has Peter Parker been Spider-Man? How long has Bruce Wayne been Batman?
Comic timelines are insane on the face of it because if anyone wanted to retain any semblance of realism these characters would have been replaced multiple times over by now.
But that hasn't happened. People like their favourites sticking around.
It is for DC. Marvel is the one who leverages the sliding timescale the most as they tied their characters to real world places and events far more. No idea on Image and the rest.So rather than trying to tie one's self in knots trying to make that which cannot logically work work by logic, why not just embrace the vague timeless aesthetic? Batman, Archer for cripe's sake... the notion of setting stories in a vague mishmash of eras helps with flexibility and allows you to keep ALL of these characters around without having to engage in mental gymnastics to justify it. It should be the industry standard.
Punisher was tied to Vietnam as a Vet with PTSD, from what I recall. He has the same issue, honestly, in terms of timescales. Does anyone know how his situation has been addressed?The thing is, as I said, this is not unique to Magneto. Everyone's timescale is crazy, but for Magneto it's a problem?
An "issue" with so many quick fixes that are time honoured traditions in comic books but with Magneto it's a problem?
Hell, a Holocaust survivor being a badass in the present isn't even in the top twenty insane things that have happened in the Marvel comics universe. This is a universe where a giant purple man tried to use the power glove to kill half the universe so he could bone Death.
And Magneto being a Holocaust survivor isn't "realistic"? Spare me.
I'd prefer if you would not cast aspersions and assume I'm antisemitic just because I happened to try to explain what the question was getting at(and judging by the likes, it seems my reading was correct here?) If you want to accuse us of that, come out and say it.It's a lot of this kind of thing that makes me question the "we just have to ask because of the timeline" explanation.
Nah, that's an easy fix with at least five viable options. There could be an ulterior motive here
Only kicked dogs (or foxes in this case) howl.I'd prefer if you would not cast aspersions and assume I'm antisemitic just because I happened to try to explain what the question was getting at(and judging by the likes, it seems my reading was correct here?) If you want to accuse us of that, come out and say it.
Yes, I feel kicked because I was TRYING to be helpful in clarifying intent of(and mostly add context to) the original poster. And I get attacked for it. Thanks for being an asshole and not even trying to apologize.Only kicked dogs (or foxes in this case) howl.
I'm tired of antisemitism being given a free pass and treated as a "lesser" evil.Thanks for being an asshole and not even trying to apologize.
Not the first time.I'm not going to touch the rest of that...
Okay, fair here. Understandable.I'm tired of antisemitism being given a free pass and treated as a "lesser" evil.
I'm tired of Jewish identity, Jewish safety, and Jewish issues being dismissed by people. I'm tired of assuming the best and having that faith thrown back in my face.
This is small potatoes in the grand scheme of things, but I'm tired of letting antisemitism get a pass for whatever bs reason is conjured up.
I ignored that at the time because I AGREED with it, so I didn't feel a need to say anything about it at the time. Do I need to put it in specific words then?Not the first time.
My first two posts in this thread outlined why I felt it was important for Magneto to retain his Jewish identity and status as a Holocaust survivor. You even replied to the second one... and ignored all of that.
You're uninterested in actually hearing why people think this is a bad idea... and I'm going to be frank about that.
Would anyone consider reinventing Black, Hispanic, Muslim, or LGBTQ+ characters with those traits stripped away? No.
But for whatever reason some people think Magneto's Jewishness can be stripped away and reinvented. If those people earnestly don't believe they're antisemites they need to consider why they make an exception for Jewish characters in that regard.
I think clarity is key, especially when you're dealing with sensitive issues?Do I need to put it in specific words then?
I guess the root of my frustrations is this...The reason I see Blud asking this question to even begin with is due to the sliding scale of time, so I posted as I see this as the only reason to even bring up the possibility in the first place. Specifically in a "okay, how do we address this?" even if it was horribly worded.