He never was, but whatever.
He never was, but whatever.
I don't think so. I took that line about her always getting what she want as meaning she's not afraid of taking what she wants, not that everything was given to her on a silver plater whenever she demanded it.
When did she move contents? Toph definitely keep getting stronger, but she was nowhere near capable of beating Ozai.
You keep posting that, but it makes no sense and would be really convulted. Seriously, I don't mean to be rude, but at this point you're comments come off as spam.
You keep posting that, why? It really wouldn't make sense the way things stand.
Well, he's a grown man, so yes, he can. I doubt that's what their disagreement was about, though.
She can't be be behind all or even most of the bandit attacks. That wouldn't make any sense. An attack her or there to scare people into joining her, yeah she probably does that, but the bandit problem is most definitely a real one whether Kuvira's around or not.
Whatever Toph's involvement in the plot is, I hope she's not too important.
Yeah, I doubt either Aang or Korra would define their lives as the avatar as a "privilege" with everything they've gone through. They might accept it, and Korra might have embraced it, but yeah after all that's happened…I wouldn't call that a privileged. And calling a bending in general a privilege doesn't work for me…
I think you're trying too hard to force an interpretation that just doesn't fit with what we've seen.
How exactly were Mako and Bolin privileged. Or for that matter, Katara and Sokka, or Aang or Korra themselves?
He lied because otherwise the others wouldn't let him kill her and he knew it. He was totally sincere in his belief however. I can't see any corruption either.
Zuko and Yin couldn't reunite because they've never meet before. The girl you're thinking of was named Jin, not Yin.
Because I father totally can't worry about his daughter and be there for her if she's in danger.
Because she can't beat all of them and it going in without a plan would be suicide.
Zaheer is far shot away from being as bad as either Sozin or Ozai. I hate hyperbole.
It's simple tactics, nothing particularly cowardly about.
You mean like the Avatar?
I never understood crying over fiction. Seriously, I've been emotionally invested in a lot of books and shows, but I've never almost cried over any of it because it's not real. This isn't me mocking your reaction, I just never got how people took these things so seriously.
Two episodes left, this was number 11 and there are 13 in the season. I don't know why people keep saying three.