I mean. You want me to be a villain? Really? Me? Alright, if you insist.
The GIW go over the top, and commit atrocious crimes against Ghostkind.
And when Danny tries to strike back?
They get the JLD involved.
Now to be entirely fair, they lied to the JLD and withheld valuable information that would have let the JLD know that they were siding with the bad guys.
To be even more fair, Danny doesn't know that.
So fine.
They want him to be the bad guy?
He'll be the bad guy.
He never wanted in on this hero crap anyways.
Phantom and his two associates, Overdrive and Hemlock, take to the streets and show the JLD exactly how bad of an idea it was to make an enemy out of them.
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Start reading Episode 1
Dialogue transcripts:
Panel 1
Jack (voiceover): We are honored that you are visiting despite your busy schedule, Dr. Jekyll.
Jekyll (voiceover): I indeed rarely pay visits, but… we do live in unusual times.
Jekyll: ...
Panel 2
Jekyll: And Dr. Van Helsing has told me a great deal about you, Dr. Seward. Thus, I trust you will be an excellent help in investigating my findings.
Panel 3
Jack: Thank you for your trust. But the scientist we would like you to meet is better suited than me.
Jekyll (offscreen): Oh? Can I see him?
Griffin: That’s complicated.
Panel 4
Griffin: Ashley Griffin. Optics genius. And the only scientist in this house with any visible results.
Panel 5
Jekyll: The—the Invisible Man of Iping?? I thought that was a hoax…
Jack: I told you to wait until I had prepared him…
Panel 6
Jekyll: Pardon me, sir, but… You experimented on yourself?
Griffin: As any pioneer worth his salt ought to. I obtained the desired results, too.
Panel 7
Jekyll (offscreen): And the reports about murder?
Griffin: I–I didn’t—Listen, it was self-defense—
Jack: Past actions notwithstanding, Mr. Griffin has turned over a new leaf.
Panel 8
Jack (voiceover): Thus, on behalf of Mrs. Harker’s league, we are wondering, doctor… would you consider assisting us? For the good of our fellow man?
Panel 9
Jekyll (voiceover): ...I shall consider it.
Paper: I accept your proposal. -Dr Henry Jekyll
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WOOOO THE REST OF THE BOYS!!!
Jack's fans are screaming, i can hear em
I showed these to my friend, AND HE SAID ABOUT RIDDLE "he's giving really big fruity twink energy" AKKFKSKSNDN IM DYING!!!! BUT HE'S NOT WRONG!!!
GANTU!?!?!?!?!
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My pitbull is completely convinced that everyone at the weed dispensary is there specifically to say hi to him. People love him there so much (and he loves so much that they showed up today just for him) that today he attempted to become the store greeter and sat right at the door as people walked in.
And while queer stoners apparently love pitbulls, I had to pull him away - Romeo does NOT understand he is 80 pounds of muscle and teeth and therefore cannot lie in wait at the only entrance into a building, no matter his intentions. He is just stumped by it. After all, as far as he knows, he is an extremely tiny guy! Maybe even the tiniest! He may actually be TOO tiny! Perhaps that is why people fear him. They think he is a mouse, for no dog has ever been so smol, so miniscule. But fear not, everyone - it is only Romeo!
Alas, for every chihuahua that thinks it is a pitbull, there is a pitbull what thinks it is a chihuahua. But good news they both have anxiety!!!!
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This excerpt from Masters of the Air lives in my brain rent free by the way:
With the war over, [Rosenthal] was still not through.
Back home in Brooklyn, working for his old Manhattan law firm, he found himself in an unsettled state.
“Throughout my war service, I had been tightly disciplined. I put the brake on my emotions and probably held too much inside me. Now I began to unravel. I couldn’t concentrate, I couldn’t focus on my work. We were working on some important law cases but the work seemed humdrum compared to what I had just been through.”
Rosenthal had been closely following the news of the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal, which had convened in November 1945, and felt he ought to be there.
[…]
[Rosenthal’s] job was to investigate the racial crimes committed by those who served under Göring, Joel, and Keitel.
“I interrogated all three of them. Göring was arrogant and unrepentant, but the army generals talked to me in a grandfatherly way, claiming they had nothing to do with the Nazi atrocities. Keitel was especially insistent that he had adhered to the German military’s code of honor. They lied, of course.”
“Seeing these strutting conquerors after they were sentenced - powerless, pathetic, and preparing for the hangman - was the closure I needed. Justice had overtaken evil. My war was over."
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