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Nov 28

X-Force #2 annotations

Posted on Thursday, November 28, 2019 by Paul in Annotations

As always, page numbers go by the digital edition, and this will be full of spoilers.

COVER / PAGE 1. Kid Omega and Wolverine fighting lab-grown thingies.

PAGES 1-2. The mutants of Krakoa gather around the fallen Professor X, and Magneto gives a brief eulogy.

“This was your plan, your island, your future.” Or such is the official line, anyway – this seems to have been at least as much Moira’s plan, but that’s secret. Naturally, Magneto makes the point that if Xavier can be brought back from the dead, nothing will change. The problem is that, as shown in House of X, Professor X himself has been essential to the process of restoring the backed-up minds from Cerebro, and no other telepath has been taught how to do it yet.

Professor X is seen without his Cerebro helmet for the first time in the Hickman run, outside flashbacks. Previous stories even went out of their way to avoid showing his face when he was unmasked, but there seems to be nothing unusual about his appearance here.

The gathered mutants are mostly people we already knew were on the island. The recognisable ones are:

  • Starting at the top and working broadly left to right (ignoring a few uncostumed randoms at the back), a volcano/lava woman who’s presumably Magma, though she normally doesn’t look this rocky, and it begs the question of why she isn’t with the New Mutants.
  • Gentle
  • Archangel
  • Selene (the former Black Queen)
  • Gambit, presumably appearing here between Excalibur #1-2
  • Strong Guy from X-Factor
  • Shark Girl
  • Callisto, former leader of the Morlocks
  • Cable
  • Warpath
  • Banshee
  • Three of the Stepford Cuckoos
  • The Beast
  • Jubilee
  • Havok
  • Forge
  • Feral
  • Wolverine
  • Apocalypse
  • Black Tom Cassidy
  • Firestar
  • Cyclops
  • Shatterstar (who’s surely an alien rather than a mutant?)
  • Psylocke II (Kwannon)
  • Bishop, presumably returning from Taiwan through a gate in response to the news.
  • Anole
  • Aurora and Northstar, who were indeed mentioned as being on the island in X-Men #2
  • Nightcrawler
  • Jumping to the bottom tier, some less likely characters, and some hard to identify ones. The guy with the pony tail on the left beneath Magneto’s cape is Gideon, an X-Force and Cable villain. He was last seen in Cable #153 (2018).
  • Below him, the guy in the funny shaped hat is the Changeling, wearing his Factor Three costume! Changeling died all the way back in X-Men #42 (1968), per a later retcon which revealed that he had been impersonating Professor X at the time (in other words, they killed off Xavier, and used Changeling to explain it away when he was brought back two years later). This is the first time we’ve been shown that Cerebro has back-ups of characters who died that far back.
  • Below him, the elephant guy is Mammomax, who was briefly a member of Exodus’s Brotherhood of Evil Mutants during the Chuck Austen run. He was eaten by a monster in New X-Men #34 (2007).
  • I don’t recognise the person with the black ponytail.
  • Daken, easily recognisable from his tattoos.
  • The Blob
  • Somebody with energy effects on the hair and hands, who I don’t recognise.
  • A green guy who I don’t recognise.
  • Somebody in another funny shaped helmet and a cape.
  • Xorn.
  • Someone with long hair and a purple cape.
  • Since the guy in the leather jacket can’t be Chamber (who’s in space in New Mutants), it’s probably meant to be Wither from the 2003 New Mutants run. He was killed in the X-Necrosha storyline in 2010.
  • Rockslide
  • Pixie
  • Dr Nemesis

PAGES 3-4. Recap and credits.

“Long live the king” refers, obviously, to “The king is dead, long live the king”, which normally carries the implication that the role of monarch has transferred seamlessly to the heir. In this case, of course, it’s more literal.

The title is “The Sword of Damocles”, which traditionally refers to the idea that people in positions of power face the ever-present threat of catastrophe (the original sword hung over a throne by a hair).

PAGES 5-6. The X-Men get to work on resurrecting Professor X.

This, of course, involves trying to get the back-up system working without him. The obvious plot question is why this hasn’t been tried during his lifetime when it seems so essential – and why Xavier was putting himself in harm’s way as he did last issue, by going out to hostile locations without proper guards. Beast specifically draws our attention to all this (“I could never understand why the Professor would make himself so vulnerable”) in a way that rather suggests it’s a plot point. (Although of course it was a classic strategy in the nineties to hint that something would be explained and then hope it deferred the problem long enough for everyone to forget about it… so we’ll see.)

“At any time, only one version of Cerebro can be live.” Why? Is this a rule of practice or a physical limitation? What’s to stop someone else building one?

PAGE 8. Data page on the assassination, largely recapping the previous issue. The main new point is that it flags the similarity between the assassins and the Reavers, which wasn’t explicit in last issue’s story, although it was in the script. Curiously, the Reavers are described as “believed to be disbanded” – in fact, they were last seen in Astonishing X-Men #17 (2018) when they were defeated yet again by the X-Men and arrested by ONE (who probably let them go).

We’re also told that a daily EMP blast will be used to wipe out all traditional electronics on the island. This seems a bit harsh on the mutants with cyborg limbs but perhaps they can pop through a gate. It also begs the question of how much contact the inhabitants of Krakoa have with the outside world, at least if they choose not to go through a gate – where do they get their news from?

PAGES 9-11. Cecilia Reyes autopsies the Reavers and catalogues their many enhancements.

The Reavers are clearly very enhanced humans, of the sort that Hickman’s mythology warns us to be very worried about. As strongly hinted last issue, they got past Krakoa’s defences by confusing it using skin grafts from Domino.

Wolverine seems to suggest that the stored memories in Cerebro can only be accessed through a resurrection, which would slightly alleviate the privacy implications.

Sage. The woman in yellow is Sage – not actually named clearly in the dialogue, and not in her usual outfit, but the recap page makes clear that it’s her.

PAGES 12-14. Wolverine investigates at the Seoul airport where the Reavers’ flight took off, and runs into Kid Omega.

Kid Omega. Quentin Quire was introduced in New X-Men #134 (2003) and has hung around ever since as the X-Men’s resident troublesome radical brat. Despite starting off as a villain, he’s broadly a good guy these days, albeit a hugely obnoxious one. He was last seen as a member of the West Coast Avengers, of all things. For years, his trademark has been slogan T-shirts, but he’s gone back here to the black and red stripes from his earliest appearances. Kid Omega is not normally as mutant-supremacist as he is here, although it would have been more in character for his earlier years. But he’s upset about Xavier’s death, which could be part of it.

Meomchwo = “Stop it!”

PAGE 15. Beast and Marvel Girl work on the back-up Cerebro.

“Deliver our souls from the sword.” Another Sword of Damocles reference. Beast describes this as coming from a prayer. It’s actually from Psalm 22 (the one that starts “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” and ends by praising God for His belated deliverance).

PAGES 16-17. Wolverine and Kid Omega trace the bad guys to a printing press.

The sign in Korean outside the plant just says it’s a printer.

“The gods of their future…” Kid Omega has taken on some of the pro-mutant rhetoric that Magneto was bandying about in House of X #1. He was a big fan of Magneto in his early New X-Men appearances too.

PAGES 18-20. Sage and Marvel Girl continue examining the Reavers, and Jean tries reading the survivor’s mind, getting a hazy image.

It’s an image of the mask and peacock-design tattoo of the bad guys’ leader from issue #1, but Jean doesn’t know that. Mostly, this scene continues making the point about how post-human the Reavers are.

“I’m good at reading code, Jean. Not minds.” Um. Sage’s basic power is meant to be that she has a supercomputer brain – in other words, she’s great at anything that involves crunching data. But she is a telepath – that was introduced in X-Men #29 (1994), quite possibly as an error, but it’s stuck.

PAGE 21. Data page about Domino’s investigation in to “Phineas Hook”, who turns out with hindsight to have been a trick to lure her in. Hook as in Line and Sinker, presumably. The name doesn’t seem to have any other significance, though Phineas Hook was the name of the villain in the 1936 film Song of the Saddle.

PAGES 22-25. Wolverine and Kid Omega find Domino, who’s in suspended animation and not looking great.

Wolverine picks up on the fact that Kid Omega is repeating Magneto’s “gods” rhetoric, and makes clear that he doesn’t agree. Meanwhile, Kid Omega’s psychic powers turn out to be blocked here – though apparently not mutant powers in general – which gives him the chance to get a kicking for his mutant supremacy angle.

PAGES 26-27. The trailer reads NEXT: LOST AND FOUND.

Bring on the comments

  1. Joe says:

    Here’s my theory. Xavier faked his death. Why? To avoid bringing Destiny back, who can screw up the big plan. I expect they won’t manage to bring Xavier back. Or if they do, something new will go wrong with the backup system. But Destiny has to stay dead.

    Of course, bringing her back to mess everything up is a sensible plot development. I dunno, I’ve just made a guess.

  2. Chris V says:

    Surely, if that were the case, Professor X and Changeling would have switched places.
    Maybe they did.

    I don’t see why Xavier and Magneto can’t just continue to delay the resurrection of Destiny.
    It would upset Mystique, but that could be a plot development.

    They stated that it would take a very long time to resurrect everyone who died on Genosha.
    So, there’s plenty of time to avoid the subject of Destiny.

    It could lead to Mystique, who is on the Council, leaking secrets to the wider populace, or maybe even leading a revolt.
    That’s not a direction I’m very interested in, but if Krakoa is meant to be the new status quo (rather than something dark and sinister), I definitely see new schisms arising on the island, as different mutants side with different leaders of Krakoa.

    I think we are already seeing signs of this with Wolverine trusting Xavier, but not liking Magneto’s propaganda.
    We could see factions siding with either Xavier, Magneto, or Apocalypse to decide the future direction of Krakoa.
    Yawn, but there you go. We might be heading there.

    —————————————–

    The artwork on Sage was very confusing. I thought it was Moira, until the captions made it clear that it was meant to be Sage.
    I kept thinking, “Oh boy. Now Moira is running around on the island and everyone knows. What is going on now?”.

  3. Paul says:

    That’s a thought. It’d be cute if Xavier turned out to be the guy in the Changeling helmet – though if he is, you’d think he’d be letting the X-Men know to hold off on the resurrection just in case it actually works.

  4. Si says:

    Not that it matters much, but Xavier has transferred his consciousness into new bodies twice in the past. Once recently, after being dead for ages. Why do they need Cerebro at all?

  5. YLu says:

    “Wolverine seems to suggest that the stored memories in Cerebro can only be accessed through a resurrection, which would slightly alleviate the privacy implications.”

    I’d say this is already implicit. Xavier clearly wasn’t privy to all the X-Men’s mutant enemies’ secrets in those years he was downloading everyone.

  6. Ben says:

    Like New Mutants, thought this had excellent art. Really like this Wolverine design visually.

    This might be the X-book I stick with. At least it seems in on the idea that all of this is very weird and not good.

    About the 2 Cerebros thing- my assumption is they can’t have more than one running at a time because it would mean multiple copies of the same mutant brain scans. Which kind of puts a crimp in the “these clones are totally definitely the real versions of these characters brought back exactly right, not clones” angle.

  7. SanityOrMadness says:

    Well, the HoXPoX data pages made it very clear they *intended* to get round to training the other telepaths in using Cerebro to restore minds from backup, not least since Xavier couldn’t possibly manage to do it himself on the scale they intended (although that would raise further questions unless they managed to get redundancies for “the Five” to increase the number of bodies they could manufacture too). Which would be fairly pointless if they could only use one Cerebro at a time.

    Paul> …why [was] Xavier was putting himself in harm’s way as he did last issue, by going out to hostile locations without proper guards. Beast specifically draws our attention to all this (“I could never understand why the Professor would make himself so vulnerable”) in a way that rather suggests it’s a plot point.

    I’m not sure. I feel like the resolution is going to be “he was trying to build trust, and bringing the Heavy Squad along as bodyguards wouldn’t work very well with that,” mixed with overconfidence.

    Paul> Bishop, presumably returning from Taiwan through a gate in response to the news.

    Which, of course, would contradict Fallen Angels, where the island being in lockdown for multiple days after Xavier’s death is a major plot point.

    Paul> Below him, the guy in the funny shaped hat is the Changeling, wearing his Factor Three costume!

    This raises a further question. Morph, in AOA and Exiles, was the alternate counterpart of Changeling. Proteus could possess Morph’s body without burning it out, and at least Betsy Braddock and Sage should know that.

    So why, per the HoXPoX data pages, are they messing about with making Xavier “husks” for Proteus to burn out every few days rather than just giving him one Changeling clone?

    Paul> Shatterstar (who’s surely an alien rather than a mutant?)

    PAD’s X-Factor retconned him (for real this time) into being Longshot & Dazzler’s son after time travel shenanigans. Ergo, half-human/mutant.

    Paul> We’re also told that a daily EMP blast will be used to wipe out all traditional electronics on the island. This seems a bit harsh on the mutants with cyborg limbs but perhaps they can pop through a gate. It also begs the question of how much contact the inhabitants of Krakoa have with the outside world, at least if they choose not to go through a gate – where do they get their news from?

    Maybe they don’t? I mean, there has been very little effort to build Krakoa up as a functioning society, but what little there has been suggests they’re heavily isolationist outside of a few deliberately-limited channels.

    Joe> Here’s my theory. Xavier faked his death. Why? To avoid bringing Destiny back, who can screw up the big plan. I expect they won’t manage to bring Xavier back. Or if they do, something new will go wrong with the backup system. But Destiny has to stay dead.
    Chris V> I don’t see why Xavier and Magneto can’t just continue to delay the resurrection of Destiny. It would upset Mystique, but that could be a plot development. They stated that it would take a very long time to resurrect everyone who died on Genosha. So, there’s plenty of time to avoid the subject of Destiny.

    Problem with that line of thinking is that, if Mystique has signed up specifically to get Destiny back… then that implies Destiny gets priority over Random Genoshian Mutate 14653, or Mystique has signed up for absolutely no reward at all (since bringing back Every Mutant Ever is an explicit goal.)

    So, really, they have no time at all – they cannot reasonably stall Mystique for any period of time (while the resurrection system is working, at least) without making it crystal clear that they have absolutely zero intention of brining Destiny back.

    The question is “WTF did they make the deal?”. Why is it important to get Mystique, a habitual traitor to virtually everyone she’s ever worked with, on board to the point of offering her specific sweeteners, let alone one they have no intention of going through with?

    Chris V> The artwork on Sage was very confusing. I thought it was Moira, until the captions made it clear that it was meant to be Sage.

    Really? The face tattoos mark her (literally!) pretty clearly as Sage.

  8. Krzysiek Ceran says:

    So. This issue’s better than the previous one because the characters aren’t idiots. And Quentin and Wolverine make for a fun duo, as usual.

    (Quick aside, in recent takes Quentin’s aloofness was presented as a facade – the same could be true for his superiority complex here; though it is in line with his original portrayal… though that original portrayal has basically been buried and forgotten after his resurrection.)

    But I really, really don’t like that level of brutality in my superhero books. I really don’t want to read about characters being skinned alive. And I don’t want to see that. Jesus.

  9. Evilgus says:

    @Krzysiek, I agree. I don’t really like or need that visual brutality in my comic books. But I kind of accept that this is the ‘darker’ book so it’s somewhat allowed.

    Interesting that Domino suffers this. She’s a mercenary and risk is part and parcel. But if we’re going to be skinning characters, imagine the outcry if this had been done to Jean or Storm. It wouldn’t fly.

    Otherwise, I’m enjoying how Dawn of X setup and ressurections allows unusual interactions between characters we would otherwise never, ever see (Sage, Jean and Black Tom?! Who’d have thunk it)

  10. Thom H. says:

    Seeing Xavier’s face here for the very first time since Hickman started makes me think his death has been faked. Like Moira – maybe they even used another “Shiar golem” or whatever. Although, it does seem like they have a surplus of cloned Xavier bodies lying around, too, since they’re letting Proteus use them up. So maybe it’s one of those. Anyway, why go to all the trouble to obscure his face for this long only to suddenly reveal it with no fanfare?

    Which begs the question: did they ever really intend to bring back every mutant from the dead? Maybe Moira, Xavier, and Magneto already have everything they want for their secret plan and more mutants would be surplus to requirements. Although Magneto sincerely seems to believe in the resurrection plan, so maybe Moira and Xavier are hiding things from him, too. That has been implied, at least.

    In any case, it seems like the normal stakes have been restored to the books since getting killed can’t be immediately reversed anymore. At least until Cerebro and/or Xavier are brought back online.

  11. Krzysiek Ceran says:

    Well, Beast is already working on Cerebro. And there’s no reason Jean shouldn’t be able to work out how to put minds into bodies – she’s done that at least once in the past, hasn’t she? She kept Xavier’s mind in hers in Morrison’s run, right?

  12. Chris V says:

    SanityOrMadness-I got the feeling that they put Mystique on the Council specifically so that they could appease her without having to follow through with the resurrection of Destiny.
    Yes, Mystique is still waiting for Destiny to get resurrected, but she was also given one of the most important roles on Krakoa.

    Mystique has been shown to be genuinely concerned with the mutant cause in the past.
    I don’t think the resurrection of Destiny was her only reason for wanting to join Krakoa.

  13. Chris V says:

    I don’t see Xavier staying “dead” (if he did fake his death). I think it was just a shock development in order to fill time while Hickman prepares to write the next chapter in his story.

    I suppose Xavier could go live with Moira and allow Magneto to run Krakoa on his behalf.
    I just don’t see that working though.
    Some characters are already showing unease with Magneto’s propaganda.
    Do you really think that Magneto is going to be able to put aside his own dreams in order to parrot whatever Xavier wants him to say?
    I think that eventually some characters would begin to question the idea of Magneto being the de-facto head of Krakoa.

    Then, what would happen?
    Xavier reveals that he faked his own death to quell the unrest?
    “Just kidding, guys! Every so many years, I fake my own death. It’s something I find funny.”
    I think a lot of characters would begin to question their trust in Krakoa if they found out that Xavier lied to them for some reason.
    “Look! Z’Nox!”
    “Oh, the Z’Nox again. No wonder he faked his own death. Yeah, we understand now.”

  14. Thom H. says:

    I don’t think you kill Xavier just to bring him back straight away. He’ll definitely be back, but I anticipate it’s going to be a difficult and lengthy process. Happy to be wrong, but it’s what makes sense to me in terms of storytelling.

    “Do you really think that Magneto is going to be able to put aside his own dreams in order to parrot whatever Xavier wants him to say?”

    Isn’t that what we’ve seen so far? Sure, he’s getting lots of adulation from his young fans, but that’s a separate issue. As far as we know, he’s bought Xavier’s Krakoa dreams 100% and will happily carry out whatever plan Xavier and Moira have concocted.

  15. Chris V says:

    Yes, but he is explicitly telling humans that mutants are their new gods.
    Something Wolverine doesn’t like.
    Magneto is going along with Krakoa, as is Apocalypse, because there are elements to Krakoa that appeal to both of their ideologies too.

    I think part of what’s going on is that Moira says that Xavier and Magneto have given up their ideologies in the name of her vision.
    However, it doesn’t seem that anyone has truly given up on their ideologies.
    That all three of the heads of Krakoa (Xavier, Magneto, and Apocalypse) are finding ways that Krakoa fits their own ideologies, rather than giving up ideologies.

    Also look at Xavier appearing to Namor, and Namor seeing through Xavier’s ruse.
    Which would imply that Xavier still believes in his own dreams too.

    I’m not sure that Magneto would have gone along with Xavier and Moira if he wasn’t given such a prominent position.
    The Quiet Council knows more than anyone else on Krakoa, but only Xavier and Magneto know about Moira and her agenda.
    If Magneto didn’t feel like such an important and powerful figure, would he have agreed to allowing Xavier (and secretly Moira) to lead Krakoa?

  16. SanityOrMadness says:

    Chris V> I got the feeling that they put Mystique on the Council specifically so that they could appease her without having to follow through with the resurrection of Destiny.
    Yes, Mystique is still waiting for Destiny to get resurrected, but she was also given one of the most important roles on Krakoa.

    But is that her priority?

    And, again, why is she so important to Krakoa that she gets given one of just twelve seats on the ruling body? Of the token villains; Xavier & Magneto clearly regard Apocalypse as in it for the long term, given that he sits with them. Exodus has “manipulable” as one of his main character traits, so presumably they expect him to vote with Magneto on everything. Sinister is also considered essential – presumably because he’s got the DNA samples they use for cloning, although he might as well replace the diamond with “UNTRUSTWORTHY”. But what does Mystique bring?

    Thom> I don’t think you kill Xavier just to bring him back straight away. He’ll definitely be back, but I anticipate it’s going to be a difficult and lengthy process. Happy to be wrong, but it’s what makes sense to me in terms of storytelling.

    Thing is, in X-Men #2 and the preview of #3, Hickman is very clearly writing around it in a way where… yeah, he’s dead if you’re reading the other books, but if you’re only following X-Men, he’s just not on-screen. That suggests it’s completely irrelevant in the grand scheme of things.

  17. Krzysiek Ceran says:

    Well, Mystique has been around for over a century, has been in leadership positions (Brotherhood, Freedom Force), has worked in multiple intelligence agencies under various alliases, has worked for the government oficially (Freedom Force, X-Factor) and under alliases and has previous history of following Xavier’s orders (in her ongoing), so, to sum up, in total…

    …um. She has exactly the same assets Wolverine would bring minus his loyalty.

    Yeah, I tried, but I’ve got nothing.

  18. Chris V says:

    She brings silence, if she wants Destiny back as her only other reason for joining Krakoa.

    Plus, there was mention about how Xavier and Magneto wanted to put people that it was necessary to watch closely on the Council.

    Exodus isn’t just easy to manipulate, but he is a zealot.
    You can’t bribe Exodus, like you could someone like Shaw.
    Exodus has to believe in a cause to gain his loyalty.

    Sinister, we already know that Moira doesn’t trust him and didn’t even want him involved on Krakoa.
    So, Sinister is definitely someone who needs to be watched.

    Apocalypse, even though they claim to trust him, is certainly someone who needs to be watched.

    Shaw can be bribed easily, but he’s already shown that his own interests will always come first. So, he needs to be closely watched.

    Mystique could fall in to this catergory due to the fact that she dearly wants Destiny brought back to life.
    It’s a way to gain her sympathy to Krakoa (since they can’t give her the other thing she wants), but it’s also a way to keep watch of her.

  19. Joseph S. says:

    It’s clear she’s Sage by the marks on her face, though this could be clearer.

    As for Xavier’s resurrection: didn’t a data page in Hox/PoX somewhere, IIRC in the resurrection red issue state Xavier had been restored twice already ( perhaps at least once to do away with the X, via Fantomex, body)? It’s also possible he was “restored” while still alive, creating a double (who is likely down with Moira in the No-Place). This would fire one of those Chekhov’s guns placed on the mantle.

  20. Joseph S. says:

    Actually, where is Mystique? Could it be possible if Xavier wasn’t a dupe/resurreX/golem/etc that she took his place? I feel like that scene with Emma during the UN recognition or whatever also hinted at a plan that may include this assassination.

  21. Chris V says:

    There are so many characters who just are never being checked on, it’s too difficult to really boil it down to, “Where is this character? I haven’t seen them in a while.”
    The cast is just too huge, and most of the spin-off books are stuck in minutiae, rather than the big picture of Krakoa.
    Mystique could be anywhere.

    You could also ask where is Exodus or Nightcrawler?
    They’re also on the Council, but haven’t been seen since the initial minis.

    It is an interesting idea though.

  22. AlsoMike says:

    I think the character in the group shot with blue energy hands/hair is meant to be Surge. You can sorta make out gauntlets under the blue energy arm effects and she does normally have blue hair. Not sure her hair usually shines but they could have accidentally overused the effect.

    The memory backup thing has always confused me. I thought a HoxPox data page told us Xavier made mind/soul backups once a week, but if so, how would you get Domino’s final memories before she died like Wolverine suggests? I can see Xavier doing extra backups right b4 people go on suicide missions but stuff that happens DURING missions that Xavier isn’t even directly monitoring? How does that work?

  23. Daibhid Ceannaideach says:

    he’s gone back here to the black and red stripes from his earliest appearances.

    And which was loosely based on Bolivar Trask’s paranoid artist’s impression of Mutant Overlords subjugating humanity way back in X-Men #14. So if he is going full mutant supremacist, the outfit could be seen as something of a warning sign.

  24. Col_Fury says:

    This issue was better than the first, but it’s not clicking with me yet. Maybe it’s the bodyhorror stuff…

    Wasn’t this book advertised as Krakoa’s CIA team? Maybe they should have started with their CIA already up and running, instead of having yet another gathering the team arc to start?

  25. Dazzler says:

    You guys have it all backwards. First you announce your nation to the world, painting a target squarely on your backs and declaring yourself gods, THEN after your leader is instantly murdered you start to figure the infrastructure, security, etc. Don’t you guys know anything about nations?

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