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True. Evil chooses not to. In some cases.
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[quote]Sacrifice leads to death[/quote]
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The difference between a hero and a villain is not a willingness to kill. It is a willingness to die. The traveler stayed.
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True but only because Rasputin threatened it... [spoiler]perhaps you could join the void...[/spoiler]
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According to unsecured/outcry that is not the case
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Rasputin didn’t threaten it. He had a plan in place, one I assume the Traveler had absolutely no knowledge of.
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Perhaps your right but I’m pretty sure he did... Il check it out... [spoiler]perhaps you could join the void...[/spoiler]
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[citation needed]
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Don’t have links but ask around, in the grimoire somewhere it said that Rasputin basically went... [i]”au cuh if ya really gunna dip on me I gon have to put a cap in yo ass cuh...”[/i] [spoiler]perhaps you could join the void...[/spoiler]
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He did not explicitly state that he was going to “ blast that -blam!- out of the sky”.
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I’ve been around the block a time or two. I know Ras likes to talk some smack in between bouts of trying to hire me to do his job. Good old Ras made a threat he never made good on. He didn’t have to... because our favorite golfball didn’t leave. Probably because of the plan to res me and let me loose on the unwashed masses of the darkness. Ras knows his place. He knows if he screws with me, he’ll need more than siva and a direct warhead impact to stop me.
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Well said.
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Depends on whether or not you view Thanos as Evil.
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Thanos isn’t evil, he’s doing the wrong thing for the right reasons (similar to Ultron’s creation and the Sokovia Accords)
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Says who?
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An evil person never sacrifices himself for others.
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They would sacrifice themselves for a greater purpose, like minions throwing themselves at a player to slow them down from getting to the boss.
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That is true, but never for another person