Let me be clear. Everything I've written is essentially from Tony's point of view. Keep that in mind. I'm on team Cap but my point is that Tony's actions are entirely relatable.While I agree it is a tragedy, I dont see Tony in the same light as you do. While of course its tragic that Bucky killed his parents, when he was explaining how the kid got killed, and he was talking about Sokovia... That was entirely his fault. He created Ultron, who was directly responsible for all of that.
I think Tony sees Ultron as his fault entirely and a great example of how well intentioned individuals given limitless power can cause catastrophe just as he has. Everybody, at some point, might think to themselves that they know better than the world what's best. That would be an argument FOR some sort of regulation in his book. I think Tony sees the Accord as a flawed but necessary first step that would take the political heat off The Avengers and give them a way to form something more constructive.
It's admittedly a contrivance to bring the new Spidey into the MCU. That being said, remember, the intent wasn't to beat down their opponent. Spidey has a very effective "less than lethal" means of controlling a situation where they're clearly outmanned. The Vision doesn't count as an asset because he's simply too lethal for this encounter. Tony is trying to stop his friends - he's not trying to kill them. A guy who slings webs sounds about ideal for this task. Still, it's mostly a contrivance to bring Spidey into the MCU - but I'm buying it.And did Tony even realize that he recruited a 15 year old kid to come and fight with him? Granted the kid that died in Sokovia was older, but cmon. Its like he is trying to rectify past mistakes, but he doesnt see them through properly. "Im going to avenge this kid by setting things right, so Im going to get this other kid to help me do it" He didnt know that things could have turned south and someone could have accidentally got killed. What if Vision blasted Spidey instead of War Machine? Speaking of that, think that he did that because he was mad at him for hurting Wanda? And he didnt just miss trying to hit Falcon?
I agree entirely. But I'm just saying that, given Tony's perspective, almost any argument Cap makes actually convinces him even more that Cap is wrong.I dont see Steves view as being reckless, but its having their hands tied.
Spidey's entire back story in those words was simply brilliant. The writers didn't even have Tony say "I'm going to build you a better suit" or have Parker explain how he made the webbing at all. That shows how much confidence they have in their writing.Thats why I loved the writers speech for Spidey, it summed up his origin in a few words. Being able to do something, and not doing it, when bad things happen, its your fault. Or something along those lines, I dont remember the line exactly lol.
That's what I thought at first but later I could see how he could actually mean it. It was, after all, a gift from his father as well as once being a symbol for patriotism. A man who defends a fugitive who killed his father and even fights him with that shield clearly (from Tony's perspective) doesn't deserve the shield.I thought Tony was just being a ****** when he said the "you dont deserve that shield" line.
Justice ought to be applied evenly across the board. Certainly Bucky does afford more than his share of protection from Cap for being his friend - and that's not exactly an even application of justice. I think Steve is aware of this - he's usually sacrificing himself for the greater good. In this case I think he's knowingly doing something for himself - protecting a childhood friend. I don't think that's necessarily wrong but it's a choice that makes him human and flawed. Maybe that's the point in the "there's a little green in the blue of your eye" comment by Zemo.I think the theme was apparent as to why Cap was defending Buck, not just because he was his best friend, but he didnt have a choice.