Marvel Comics’ 2022 event A.X.E.: Judgment Day introduced some truly terrifying new faces and concepts to the Marvel Universe. From the then newly resurrected Celestial Progenitor who stood poised to obliterate the world’s populace, to the near-unstoppable Eternal Uranos, whose armies ravaged entire worlds in an instant, it appeared as though nothing good would come of this world-shaking event. Even worse, the storyline revealed why Earth struggled so much to make a case for itself throughout the course of its final day, and it has everything to do with being Marvel’s very first T.I.L.F., or Technologically Inclined Life Foragers.While the threat of oblivion had the entire world on edge, Avengers #60 (by Mark Russell, Greg Land, Jay Leisten, and David Curiel) found Clint Barton, better known as Hawkeye, going about his day in an unusually ordinary manner. Rather than quaking at the idea of the then impending rapture and whether he would be found worthy of continued survival, Hawkeye chose to reflect on the nuances of Judgment Day as a concept, as well as the validity of the Progenitor who had set it into motion. Clint didn’t have any qualms about raising his concerns to the Progenitor’s face, either. Although the Progenitor was just as eager to point out precisely why Judgment Day was so long overdue in response. As the Progenitor explained to Hawkeye, humanity as a species is what the Celestials would call a T.I.L.F., or Technologically Inclined Life Foragers. At its core, this means that Earth’s dominant species are apt to spread themselves and their influence as far as possible. While this appears admirable to humans determined to explore every aspect of their reality, doing so would eventually drag otherwise unaware bystanders into their world’s frequently violent problems. The Progenitor described this as a “huge red flag” for the Celestials. This may seem harsh, but it was an unnervingly apt assessment of everything wrong with the world at large, casting the trappings of colonization against a cosmic backdrop that wants little if anything to do with Earthlings or the issues that plague them. This isn’t to say there aren’t other worlds or civilizations out in the cosmos of the Marvel Universe who share the same general issues as Earth. Rather, that humankind is one of the few space-faring species who have deemed their own desires as greater than the wants or needs of others.
Marvel Comics’ 2022 event A.X.E.: Judgment Day introduced some truly terrifying new faces and concepts to the Marvel Universe. From the then newly resurrected Celestial Progenitor who stood poised to obliterate the world’s populace, to the near-unstoppable Eternal Uranos, whose armies ravaged entire worlds in an instant, it appeared as though nothing good would come of this world-shaking event. Even worse, the storyline revealed why Earth struggled so much to make a case for itself throughout the course of its final day, and it has everything to do with being Marvel’s very first T.I.L.F., or Technologically Inclined Life Foragers.
While the threat of oblivion had the entire world on edge, Avengers #60 (by Mark Russell, Greg Land, Jay Leisten, and David Curiel) found Clint Barton, better known as Hawkeye, going about his day in an unusually ordinary manner. Rather than quaking at the idea of the then impending rapture and whether he would be found worthy of continued survival, Hawkeye chose to reflect on the nuances of Judgment Day as a concept, as well as the validity of the Progenitor who had set it into motion. Clint didn’t have any qualms about raising his concerns to the Progenitor’s face, either. Although the Progenitor was just as eager to point out precisely why Judgment Day was so long overdue in response.
As the Progenitor explained to Hawkeye, humanity as a species is what the Celestials would call a T.I.L.F., or Technologically Inclined Life Foragers. At its core, this means that Earth’s dominant species are apt to spread themselves and their influence as far as possible. While this appears admirable to humans determined to explore every aspect of their reality, doing so would eventually drag otherwise unaware bystanders into their world’s frequently violent problems. The Progenitor described this as a “huge red flag” for the Celestials. This may seem harsh, but it was an unnervingly apt assessment of everything wrong with the world at large, casting the trappings of colonization against a cosmic backdrop that wants little if anything to do with Earthlings or the issues that plague them. This isn’t to say there aren’t other worlds or civilizations out in the cosmos of the Marvel Universe who share the same general issues as Earth. Rather, that humankind is one of the few space-faring species who have deemed their own desires as greater than the wants or needs of others.
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