Talk:Syndrome/@comment-33551642-20180628034947

Mr Incredible was right to reject Buddy. He let his emotions judge his actions and it was his fault for doing so. Mr Incredible is doing dangerous, life-risking work to save people and Buddy only sees the "hero", not the hero, if you know what I mean. He doesn't know the dangers Mr Incredible has to deal with, yet he does it because with his powers, he feels he needs to. He doesn't do it just for the thrill of it. Buddy wouldn't understand. It's like a fanboy who finally meets Batman. Sure, they know all about him but would he really take the risk in bringing the fanboy in? He will be so caught up in the emotions of fighting alongside his hero that it may distract him from the real dangers. Sure, if Mr Incredible would've taken Buddy in as his side-kick, maybe even training him, Buddy wouldn't grow up to become his archenemy. But still, Mr Incredible would've been irresponsible for taking a child in to fight alongside him anyway. Whether Mr Incredible would work alone or not, taking a child in as a side-kick would've been wrong.