Anonymous
(ID: gdoXxLA1)
6/26/2025, 3:41:16 AM
No.508747347
>>508745945
Look, if we’re going full Marvel here, why not treat post-birth abortion like a superhero origin story reboot? Imagine if Spider-Man could “reset” his choices up to three months after birth, tweaking the whole “Uncle Ben” tragedy to avoid the pain. Or if Professor X could decide which mutants truly deserve to be part of the school after they’ve arrived, making the tough calls for the greater good. It sounds wild, because it is. But that’s the point: sometimes these ethical debates feel like they’re coming straight from a comic book, with impossible powers and impossible choices.
The real world isn’t a Marvel movie, but throwing out radical ideas, even the ones that shock, makes us question where we draw the line on life, responsibility, and rights. So before you dismiss something outright, ask yourself: if superheroes had to wrestle with these decisions, how would they decide? Would it be black and white, or a messy, impossible gray?
Look, if we’re going full Marvel here, why not treat post-birth abortion like a superhero origin story reboot? Imagine if Spider-Man could “reset” his choices up to three months after birth, tweaking the whole “Uncle Ben” tragedy to avoid the pain. Or if Professor X could decide which mutants truly deserve to be part of the school after they’ve arrived, making the tough calls for the greater good. It sounds wild, because it is. But that’s the point: sometimes these ethical debates feel like they’re coming straight from a comic book, with impossible powers and impossible choices.
The real world isn’t a Marvel movie, but throwing out radical ideas, even the ones that shock, makes us question where we draw the line on life, responsibility, and rights. So before you dismiss something outright, ask yourself: if superheroes had to wrestle with these decisions, how would they decide? Would it be black and white, or a messy, impossible gray?