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View Full Version : Shouldn't the Guardians hate Earth?


StoneGold
08-02-2009, 11:50 PM
So for millennium, the Green Lantern Corps was a fairly stable organization, bringing justice to the universe. Then this test pilot from Earth joins, and either the Corps is disbanding or the Guardians are all dying every couple years. You'd figure one of them would hold a grudge.

Spiffy
08-02-2009, 11:57 PM
The Guardians don't "hate" anything. They're the Vulcans of the DCU (or at least they try to be--how successful they are at that is debateable).

It's kind of the point of them, and actually one of the main causes of conflict which has led to all kinds of groups splitting off from them and/or resenting them.

CYOTI
08-03-2009, 12:13 AM
So for millennium, the Green Lantern Corps was a fairly stable organization, bringing justice to the universe. Then this test pilot from Earth joins, and either the Corps is disbanding or the Guardians are all dying every couple years. You'd figure one of them would hold a grudge.
But thats not Hal's fault. If they really held a grudge, they would hate Sinestro, their greatest Green Lantern who corrupted Hal, released Parallax, had them destroy the GLC and nearly the universe itself and then forms his own corps of ring slingers to antagonize and goad the guardians.

Mister Blisterfists
08-03-2009, 12:50 AM
why SHOULDN'T they hate Hal?

I mean, he DID murder them all once.

if they forgive Hal, they should forgive Sinestro.

aut0matic
08-03-2009, 12:54 AM
why SHOULDN'T they hate Hal?

I mean, he DID murder them all once.

if they forgive Hal, they should forgive Sinestro.

... read the post above you

Matt
08-03-2009, 04:10 AM
The Guardians recognise that Earth, being the key to the 52, is really important now so it's highly dubious that even if they used emotions, they'd hate it.

dupersuper
08-03-2009, 07:04 AM
why SHOULDN'T they hate Hal?

I mean, he DID murder them all once.

if they forgive Hal, they should forgive Sinestro.

Except Hal was possessed and Sinestro has been acting of his own free will.

vitruvian
08-03-2009, 02:13 PM
So for millennium


They were at it for way more than a measly 1,000 years. Did you perchance mean millenia?

aut0matic
08-03-2009, 02:17 PM
They were at it for way more than a measly 1,000 years. Did you perchance mean millenia?

must be an english professor...:rolleyes: