MHA's Quirk System, A Most Paradoxical Part - Part 3
PART 3: Society Is the Villain - Laws, Discrimination, and Hypocrisy
The System That Creates Its Own Enemies
If you've been following this series, you know by now that MHA's quirk system is broken and its meritocracy is a lie. But here's where it gets REALLY uncomfortable: hero society isn't just flawed. It's actively villainous.
The heroes aren't fighting to fix a broken system. They're fighting to PROTECT it.
And the worst part? The villains are often more logically consistent, more morally coherent, and more honest about their motivations than the heroes who oppose them.
Let's talk about why hero society is the real antagonist of My Hero Academia.
The Quirk Laws: Criminalizing Survival
Here's something the series glosses over constantly: using your quirk in public is ILLEGAL.
Not "regulated." Not "monitored." ILLEGAL.
According toquirk restriction laws, every citizen must register their quirk with the government. Any changes or new discoveries must be updated immediately. Failure to register? You're deemed a potential villain.
Using your quirk in public without a hero license? That's a crime. Even if you're defending yourself. Even if you're saving someone's life.
Remember Gentle Criminal? He tried to save a falling window washer and accidentally interfered with a pro hero's rescue attempt. That one mistake destroyed his entire life. He was branded a criminal, barred from hero work, and pushed into actual villainy because the system offered him no path back.
The law doesn't care about your intentions. It cares about your license.
Now think about what this means for people born with quirks they can't turn off. Heteromorphs like Shoji, Tsuyu, or Spinner don't GET to "not use their quirk in public." Their quirk IS their body. They're walking violations of the law just by existing.
The system is fundamentally designed to criminalize people for biological traits they didn't choose and can't control.
Self-Defense Is Illegal [Unless You're Licensed]
Let's get even more specific: self-defense is technically legal, but only in narrow circumstances, and you can STILL be punished for "taking matters into your own hands unnecessarily."
Translation: if a villain attacks you and you defend yourself with your quirk, whether you face charges depends entirely on whether the authorities FEEL LIKE prosecuting you.
It's a system where your legal rights depend on the mood of law enforcement and how good your lawyer is.
And who do you think can afford good lawyers? The people born with powerful quirks who got into UA, became pro heroes, and now make millions from endorsement deals. Not the kid from a rural town whose electricity quirk could help his family's construction business but can't afford the licensing fees.
The system punishes the poor and powerless while protecting the rich and connected.
Heteromorph Discrimination: The Bigotry Hero Society Ignores
Now let's talk about the elephant [or lizard, or frog, or octopus] in the room:heteromorph discrimination.
Heteromorphs are people whose quirks permanently alter their physical appearance. They can't "turn off" their mutations. Spinner looks like a lizard. Shoji has multiple arms. Tsuyu looks like a frog. Gang Orca looks like an orca.
And hero society treats them like DIRT.
In rural areas, heteromorphs are beaten, tortured, and murdered by bigoted mobs who see them as "impure" or "dirty blooded." TheCreature Rejection Clanis a literal hate group dedicated to exterminating heteromorphs, and they operated OPENLY until the League of Villains killed them.
Shoji's backstory? He was attacked and scarred as a child by adults in his hometown who beat him for having extra limbs. He still wears a mask to hide the scars.
Spinner? Bullied and ostracized his entire life for his reptilian features. Driven to isolation and depression. Told he didn't belong in society.
Tsuyu and Habuko Mongoose? Struggled to make friends as kids because people were creeped out by their appearances.
This isn't "prejudice." This is systemic, violent, institutionalized bigotry.
And what does hero society do about it? NOTHING.
The heroes don't address it. The government doesn't legislate against it. UA doesn't teach about it. The Hero Public Safety Commission pretends it doesn't exist.
When a giant fox woman is turned away from an emergency shelter during a crisis because of her appearance, where's the hero outrage? Where's the policy reform? Where's the societal reckoning?
It doesn't happen. Because hero society benefits from keeping heteromorphs marginalized.
Why the System WANTS Heteromorphs Oppressed
Think about it: if heteromorphs are discriminated against, isolated, and pushed to the fringes of society, what happens?
Some of them become villains.
And when heteromorphs become villains, what does that do? It REINFORCES the stereotype that heteromorphs are dangerous and untrustworthy, which justifies further discrimination, which creates more villains.
It's a self-perpetuating cycle that benefits hero society because it creates a steady supply of "monsters" for heroes to fight, which keeps the hero industry profitable and keeps the public dependent on heroes for protection.
The system doesn't WANT to fix heteromorph discrimination. The system NEEDS villains to exist, and marginalized heteromorphs are an endless supply.
Spinner wasn't born a villain. He was CREATED by a society that rejected him from birth and gave him no other options.
The Villains Are Right [And Hero Society Knows It]
Here's the most damning part of all this: the villains make MORE SENSE than the heroes.
Stain's ideology: "Heroes have become corrupt, fame-obsessed frauds who care more about money and popularity than saving people."
Is he wrong? NO. Mount Lady literally debuts by stealing another hero's spotlight for publicity. Endeavor admits he only cares about surpassing All Might. The hero rankings are EXPLICITLY a popularity contest based on public approval, not actual effectiveness.Stain's critique is ACCURATE, even if his methods are extreme.
Spinner's ideology: "Heteromorphs are treated like subhuman garbage and hero society does nothing to stop it."
Is he wrong? NO. We SEE the discrimination. We SEE the hate groups. We SEE heroes doing NOTHING about it.
Toga's ideology: "I was born with a quirk that society deemed 'villainous,' so I was rejected, criminalized, and given no support. Hero society hates people like me for things we can't control."
Is she wrong? NO. Her quirk requires blood to function. That's not her fault. But instead of therapy, counseling, or support, she was ostracized and pushed toward villainy.
The villains are responding LOGICALLY to an illogical, hypocritical, oppressive system.
The heroes, meanwhile, are defending the status quo. They're protecting a system that criminalizes self-defense, enables hate crimes, and turns heroism into a capitalist spectacle.
And the series treats the HEROES as the good guys.
The Hero Public Safety Commission: Corruption Made Official
Let's talk about theHero Public Safety Commission, because they're the perfect embodiment of everything wrong with hero society.
The Commission:
โขTrained child assassins [Hawks] and sent them to kill people in secret
โขOrdered the execution of villains without trial [Lady Nagant]
โขCovered up hero scandals to protect the industry's image
โขPrioritized public perception over actual justice
โขOperated as an authoritarian shadow government with zero accountability
Lady Nagant, a former hero, was ordered by the Commission to assassinate peopleโvillains, corrupt heroes, whistleblowersโanyone who threatened the hero industry's reputation. When she couldn't take it anymore and killed the Commission president, SHE was thrown in Tartarus and erased from history.
The heroes are literally government-sanctioned executioners operating outside the law.
And the series wants us to root for this system? The series wants us to believe the heroes are fighting for justice?
They're not. They're fighting to preserve a corrupt, oppressive regime that benefits them at the expense of everyone else.
Why This Destroys the Story's Moral Foundation
Here's why all of this matters:
MHA is supposed to be about Deku learning what it means to be a "true hero." But the series never actually challenges the system. It never asks whether hero society SHOULD exist. It never explores alternatives. It never holds the heroes accountable for the structural violence they perpetuate.
Instead, it frames the villains as irredeemable monsters who need to be stopped, and the heroes as righteous saviors protecting the innocent.
But the series ITSELF shows us that this framing is bullshit.
The villains have legitimate grievances. The heroes are complicit in systemic oppression. The laws are unjust. The discrimination is real. The corruption is institutionalized.
And the series resolves this byโฆ having the heroes punch the villains really hard and then going back to the status quo.
No systemic reform. No accountability. No acknowledgment that hero society CREATED the villains it now fights.
The heroes win, the villains lose, and nothing changes.
That's not a satisfying resolution. That's propaganda.
What the Series Should Have Done
The series COULD have been a devastating critique of hero society. It COULD have forced the heroes to reckon with their complicity. It COULD have shown meaningful reform.
Instead, it:
โขIntroduced heteromorph discrimination in the final arc with zero buildup
โขResolved it with a single speech from Shoji telling people to "be patient"
โขKilled or imprisoned all the villains without addressing their systemic grievances
โขEnded with hero society largely unchanged
โขFramed this as a "happy ending"
The series set up one of the most interesting moral conflicts in modern shounenโheroes defending an unjust system vs. villains trying to burn it downโand then REFUSED to engage with it meaningfully.
It's cowardice. It's intellectually dishonest. And it undermines everything the series claimed to be about.
The Bottom Line
Hero society is the villain. The heroes are its enforcers. The villains are its victims.
The laws criminalize survival. The discrimination is institutionalized. The corruption is systemic. The heroes benefit from the oppression of others and fight to maintain it.
And the series treats this as HEROIC.
MHA had the chance to be a revolutionary deconstruction of the superhero genre. Instead, it became an apologia for state-sanctioned violence, systemic inequality, and authoritarian control.
The villains aren't the problem. The system is. And the heroes refuse to acknowledge it.
Discussion Questions
โขDo you think MHA should have sided with the villains, or at least acknowledged their points as valid?
โขCould hero society have been reformed, or did it need to be torn down completely?
โขIs Stain a villain or an anti-hero? What about Spinner?
โขShould the series have addressed heteromorph discrimination earlier, or was it always meant to be a minor subplot?
โขDo you think the heroes are complicit in the system's oppression, or are they just products of it?
Drop your takes in the comments. Let's argue about whether hero society deserves to exist.