Tumgik
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
thrills ∙ mystery ∙ action ∙ comedy ∙ patriotism
11 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Text
80 years ago today!
Yet another pre-war Captain America story in which the most dangerous villain is the American people.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Captain America #6, on newsstands June 25th, 1941.
Bonus:
Tumblr media
4 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
out here simping for the führer
6 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
if you dont think sam has queercoding in the mcu, comics, or otherwise then i’d like you to read this and imagine what’s being ‘left unsaid’, I just think it’s interesting.
450 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
“hold on, kid, hold on”
10 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Text
Isaiah Bradley’s narrative in TFATWS simultaneously demonstrates the necessity of teaching critical race theory and explains why there are people in your state who want to make that illegal
1. Unequal outcomes
Isaiah and Steve took on nearly identical unauthorized rescue missions. Both returned successfully with men written off as dead. Steve received acclaim, medals, and a promotion. Isaiah received secret torture prison. 
Bucky and Isaiah are victims of human experimentation and decades of torture and imprisonment. Bucky’s special torture included being used as the Winter Soldier. Today a judge allows Bucky to walk free (with conditions). Isaiah, who never assassinated anybody, has never seen his day in court, and lives in hiding in constant fear for his family. 
The unfairness is obvious. Some people praised Steve and others locked up Isaiah. Some people showed mercy to Bucky and others keep Isaiah living in fear. These people are all a bunch of racists, right?
Sure, maybe so. But more to the point, that doesn’t actually explain anything.
2. Origin stories
Steve got juiced by the US Army. He competed to be chosen for the serum test, and he was fully briefed on known side effects. This was fine. 
Bucky was taken as a POW and dosed against his will by Nazis. This was a war crime, illegal even in Nazi Germany.
Isaiah was selected as a test subject without his knowledge or consent by the US Army. Given the time period (1950 or 51), this was probably legal. Informed consent laws didn’t exist yet. The Army had no formal guidelines on human experimentation until 1953. 
Regardless, it was still scientifically unethical and definitely racist. The Army was mostly integrated by this time, which means Isaiah’s all-Black unit was singled out on purpose. 
3. Everything builds on what came before
The same Army that abused Isaiah and his fellow soldiers knew perfectly well they were wrong to do so. This is evident in the way they immediately went into cover-up mode. 
The super-soldier POWs Isaiah rescued: the Army wanted them dead. The other 28 soldiers Isaiah brought back, who had nothing to do with any of it: the Army intended to make them collateral damage.
So when Isaiah triumphantly marched into camp with living evidence of the Army’s special crime, they locked him away. They reported Isaiah’s death but in fact they were too greedy to murder him. With Isaiah imprisoned the “experiment” could continue in secret. 
Isaiah escaped by faking his own death, but he can’t ever let down his guard. He’d be locked up again and probably his family too. 
4. Color-blind policies perpetuate anti-blackness
We meet Isaiah after 30 years of unjust imprisonment and 40 years more of living as a ghost. At no point during this time did any individual involved necessarily have to make any decision rooted in racially discriminatory law or personal racial bias. 
They made institutional decisions to hide the crimes of the past while continuing to profit from them.
That’s it. That’s all that’s needed. Isaiah’s body is evidence of a crime that can never be allowed to come to light, and every single thing that happens to him and to his family in the aftermath is done for that reason.
This is why Steve was called a hero. It’s not because Steve’s C.O. loved to praise White guys who go AWOL. It’s because Steve saved people who the Army actually wanted saved. 
This is why Bucky is allowed to walk free. Bucky’s body is evidence of crimes committed by Nazi Germany and the USSR. The government has nothing to lose from allowing Bucky’s story to be told and in fact it’s a total propaganda win because they can say look how bad America’s enemies are, America would never do a thing like that.
5. Nobody has to feel bad and no one learns anything
Sam Wilson does the absolute best he can by Isaiah with the museum exhibit, and we see how moved Isaiah is. However, it is so important to understand that the story that made it into the museum is a lie.
“Fearful of the ramifications of a Black super soldier,” it says, “some individuals within the government tried to erase Isaiah's story from history.”
Oh really? Some individuals, with explicitly racist motivations, tried to erase Isaiah’s story? Those individuals must have been really bad people. I guess it’s just a coincidence that this explanation exonerates the entire US Army, CIA, SHIELD, and every other organization that continues to make Isaiah’s existence a living hell to the present day.
I guess it’s just a coincidence that the average White museum visitor is going to read that story and think: wow this is so sad but you know what i’m really happy that we’ve progressed so far as a country it’s such a relief to know that would never happen today.
6. If the US Govt had an amends notebook, what would it take to cross a name off the list
Meanwhile, Isaiah Bradley can’t collect a pension, or social security, or qualify for medicare, or get a driver’s license, or open a bank account, or do anything else that requires a human to provide proof that they exist in the world. 
When Eli gets big and moves out, Isaiah won’t be able to co-sign his lease or fill in the FAFSA he needs for a college loan.
And that’s how color-blind, equal-before-the-law America allows one explicitly racist decision, made 70 years ago, to limit the future opportunities of a Black child growing up in 2020s. 
Don’t forget to call it equality! Eli will be denied that car loan the same as any other White kid whose primary caregiver is the legally-dead victim of racist state-sponsored torture.
Tumblr media
53 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
I almost screamed when I saw Captain’s dark costumes for Civil War in art book. I wish he uses it when he goes a mission for Black Panther after Civil War. 
9K notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Text
just heard someone say that “how does it feel / like it’s someone else’s / it isn’t” implies that old man steve stole that shield from another sam wilson in an alternate timeline and 🤣🤣🤣 can you imagine
3 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
two cheese balls on the staten island ferry
anyway, who remembers this classic illustration, happy pride to america’s girlfriend wife
Tumblr media
“I’d Leave the Country, but My Wife Won’t Let Me” Mirko Ilić for The Village Voice 2004
8 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
...and business is good
13 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Text
Isaiah: come in, my old enemy
Isaiah: i’m just curious whether you’re here to kill me
Isaiah: you can if you want to 😐
--
Meanwhile Bucky approaches Isaiah with admiration and dare I say love: “He was a hero. One of the ones HYDRA feared most. Like Steve.” 
--
In the decades after Goyang and before the fall of SHIELD, in those rare semi-lucid moments when the winter soldier programming was weaker, did Bucky think about Isaiah? Did he dream about Isaiah searching him out again and, like a hero, ending the Winter Soldier for good? Was it a good dream?
--
One thing we don’t know is who kept Isaiah locked up. Maybe it was SHIELD (HYDRA USA). We know they had access to him in prison. But Sharon Carter’s serum guy worked for HYDRA first and then CIA, and it was CIA, not HYDRA, that provided Isaiah’s blood. Plus the way Isaiah says even your people implies that HYDRA’s special tortures were a relatively infrequent add-on to the standard tortures he endured on a daily basis
(Also, if it was HYDRA USA, wouldn’t they have tried making him into a winter soldier so they wouldn’t have to keep relying on HYDRA USSR to solve all of their problems)
Most likely it was Army/DoD. They could have had him killed but... more profit in continuing to sell access to his body to other agencies for human experimentation
--
“I’m not a killer anymore” / “You think you can wake up one day and decide who you wanna be? It doesn't work like that” is so goddamn tragic because that’s exactly what Bucky thought before Shuri and Ayo and therapy in Wakanda helped him understand that that’s exactly how it can work and we know that Nakia’s foreign outreach program is specifically designed to help people like Isaiah but Isaiah doesn’t know that
6 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Text
Also the fact that Isaiah let a man who he only knew as his enemy into his home because he thought he was gonna kill him.... so that he can finally be free from all the trauma he's faced....
83 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
kids am i right
13 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
good vibes only
2 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
gee thanks cap
3 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Text
Slice of life comics: single parent Steve Rogers
school night routine
Tumblr media
encouraging your child’s interests I
Tumblr media
encouraging your child’s interests II
Tumblr media
parent-teacher conference
Tumblr media
BONUS: "okay, bucky. you can pee behind those crates”
Tumblr media
Captain America #6, on sale June 1941
5 notes · View notes
80yrscap · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
haven’t posted a wip here in a bit
904 notes · View notes