While on stake outs Henry Heywood/Commander Steel would sing for the team and often tried to get Amaya to sing along, with no success. Against the JSA's discouragement to fraternize however, Amaya and the teams' leader Rex Tyler/Hourman fell in love, and planned to leave the JSA once the war was over. While serving, Amaya would grow very homesick and often worry about the safety of her village without her there to protect it. In the the 1940s, during World War II, Amaya was recruited into the Justice Society of America, a secret organization dedicated to opposing the Nazis and to join The Soviet Union and The United States. This item had been previously used by her mother and her grandmother. In her adulthood, she was given the Anansi Totem, which gave her the ability to channel the power of any animal in existence. She also read about Chicago in the 1920s from several of her mother's magazines, and wished she could have seen it. As a child Amaya wanted to be a police officer despite female law enforcement being generally unheard of. Unlike Sarah and Ollie, Siren really needs to hit rock bottom to change, so my guess is that she'll be responsible for her father's death and then with Sarah's help she'll start down a new path.Amaya was born in Africa in the Zambesi Village. Her romance with Diaz in her father's home shows you that she's too weak, cruel and opportunistic to change on her own or even with her father's help. On the other hand, Siren enjoys it, because it's wrong, like Sociopaths and serial killers, she knows her actions are wrong, but does it anyway, not because its for the greater good, but because it feels good. Ollie's revelation from last season that he enjoys killing isn't the same, he enjoys it because it makes him feel righteous, like he's correcting a wrong and objectively he usually is doing the right thing. Oliver's worst actions were never motivated by money, accumulation of power or other forms of personal gain, whereas Siren's actions have been solely motivated by greed, money, power, or the pleasure she receives from destroying, killing and hurting people. approved.Īs for Siren, she's clearly struggling with her dark side and her feelings for her faux-father, but, unlike Oliver, she isn't actually worthy of redemption. Also, ARGUS has known who the Green Arrow is all along and they've never made it a point to arrest or detain him, in fact they sponsor and support his vigilantism, so there's an argument to be made that his actions are secretly Govt. Given how awful and unstable his world truly is, Ollie is a paragon of restraint. Star City and the World would have been destroyed at least a half a dozen times, if he didn't take extreme action. More importantly, Ollie clearly lives in a failed state/city/world, where the normal rules don't and can't apply. I don't recall the specifics, but the only killing I thought was truly morally questionable was when he snapped the neck of a guy in a Russian prison in one of the flashbacks, who may have been an innocent informer or the lawyer of a rival mob boss. Correct me if I'm wrong, but everyone or nearly everyone he's killed has either been a remorseless killer or worked for one and at his worst Ollie was killing to survive, prevent the death of those closest to him or the destruction of the city. Just to weigh in, Oliver isn't THAT bad a person. Of course that isn't an excuse, but the idea is that if somebody as bad as Oliver Queen can find redemption, then Laurel can too. She's had a pretty bad life, especially in comparison to her counterpart. This isnt the first time Oliver/Lance offered to help Siren but she always chooses a villain for assistance. I believe in forgiveness, so I'm hoping E2 Laurel repents somehow. Well, you're a very ice cold person in that case lmao. Sure Lance situation is terrible but Siren despite biologically being his daughter is a complete stranger who shouldn't be trusted.
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