You can see the similarities in broad strokes to the idea of class warfare. The Benders monopoly on elemental power had made them the ruling class. But technology had now rendered the benders advantage obsolete. The idea that advancing technology could level class differences has more in common with early 20th century socialists than black supremacists.Formless wrote:I really have no idea where Doug and Rob Walker gets stupid shit like that first one in their brains. Amon was clearly a Malcolm X-like figure, not Lenin or Marx. Seriously, his greatest ally was an industrialist businessman . He didn't have a Martin Luther King figure to be his foil, but that's because in this story and this universe its Korra's job as the Avatar to figure out where the middle ground is when extremists arise to power.Ahriman238 wrote:Also saw the Nostalgia Critic's review, and heard one thing I took as sort of self-evident but hasn't come up in this thread. So far as major political movements of the early 20th Century go, we've seen Avatar-verse versions of communists, religious fundamentalists, and anarchists.
Just throwing that out there. The Walker Brothers are quite shallow and dim reviewers/analysts when push comes to shove.
Also the whole mass debending of enemies bears a strong resemblance to revolutionary mass executions. Perhaps even closer to the the French revolution than the Russian.