andersonh1 wrote:Not at all. If you go back and look at the way different authors have written the Guardians, there's no way it can be honestly said that Geoff Johns has done anything other than what Ron Marz did, or Gerard Jones did, and that is to change their personality to suit the story. I'm entirely on firm ground in saying that in no sense were the Guardians ever lacking in emotion or governed entirely by logic. There have been many, many occasions where emotions guided their decisions, or where they acted on knowledge that they possessed which the Green Lanterns did not.
Such as what stories? Do you have some clear examples? Because I've never seen a story where a Guardian is shown to be emotional or anything but logical that their decisions are what's best for the larger picture that is the universe. Aside from the likes of Ganthet, Sayd and Appa Ali Apsa.
The Manhunters weren't (and aren't) emotionless. In their case, it was a classic sci-fi story of the machines coming to believe that they were superior to their creators. Indeed their current goals are largely revenge against the Guardians and Green Lanterns, and revenge is an emotional goal, not a logical one. They came to see organic life as inherently flawed, and sought to remove it from the universe entirely. The Guardians personally fought and destroyed most of them. Ironic that the Guardians in this latest storyline would almost do the same thing the Manhunters did, and decide that life in the universe was fundamentally flawed and should be altered beyond recognition.
How are the Manhunters shown to have emotions then? Because, again, I have never seen a story where they are anything but emotionless robots. Wanting revenge against the Guardians is a logical choice for them, given the Guardians built them and can stop them from completing their mission that they have deemed more important than listening to their creators.
And the fact the Guardians have gone down the same road as the Manhunters is pretty much the point of the recent storyline. With the Guardians cutting themselves off from emotion, they lost sight of how life is supposed to be and became obsessed with trying to control it. Much like how the Manhunters, with out the ability to relate to organic life, decided all life was the source of chaos and the only way to end that chaos was to end life.
No, the Guardians' dialogue confirms it. That individual is gone.
What dialogue says that? You're not really supporting any of your arguments with any actual evidence here.
Have any of them been restored? If that happens in future issues, I'll concede the point, of course. But all the evidence so far says otherwise.
As I said, no one ever even tried to restore them or help those people, unless you count Saint Walker's First Lantern scenario. They seemed to all be destroyed when the First Lantern took his power back that the Guardians took from him. And again, you haven't presented any actual evidence that says otherwise.
I get the motivation, the problem is that I don't find it believable or consistent. It's like saying the way to end conflict in the world and protect life is to forcibly lobotomize every man, woman and child. That's not a rational scenario, for obvious reasons, but that's what the Guardians essentially chose to do. They might as well have allowed Nekron to end all life, it would have amounted to the same thing.
I don't see how you don't see it as believable or consistent. The self appointed Guardians of the Universe took it upon themselves to police the universe by their own ideals and however they saw fit. Their first army went on a murdering spree trying to keep order. Their second army had the tendency to be insubordinate. Is it any wonder they'd come to the conclusion they should try to control life itself? And while a lack of free will might have amounted to the same thing as death, obviously they didn't see it that way. And a point of fact, a lobotomy was a legitimate medical practice for several conditions for almost two decades.