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See AllAs A Gen Z Comic Reader, Scott Snyder’s Vision For Absolute Batman Speaks To Me On A Deep Level
Ah yes, God forbid I have the desire to see people talk about comics on an article about a comicbook. I'm not against people talking about political or ideological themes, but at the very least relate it to the actual book or the initiative it's based in. You literally did it in your reply, why didn't you just do it the first time? I could take your original comment and copy paste it to a baby boomers Facebook page and it would fit right in.
I'm not value-judging when I'm saying that you don't read comics. I'm making an assumption and generalizing you, the same way you generalized me as the "activist Gen Zedder". Those aren't the many, they're the vocal minority that exist in any community. As Gen Z, I frankly couldn't care less about any of those issues you brought up in your original comment. A large portion of them don't and some, myself included, are the type of people who would gladly accept a 9mm piece of lead between their eyes because that's more affordable than buying a house or retirement. When it looks one of the only things that matters to me in life is ignored because one person acts like the average "I only read the headline" guy, I'm going to treat you that way. I don't blame you for generalizing me, but you can't blame me for generalizing you either
As A Gen Z Comic Reader, Scott Snyder’s Vision For Absolute Batman Speaks To Me On A Deep Level
I doubt you actually read comics, considering you're making this to be about the headline having 'Gen Z' in it rather than this new initiative and what it means for DC and Batman as a whole. If you actually read any DC in the last 15 years, you'd be quite familiar with Scott Snyder and the quality of work he's done by making one of the most consistently well written Batman runs of the past 2 decades
As A Gen Z Comic Reader, Scott Snyder’s Vision For Absolute Batman Speaks To Me On A Deep Level
Bob Kane can roll over in his obnoxious and narcissistic grave all he wants. It's not like any of his influence on the character matters when Bill Finger did all the heavy lifting. Plus, Batman has always been fighting corruption in Gotham. This is the same theme, just through a different avenue. If you think he's an antihero, you might as well call Green Arrow an antihero then