Ru1977
The Irishman
Ah I see! I think heh.
Intentional or otherwise, I always felt like Tony's journey was great for showing how an otherwise well-meaning person can become a fascist authoritarian - often without even realizing that's what's happened to them. Tony started as an arms manufacturer that literally didn't care about any of this shit. Then he seemed to become pretty hardcore antifascist. But all it took was his sense of security being shattered and a slight mental break for him to go full-blown 'let's just control the planet to keep everyone safe.' And that really IS all it takes.For what it’s worth, Tony’s specifically-stated reasons for wanting/creating the Iron Legion and Ultron are where I went from “this guy’s a bullying dick” to “oh wow he’s a fascist, yikes and yuck”.
Oh definitely. The problem is when you start driving towards authoritarianism as a solution. Even today we can look around at a potentially very dangerous, hostile world and 50% of us are capable of saying 'the answer isn't unfettered power for a military force.'I'll defend Tony here in that he did see that huge armada prepared to come through the wormhole during the Battle of NY, and had that vision of everyone dead in AoU and was well aware of what could happen.
Which is literally the tag-line for authoritarian regimes. "It's for your safety that I am in complete control."So I didn't see it as him wanting to take control, but feeling he needed the option to take control be able to protect against a threat that seemed insurmountable.
But in the end, they won with teamwork and self-sacrifice in service of others, rather than through sheer force of arms and a completely controlled, militarily walled off population. I actually think Disney/Marvel could have done a way better job with Tony's atonement here, in showing that he recognized what he wanted to do wasn't just wrong, but was bordering on evil. They sort've dance around it a bit, but that's it.And it should be noted that threat won and the good guys lost during Thanos first foray to Earth. There is a fine line between having a strong defense/security and overstepping once the power of that strong defense is in hand...I am not sure we ever saw Tony go over that line.
Except a single man doesn't have full automated control over the cadre of super-powered people. We literally got a superhero civil war over them disagreeing about how to do things. Tony couldn't just point Thor at someone he disagrees with and say 'kill.' That's what makes it authoritarian; when he actually can do that. Tony's entire idea, boiled down, was near infinite power answerable only to one person. That's the definition of authoritarian.I don't see at all how Tony was approaching fascism/authoritarianism. He was trying to make auto-Avengers. I mean, you have to accept a world where there's a privatized cadre of super-powered people policing the world, but that's your buy in when watching super-hero shows.
Except he wasn't trying to make the Avengers bigger - because the Avengers are, by their very nature, individuals capable of making moral judgements. Tony was making an automated army big enough to defend an entire planet from any threat.In the context of the movie, though, he's just trying to make the Avengers infinitely bigger so they can handle the next invasion fleet.
As an American, would you be comfortable with any man having mind-control-level complete authority over a military force that can destroy all the military of the rest of the world combined at the same time as long as he said he pinky-promised to only use it on outside threats? Just as a thought experiment.As pitched by Tony, it was an entirely outward facing force.
As an American, would you be comfortable with any man having mind-control-level complete authority over a military force that can destroy all the military of the rest of the world combined at the same time as long as he said he pinky-promised to only use it on outside threats? Just as a thought experiment.
I think we are coming up against a philosophy that wants to see superhero stories as power fantasies vs a philosophy that wants to see superhero stories as altruism fantasies.
Philosophical difference here as well."might for right"