I wasn't fond of the Erg/Caitlin storyline, since it played into a tired cliche -- the story wherein a victim of systemic racism, who has every right to be angry at how the establishment built by the dominant race has victimized him, learns that his bigotry toward a specific member of the dominant race is unwarranted because she's enlightened and good. It's too self-congratulatory, like the kind of stories that white writers in the '60s and '70s did about race relations, with the angry young black men realizing they were wrong to hate all the white people because this one particular white person was good. The kind of story that paints the victims of systemic racism as the "real" racists who need to learn that things aren't so bad, and thereby rejects the legitimacy of their fight for equality.
It would've been a more honest story if Caitlin had gone down there wearing the shield of her enlightenment and tolerance toward all mutants, only to discover that some of the Morlocks creeped her out or that she unthinkingly condescended to them, and thereby learned that the mindset of privilege is not so easy to cast off entirely.
I did like the revelation that the reason Reeva and the Purifier-backing TV pundit are working together is because they both want a race war. It's reflective of the real-life symbiosis between extremist groups. Whenever American conservative pundits denounce Islam as an evil religion, they're giving the Islamist militants and terrorists exactly what they want. Hate groups need to sell the idea that their enemies are the ones who hate them. The people on both sides who reach out and try to make peace are a greater threat to the hate groups' agenda than the people on the opposite side who want a fight as much as they do. The polarization and conflict is exactly what both opposing hate groups want and need, so they're in a symbiotic relationship with each other.
It would've been a more honest story if Caitlin had gone down there wearing the shield of her enlightenment and tolerance toward all mutants, only to discover that some of the Morlocks creeped her out or that she unthinkingly condescended to them, and thereby learned that the mindset of privilege is not so easy to cast off entirely.
I did like the revelation that the reason Reeva and the Purifier-backing TV pundit are working together is because they both want a race war. It's reflective of the real-life symbiosis between extremist groups. Whenever American conservative pundits denounce Islam as an evil religion, they're giving the Islamist militants and terrorists exactly what they want. Hate groups need to sell the idea that their enemies are the ones who hate them. The people on both sides who reach out and try to make peace are a greater threat to the hate groups' agenda than the people on the opposite side who want a fight as much as they do. The polarization and conflict is exactly what both opposing hate groups want and need, so they're in a symbiotic relationship with each other.