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February 08, 2010
Warner Todd Huston Marvel Comics: Captain America Says Tea Parties Are Dangerous and Racist
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** UPDATE ** BELOW Marvel Apologizes

Marvel Comic's Captain America is the mightiest soldier with the super powerful secret soldier formula that makes him a super man. Sadly, this muscle bound hero that took on the whole Nazi army during WWII seems to be afraid of those American people who've joined the Tea Party movement. Not only is Cappy quaking in his little red booties, but he's sure that the Tea Party folks are dangerous racists, too.

Isn't it wonderful that a decades old American comic book hero is now being used to turn readers against our very political system, being used to slander folks that are standing up for real American principles in real life -- and one called "Captain America" at that?

In issue number 602 of Captain America, a new story line has begun called "Two Americas." In it the current Captain (there have been a few of them, apparently) is on the trail of a faux Captain America that is mentally deranged and getting chummy with some white supremacist, anti-government, survivalists types going by the name of "the Watchdogs." While investigating this subversive group, Captain America and his partner The Falcon -- a black super hero -- have decided to try and infiltrate the secretive organization.

In preparation for the infiltration, Marvel Comics depicts the two super heroes out of costume and observing from a rooftop a street filled with what can only be described as a Tea Party protest. The scene shows crowds of people in city streets carrying signs that say, "stop the socialists," "tea bag libs before they tea bag you," and "no to new taxes." Naturally, the people in these crowds are depicted as being filled with nothing but white folks.



(Click to see larger image)



The black character asks the out of costume Captain, "What the hell is this?" And follows that with, "looks like some kind of anti-tax protest." The Falcon character then snidely tells his partner the Captain, "So I guess this whole 'hate the government' vibe around here isn't limited to the Watchdogs."

The two then discuss their plan to infiltrate the subversive group that Marvel comics seems to be linking to the Tea Party movement. This discussion culminates in The Falcon wondering how a black man would do such a thing. "I don't exactly see a black man from Harlem fitting in with a bunch of angry white folks," he tells the incognito Captain America.

The Captain tells him, "no it's perfect… this all fits right into my plan." After this we find that the Captain's plan is to send the black man into a redneck bar to pretend to be a black man working for the IRS and to get everyone all mad… because… well, you know that every white person is a racist that hates black civil servants, right?

So, there you have it, America. Tea Party protesters just "hate the government," they are racists, they are all white folks, they are angry, and they associate with secretive white supremacist groups that want to over throw the U.S. government.

Bet you didn't know that when you were indulging your right as a citizen to protest your government that you were a dangerous white supremacist that wants to destroy the country, did you? Bet you didn’t realize that your reverence for the U.S. Constitution was a subversive thing to do, did you? And I’ll also bet that you never imagined that you'd scare the little blue panties off of Captain America!

Nice going Marvel Comics. Thanks for making patriotic Americans into your newest super villains.

** UPDATE ** Marvel Apologizes

Well, it looks like Marvel has admitted that it was a bit of a mistake to specify that they were talking about Tea Party groups in Captain America issue #602 published this month.

As I reported on Sunday, it seemed that Marvel Comics was saying in the story line of its latest Captain America title that Tea Party groups are nothing but white supremacists that are dangerous, and anti-American. Marvel Comics Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada discussed my article today and agreed that they made a bit of a mistake and promised to remove the Tea Party references in reprints of the issue. Quesada spoke to Comic Book Resources website offering some further clarification from his perspective.

Quesada said that the comic's writer, Ed Brubaker, did not intend to pinpoint the "anti-tax protests" in his comic as Tea Partiers.

There was zero discussion to include a group that looked like a Tea Party demonstration. Ed simply wrote in an anti-tax protest into his story to show one of the moods that currently exists in America. There was no thought that it represented a particular group.

And yes, what Ed said is absolutely true, he does shy away from labeling things and did exactly that in this instance. In Ed’s story, there was no connection to the Tea Party movement, that’s a screw up that happened after the fact and exactly what some people are getting upset about.

Where Mr. Houston [sic] is correct is in our accidently identifying in one of the held up signs, the group as being a part of the Tea Party instead of a generic protest group. That’s something that we need to apologize for and own up to, because it’s just one of those stupid mistakes that happened through a series of stupid incidents.
Naturally, Mr. Quesada claimed I was being "irresponsible" with my intimation that Marvel was painting Tea Partiers as racists. Of course, that is a bit hard to accept since the drawing of the protest clearly identified it as associated with the Tea Party movement and The Falcon character said he could not mix with those "angry white folks."

I think Quesada doth protest too much.

FoxNews also reported that Marvel has decided to remove the reference and reported that Quesada spoke further about the issue.

Ed Brubaker, who wrote the story, told FoxNews.com he did not write the "Tea Bag The Libs Before They Tea Bag YOU!" sign shown in the edition, insisting that the words were added by someone in "lettering or production" just before being shipped to the printer. It will be changed in subsequent editions, he said.

"I don't know who did it, probably someone who thought it was funny," Brubaker wrote in an e-mail. "I didn't think so, personally. That's the sign being changed to something more generic for the trade reprint, because I and my editor were both shocked to see it."
Even as writer Ed Brubaker admitted to Fox that he harbored anti-Tea Party movement sentiments, Marvel promised to remove the Tea Party reference in reprints and will avoid it in the rest of this story line.

I want to point out, though, that I never called for any retractions or apologies, myself. I merely reported the incident. If Marvel Comics wants to apologize that is up to them. And they have, at least for "accidentally" identifying the Tea Party movement in their anti-protest screed.
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Return to Top  Warner Todd Huston | 1:26 pm | Permalink Comments (View Comments)   Email this!  
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  • Good to know I didn't look closely at the comic.

    Please feel free to check out my podcast by searching the iTunes store for: Captain America Archives

    Search for it on iTunes or http://bwhancock.libsyn.com

    The 50s Cap represents a lot of bad things and he is a front for some neo-Nazis. In the first 20 issues of Brubakers run, we find out that bad guys don't wear colorful costumes and you can't punch people in board rooms. Not everyone protesting are Neo-Nazis that the 50s Cap is fronting and maybe Falcon or Bucky will learn a thing or two about their assumptions, just as Rogers did.

    I'm not for judging a story complete until it's over and the last time I checked there were still 3 more issues in this arc.
  • Hancock your attempt to spin this into something nice is duly noted, but its clear you haven't actually looked very closely at the comic.
  • This is the first issue of a four part series and the author of the this article seems to be making a lot of assumptions on how it's going to turn out.

    The character the "Falcon" feels uncomfortable. When he goes into the bar, it's Captain America that picks a fight with him and not the other bar patrons.

    A black man from Brooklyn sees a large bunch of white people that seem angry, I don't think his first instinct would be to join in, but would be uncomfortable.

    We may find out later in this four-parter that his initial feelings were incorrect, we may not, but this article paints a lot of things with a broad brush.
  • KingRandor82
    Marvel should've left Captain America "knocked off" after the Civil War storyarc. The Captain America that made the choices he made in Civil War was the Captain America who pretty much entirely forgot what he was fighting for to begin with.

    Christ, in the storyline, he could no longer decipher between innocent civilians and the ENEMY COMBATANTS. He actually gave up because the people he was attacking were getting hurt.

    That Cap is a shell of his former self at best. It was time for him to go.

    They brought him back, and are now ruining him. They pretty much need to retcon the whole friggin' Marvel universe right now, from what I've been hearing.
  • Its odd to me that so many people who write and edit comics are so hard left when the entire concept of heroic comics is so conservative a principle: good versus evil, the need to use force to oppose wrong, and strong concepts of absolute justice and patriotism.
  • RKae
    Comic books suck: plain and simple. They started sucking when someone decided to start marketing them to adults instead of children.

    Each generation is supposed to read them as kids, then move on and leave them for the next generation of kids. But one pot-smoking, unable-to-mature generation decided to cling to them and drag them into adulthood with them. They stole the comics away from children and decided that they needed to make them "dark," "gritty," and downright cynical.

    I almost got into the biz after high school. I'm relieved that I didn't! My innocent concepts of good guys and bad guys wouldn't fly now.
  • Mighty, exactly why I added (they must've got mail)! LOL
  • In my research for this article, I discovered that they didn't kill Steve Rogers (they must've got mail).


    Correction. They killed him, then they realized what a horrible fucking mistake that was (along with the rest of the ridiculous Civil War arc) and they did what every self-respecting comic writer does when he realizes he's fucked up royally. They retconned the death out of existence (using time travel, for extra points of ridiculousness) and brought him back.
  • In my research for this article, I discovered that they didn't kill Steve Rogers (they must've got mail). He ended up in a "time rift" of some sort. He's been recovered and now is marked as "retired." His old partner Buckey is now Captain America. This was the first comic book I've bought in decades. I have to say I was a bit shocked that the thing was $4.00 fer cripes sakes!!
  • democratsarefascists
    I've been boycotting them since they smeared Americans and killed off the real Captain America.

    The last thing Marvel is, is American.
  • BIG
    I bet they would look at a Code Pink rally and proclaim they are patriotic Americans.
  • Marvel has been sliding down the left-wing slope for decades now. And so have their sales figures.
  • Yeah I wrote about that a couple days ago. The same day I called the comic book store and canceled all my Marvel titles. They weren't very good anyway.
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