@JakeRob21031317 @TlMK0N @tiredamandaa This is completely irrelevant, I'm sure gay fans of those characters felt exactly the same in the early 20th century.
@JoshuaLMcDonald@TlMK0N Because calling it "the most odd take" when he's almost certainly heard it before and it's actually an incredibly obvious interpretation of the secret identity is obvious flaming. Lrn2 2007 internet.
@William_42318@zenturian2000 @annatarsus @BoundingComics The funny thing here is that they literally dont even actually have sex, she eats a fruit that allows her to psychically link with him, but this is still too much for you
@GradFrustrated@MikeDrucker@KalmanMT @Redhotswami2 That's not "moving the goalposts" it's not a Lincoln Douglas debate or even an ideological argument, it's an argeed upon set of rules for a union
@OwenJenkins92 @EazyE_vs_TheDOC @cynicalzoomer No, Born in the USA is much more explicitly anti-America than Fight Club is an explicit critique of masculinity.
@helloimKennyK@Geekdaddy75 @MaxPriestley Telling on yourself about how little you actually you've read. Fanboys make terrible comics for the most part, the 2000s was shit book after shit book by fanboys. Morrison and Byrne are really the only consistently good fan creators.