I never said she didn't. I never said Vicky was a saint, just that people demonize her. She is casually violent and almost never thinks things through when she really really should.
Which is an
amazingly bad attitude for someone who can bench press a cement truck. Just saying.
Or were you referring to the fandom attitude to her? Which isn't far off the mark, but you forgot 'oblivious to obvious clues' (never seeing that Amy's attracted to her), 'has a very black and white attitude toward wrongdoing' (when Amy does the mental adjustment, refuses to believe her when she says she wants to change it back), 'serious anger issues' (willing to threaten the Birdcage for Taylor & co, kicks a
dumpster at a fleeing suspect).
One of her core problems is that she really, really sucks at empathy. In the bank, with a knife at her sister's throat, she refuses to de-escalate, and in fact threatens two teenage girls with the Birdcage (doesn't matter if she can't follow through; the threat is enough). When Amy's refusing to heal Mark, she doesn't even try to understand why Amy won't do brains. It's "You won't help Dad, I hate you now." Afterward, once Amy heals him, she's happy again, even to the point of offering to help Amy make it as a family as just the two of them, even as Amy desperately tries to tell her to back off. And you can see how badly that ends.
If she'd listened to someone else, tried to think things through from another person's perspective, even once during the story? Things may have turned out very differently.
I agree. But people constantly go on about Vicky mind raping Amy into loving her. Vicky's aura likely had an effect, but what exactly it was was never confirmed, just implied there was one. Amy, in the text, explicitly did do that to Vicky. It was a moment of weakness but she did it. The hypocrisy annoys me to no end.
Yeah, true. A moment of weakness. Like no other human being ever had a moment of weakness.
Let's list her problems at that moment, because you apparently didn't look through them earlier:
1) At the end of her rope,
[WB himself said that she'd been emotionally crumbling since before the bank job]
2) desperately lonely,
[ten years of having only her sister as family, no mother or father figure worth noting, and hating herself for loving her sister like that. TEN. YEARS.]
3) haunted by her father's shadow,
["Oh, hai. Your real father's a supervillain who went the Birdcage. Yay?" She'd been scared that her father was a villain, and that she would become evil like him for years. And she's just now gotten confirmation of at least part of that. How does she feel about that? Fucking terrified.]
4) her shame at being unwilling and unable to help Mark until now,
[This is due to her one ironclad rule. "Don't mess with brains". Not because it was difficult. Because it was easy. And then she was faced with the impossible choice: to let Mark die, or to break her one unbreakable rule. So she broke it. And now she's hating herself because a) she didn't help him before and b) because she broke her rule. So there's that going in her head as well.]
5) the idea that one of the Slaughterhouse Nine thought she belonged with them?
[This would fuck anyone up.]
6) She was losing everything so quickly. Victoria was all she had, and it was the choice between abandoning that for everyone's good and keeping Victoria close.
[She's faced with losing her one family member. Because now she's broken her rule, she sees herself as being on the path to emulating her father.]
Okay, just gonna say here? I'm an
adult. I have more than thirty years of life experience over and above what Amy's had. But if I had that shit weighing on my mind, I cannot honestly say that I'd do much better. She's a teenager, with angst basically built into her character, who's had her entire world fucked up beyond all repair, and the one person she loves is hugging her and saying they'll make a life together -- but she knows Vicky doesn't love her the same way. All she's ever
wanted was for Vicky to love her the same way. It wouldn't have been so much a choice to do it as a split-second relaxation of the determination
not to do it.
As for the other side of the coin:
Vicky consistently and repeatedly exposed Amy to her aura from when Amy was in her early teens (a time when anyone is hormonally vulnerable) and was also her only dependable 'family'. The aura probably didn't do it all on its own, but I would amazingly astonished if it wasn't a factor.
After all, let's look at the evidence here:
1) Glory Girl's aura specifically makes her allies see her as amazing.
2) Amy loves her, despite not wanting to.
But wait, there's more.
There are several really big hints that something's wrong in this passage:
Interlude 2 said:
"This isn't just a team, Ames," Victoria told her, "We're a family. We're your family."
The man lying just a matter of feet away stirred, then groaned, long and loud.
"My adoptive family," Amy mumbled into Victoria's shoulder, "And stop trying to use your frigging power to make me all squee over how amazing you are. Doesn't work. I've been exposed so long I'm immune."
"It hurts," the man moaned.
"I'm not using my power, dumbass," Victoria told Amy, letting her go, "I'm hugging my sister. My awesome, caring and merciful sister."
Amy thinks Vicky's using her power, but Vicky says she isn't. This means that either a) Amy's feeling the same emotions that the power normally awakens in people, or b) Vicky's
lying.
If a), then:
1) Vicky
totally fucking misses the fact that Amy feels that way about her
all the time
2) It's really telling that what Amy feels about Vicky is
identical to the feeling of being exposed to the aura.
3) Vicky totally misses that Amy believes she's immune because
she's been exposed for so long. (Huge danger signal right there)
3a) When in reality, Amy simply
never feels any differently.
If b), then Vicky is a lying, manipulative bitch who cold-heartedly uses her sister as a healing resource.
I'm inclined to go with a) (Vicky is a
moron when it comes to the effect of her powers on her sister) but b) is still a possibility.
In the same paragraph where he says she was not mistreated. You are the one saying she should be criminally charged with a felony for her treatment of Amy. I'm not saying she wasn't neglected or that Carol was a good mother, just that people blow things way the fuck out of proportion for Vicky and Carol while ignoring any flaws Amy has. And in doing so usually turn Amy into a boring shell of a character.
Who's saying that Carol should be criminally charged for her canonical treatment of Amy?
I know exactly what he said. When he said "that" in his reply, what exactly was he referring to? The post he replied to was quite long and involved. So what parts of it was he referring to? Wildbow has been known to offer short and vague replies to things.
Pretty sure he was referring to the
question. You know, where someone asked if Vicky's aura had an effect on Amy to make her fall in love with Vicky. He was wondering if someone noticed (perhaps) the correlation between Vicky's power and Amy's feelings toward Vicky. To say "I'm not sure which 'that' he was referring to, so I'm going to rule that answer as meaningless" is disingenuous and deliberately missing the point.
Why would I do that for something I haven't been saying? My whole point is that people in the fandom demonize Carol and Vicky and attribute things to them that the text does not support.
Such as? (Examples please).
At the same time they ignore the flaws that make Amy an interesting character and turn her into a one dimensional character. So all three characters are turned into one dimensional caricatures of their canon selves.
Examples please.