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Oh, and due to the entire 'living for around 5000
years' point, it can be a little complicated for them to get the significance of a ten years here
and there - which Harry, who's thirteen at the start off of the story, and has abandonment challenges, is not happy about.
While Asgard in the beginning will come off as a progressive utopia which functions properly with most
of fashionable Earth, it is manufactured fairly obvious that it is really much from perfect: there is certainly an unconscious expectation of armed service prowess, specially in noble bloodlines (with the implication that people missing it get a relevant diploma of
lesser regard), and when they are fond of
humanity and like their plucky design and style, the normal Asgardian view is benevolent condescension (while the Avengers are changing that).
Captain America: - The Ultimate Marvel variation provides Cap with some rather modernly distasteful attitudes, as part
of a more "reasonable" acquire on what a soldier and average American citizen from 1940 would really be
like, especially if he time-skipped to the 2000s. Most prominently, he is a Noble Bigot, a company believer in My Country, Right or Wrong (as found throughout his confrontation with Ultimate Nuke), and he retains an infamous disdain for
the French, whom he views as Cheese-Eating Surrender Monkeys.