1961. In the MCU timeline, Brooklyn-based Captain America Steven Rogers has been frozen in a barren land for 16 years, and Sergeant James Barnes has been controlled, used and destroyed as an asset for almost as long. Anthony Stark, who was not yet born. In the real-life timeline, the Cold War Iron Curtain has fallen on the Continent, and the hunt for Nazi henchmen has turned to a more fragmented and personal phase. Dr. Stanley Milgram, from New York, embarks on the famous Milgram experiment. The Milgram experiment tests whether participants can violate their own moral code under the orders of an authority. The terrifying result is that more than 60% of the people can obey orders to inflict lethal electric shocks on others (experimental actors) only under the control of the words of the scientists assisting the experiment. Obedience, no scale obedience. This is explained by human evolution. The code embedded in the genetic sequence is more cruel and common than the mutation that is mutated by injection of blood serum, mutated by spider bite, and mutated by radiation. It could be you, me, our relatives and enemies. Those who obey authority survive and thus leave offspring. Those who disobey are more likely to die. Bullies are good at obedience, so Captain America doesn't seem like an easy death at first glance. This character seems to be the model that came down from the American imperial propaganda poster: blonde, blue-eyed, long legs and big breasts, and neat white teeth - but in fact he is really a commercial model who sold national debt and changed his career. In the Avengers, Captain America and Iron Man briefly confronted Iron Man. The old popsicle had a rustic hairstyle, a rigid expression, a rigid posture, awkward weapons, and he was good at preaching and sticking to rules and regulations. The personable Mr. Compared with Stark, it is not pleasant and even less interesting. A friend who knew I was standing on Team Cap wanted to tear me apart and said: He is a great man. However, the absurd thing is that the MCU's Captain America has nothing to do with obeying the rules and regulations. When he was as thin as a bean sprout, he often fought with gangsters. He forged medical results many times to deceive the recruiting department and tried to join the army. He would swear with his good buddies. Painted as a circus monkey, he had directly violated the orders of his superiors to rescue the captured 107 regiment, and he even single-handedly directed the destruction of S.H.I.E.L.D. Simply deviant. This deviant was especially true in the civil war. On the issue of whether to sign the supervision agreement, Iron Man, who has always been maverick, was driven by the guilt of manslaughtering civilians, and took the lead in signing the Sokovia Agreement, which is subject to the supervision of the United Nations team, while Captain America, who seems to be inclined to the collective will But took the lead in opposing. In the beginning, when it had nothing to do with the Winter Soldier, the US team was determined not to sign the agreement. He recognizes the collateral damage of various actions, he does not obey government supervision, he believes in the morality of the individual members of the Avengers more than in international organizations, and he cannot accept that Iron Man has placed the Scarlet Witch under house arrest for protection purposes. 117 countries, Iron Man Black Widow two or three comrades, he chose to stand on their opposite. In other words, Captain America is against the government. However, let's look back at the captain's personal experience. The commanders who refused to rescue the captives of the 107th Regiment during World War II, and now the S.H.I.E.L.D., which has been corroded and infiltrated by Hydra, are vividly vivid. How can he trust his own Power, entrusting the safety of civilians to moral standards, a government organization that is likely to be motivated by interests? For example, the way Secretary of State Ross treated the captured superheroes such as the Red Witch Ant-Man. Did they kill people at Leipzig Airport? no. Damaged property? Yes. Is it illegal? illegal. Indicted on any charge and tried with any verdict? no. Does the U.S. have a law that breaks off wings, burns cars, fights at airports, and sentences to life at sea? no. The Scarlet Witch was wearing a mutant collar, was in a trance, was tied up, and was her basic rights guaranteed? no. Imprisonment without a sentence that does not guarantee fundamental rights, what is this called? This is called illegal detention, illegal detention by the government. So, Captain, he doesn't trust the government, is he wrong? There are two clues to the Civil War, the public is the captain and the supervision agreement, and the private is Steve and Bucky. The Vienna incident, which has not been thoroughly investigated, was ordered by the special team to shoot on the Winter Soldier. sight. For Steve's long-term friend and life and death, the special team was ordered to shoot and kill, and the Black Panther plan to kill, let Steve put it down at this time, is this a wrong to Steven? What are the major misconceptions the people at Rogers have? ! Steve chased Bucky the whole way, trying his best to avoid death on either side, and the hand on Bucky's chest was both protection and deterrence. Bucky wasn't shot unprovoked, and the team wasn't killed, wasn't that the best he could get? Let's talk about bloody Siberia. Having seen his parents suffer, no one could ask Tony to remain calm and rational in such a tragic scene, no one could ask him to think or ask him to forgive. He is the most innocent victim, he bears years of incurable trauma, and of course he has the right to hunt down those responsible for the Howards out of love for his parents - for Tony at this moment, it is not abstract Hydra, but the Winter Soldier standing in front of him. It was a murder weapon stained with the blood of his parents. He was grief-stricken, he was furious, he caught up with Bucky, pinned him down, and tried to shoot Bucky's face with his palm—three times. Iron Man made up his mind to kill the Winter Soldier on the spot. Some people say that the Winter Soldier killed Iron Man's parents, killing them for their lives, that Iron Man has the right to take revenge, and the captain should not intervene. Indeed, the deep hatred with the Winter Soldier is Iron Man's private affair. But there are also two problems at the same time: First, Bucky is no longer an unconscious asset, he is a person. And people have the right to live. Second, Bucky is Steve's best friend since childhood, the only thing he had when he had nothing, a comrade-in-arms who sacrificed to follow him, a brother who was tortured and killed for decades and escaped death. The only remaining link between the outdated and the old, he is his anchor, his memory, his familiar, warm, but almost destroyed old home. He's also Steve's personal business. Can Steve leave it alone? Will he be able to watch Iron Man kill Bucky? He once watched and lost him once. How could he just watch and lose him a second time? Tony has the right to get revenge, and Steve has the right to stop it. This is where things come to an end. Tony keeps chasing, Bucky keeps running, and Steve keeps stalling. He's breaking Tony's jet, he's pulling him, holding him, dragging him down, facing Tony's rage, that's not the way, but it's the only thing Steve can do. It wasn't until the exit was blocked by Tony that Steve turned to trying to destroy the armor's power source. He was dealing with personal matters, but he was still restrained, he had no intention of killing Tony, in fact, Steve was No major physical damage was dealt to Tony. However, nosebleeds and bruises do exist. He was caught between the grief of his new comrade-in-arms and the agony of his old friend. If he didn't stop, Bucky with the broken arm would die; if he stopped, he wouldn't kill Tony, so both could live. Too many people have died around Steve, too many people. are alive. Everything is possible in life. A request that could not be more humble and insignificant. What more could you ask Steve? He's enhanced, he's tall and strong, blond, with white teeth, he's in his nineties and doesn't look alike, he's upright and kind, a flawless icon, how perfect he is . But he is still human. He embraces heavy personal feelings, and he can also be emotional, stubborn and extreme. He doesn't seem to be so handsome anymore. But he has principles, a sense of justice, and a heart to do his best to protect others. No matter whether he is thin or strong, whether he has the ability or not, he will never back down whenever he can help. He also seems to be still very good. Atlas carried the sky, his voice vibrating underground, spewing in volcanic rock, roaring in thunder and lightning. So Atlas doesn't speak. Attachment 1: Sometimes I think, put it in the real world, make a person lose the ability to respond, and then take his hand to strangle others, and use his hand as a tool - in the end, should he be considered a murderer, or should he be held The man who kills the hand? I have come up with many, many strange ideas. I have checked a bunch of search engines and I am afraid that I will file something with my head. I have prepared similar cases of case law, but in the end I still can't say it. I'm still reluctant to argue with people about Bucky's innocence. I can't argue. . I can't argue with the thought of zemo roaring and struggling like a trapped beast while he says the activation words. I can't argue with the thought that he had just come back from the freeze, weak and in a trance, being dragged and dragged on his feet. Thinking of the electric chair, of the piercing cry, I can't argue. Thinking of his broken left arm, Zola, Pierce, I can't argue. I can't argue with the large file photo of the Winter Soldier in the freezer, and the little feisty Sergeant Barnes in the lower right corner. James Buchanan Barnes, the greatest sin of his life, was the snowstorm that year, he chose to stand beside the boy in Brooklyn and boarded the train that never arrived. Who will return the six plums to him? Attachment 2: Whether the collateral damage is reasonable or not and how to control it is also an unsolvable problem in the actual military war. No one knows whether a group of superheroes who talk about politics in the movie will obey government regulation or obey personal morality and cause less collateral damage. Assuming that it is as close to reality as possible, the Iron Man's plan is too soft, while the Captain's plan is too rigid. In fact, Black Widow's choice seems to be more stable and moderate: that is, to temporarily sign the agreement and draw it slowly. Anyway, you are all super heroes, one or two characters who turned the world upside down. After signing the agreement, you can go against the grain. If you turn your face and kill you, you will go out. The aliens can’t do anything, and the United Nations naturally can’t help you. Of course, the movie couldn't be made. (Those "Iron Man fans" who said Captain and Bucky destroyed the reactor without even watching Iron Man 3 are going to kill Tony please don't talk to me thank you)
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