User blog:Mbarriosfuenmayor/The "Superior" crosses the line...

Blog post created or updated.
While some people might look at this as "just another blog rant", I'd like to share my thoughts on the current course of events that are transpiring on Superior Spider-Man Vol 1

WARNING: This blog contains Spoilers from Superior Spider-Man #5 so if you haven't read it...avoid the blog or enter at your own risk

With this said, let me procede...

Yes, everyone knows at this point how different Spider-Man is since the first day of Superior Spider-Man, the notorius Otto Octavius is living the life of Peter Parker and Spider-Man, trying to be, in his words, Superior than the hero we all knew. His tactics are quite more aggressive than his predecessor and while he made some moves that the Peter Ghost considers clever (like the Spider-Bots Patrol App) and even we saw the comparissions with certain "Dark Knight" (like the Spider-Signal)...this whole thing changed with Issue #5

If there's one thing we always knew about Spider-Man is that he's one of the many on the list of superheroes who KNOWS that the line between defeating a villain and give him to the authorities and killing a villain to stop the menace permanently shouldn't be crossed due to the break of morality, but since Otto Octavius has no morale, why should he care about that line?

The point is...yes...in another comparission, Spider-Man did the one thing Batman never did: Use a firegun to kill a villain. Right there. Point Blank. Pull the trigger. BAM! Dead and Gone

Putting aside the whole "Big Brother/Person of Interest" thing Peterpus is pulling now, everyone knows that Death is a key role in Peter's character development, because he carries the death of everyone who fell on his guard on the top of his shoulders: Uncle Ben, The Stacys, Marla Jameson, Rhino, Silver Sable, the list goes on. But now it takes to a new level since, while it wasn't made by him subconsciously, his hand made the exectuion (since that's the best word that came into my mind to define what Otto did) and now the world knows that Spider-Man, a hero who always devoted to uphold justice by capturing villains, now is more than willing to cross the line to kill a supervillain

Here is where the "Big Question" comes: How will this affect the "Parker World" (you know, the supporting characters like Aunt May or MJ) and how hard will it be for Peter to regain the lost trust once he gets his body back?