In a superhero world adjusted to the fact there are superbeings and normal people are attacked by then, yes Government agencies would adapt to that and be able to try and provide protection.
No, they would not. Providing personal protection for individuals is not their job or within their legal authority. Again, making shit up does not make it true or sensible.
Yes. However, the hero was thoughtless and associated with them in both identities and thus is responsible for putting them in danger. So now they need to know about the danger to take precautions.
Once again: consciously involving civilians in superhero business is placing them in danger for no justifiable reason. Two, there are no precautions against the endless numbers of super-villains who all have distinct powers, methods of operation, etc., that the superhero cannot stop outright even when he's the only one facing them. He or she cannot possibly protect them, nor are they ever going to be "prepared" to deal with super-villains, unless this miracle is the product of especially poor storytelling.
Again, it's on the hero for thoughtlessly putting the target on them to begin with.
Nope. You're trying to shift the argument again. I said:
Which no regular person signed up for and would not like such a dangerous imposition on their lives. If one is to accept characters as behaving somewhat like real people, then said characters would not willingly send their lives into danger and chaos for some irrational reason that can never be justified with reason.
The only thing on the hero is being so irresponsible that he or she actually believed involving his very fragile, John & Jane Q. Average relatives / friends in his life of dangers they will ever be "prepared" to face, handle, much less understand. Real people would not appreciate the hero deciding--of
his or
her free will--to involve--essentially draft their loved ones into a fight they never needed to know about/or face, and would not under every other circumstance of life.
They tell them that they ARE CIA, NSA and other similar positions, even if they don't tell them exactly what their position is. They do not lie to their spouses over everything.
You really do not know what you're talking about. No one in the CIA or NSA is opening up the "book" of his or her job, what they see/know/do to relatives, not only due to the rules of the agencies, but on a personal level, for the safety of their relatives.
We need more stories where once the hero's ID comes out to people they associated with in both identities, they get chewed out for how they endangered them.
Unrealistic and lacking any creative value whatsoever.