Mono
(Based off and Some after the episode distant sun)
If youâre wondering why I and so many others are so upset by Mon-El and his relationship with Kara, let me list out some of behavioral issues, so that you can better understand why heâs not just bad for Kara, but bad for television and its young viewers, as well.
Heâs selfish, first and foremost.
Mon-El wants to make himself a better person, not because a good twinkle in his heart tells him to, but because thatâs how to best serve Mon-Elâs desires. Mon-El wants Kara; Kara is a good person; Mon-El only wants to be good to win over Kara. He doesnât care about endangering anyone else as long as Kara is safe. In âDistant Sunâ, Mon-El even suggested that the pair run away to another planet together to escape Karaâs bounty (placed by his mother). He doesnât care that Kara would leave behind her home, her family, and the city who needs her; he only cares that he is with her.Â
He has no concept of respect.
At one point during âStar-Crossed,â Mon-El pleaded with Kara to tell him how to fix their relationship because according to his âresearch,â she should have already forgiven him. Kara doesnât give in because Mon-El has never listened to a single thing Kara has told him. She taught him that in order to be a hero, he needed to trust her and to protect civilians. He ignored her. She told him to go get Alex so that she could save the kidnapped humans on Maldoria. He ignored her. She asked him not to tell everyone about their relationship and ten seconds later, heâsurpriseâignored her wishes. Mon-El doesnât respect Kara as a girlfriend, as a hero, or as an equal. Sheâs pretty and he wants her and heâs used to getting what he wants, either through manipulation, charm, or just by whining about it.Â
Moreover, when Kara disagrees with Mon-El, he lashes out at her. Things Mon-El has said TO KARA when things arenât going his way:
âYouâre no saint! You just fly around like youâre pure of heart, but that is crap because you love the attention. You are not selfless.â
âI knew you were full of yourself, like a little bit, but this is off the charts.â
â(angrily) Iâm sorry that I was defending your HONOR.âÂ
He doesnât trust Kara.
Kara has been a superhero for a while now, but even more recent episodes, Mon-El STILL does not trust her decisions or her abilities. As she goes out to face HIS enemies, even though heâs also super-powered, he tells her:
Mon-El:Â âBe careful.â Kara:Â âAlways am.â Mon-El:Â âRespectfully disagree.â
That is not how a changed man behaves. That is not how a man who loves and trusts his girlfriend behaves.
In âDistant Sunâ, he doesnât trust in Karaâs ability to talk out a problem and instead believes the issue is hopeless. Kara wants to solve the issue by talking Queen Rhea, but Mon-El has already written that off as an option because he never even gives Kara a chance to prove her abilities. Even though Mon-Elâs parents are the problem, itâs one thatâs left to Kara to solve. While that is her job as a hero, one that she will never begrudge, Mon-El never offers insight into how to take them down, he only reminds her that her plans wonât work. As he does in most tense situations on the show. In fact, he responds to most situations with violence.Â
âWould you like to see my superpower? âCause I will just rip you apart with my bare hands right here, if youâre interested in that.â
He considers himself a hero
This might seem like a small nitpicky detail, but I think itâs rather telling of his character. Mon-El tells his parents that he is âalso a hero.â Now, Iâm sure that MON-EL believes he truly is a hero, but on Supergirl, weâve never seen him exhibit that behavior. When has Mon-El truly sacrificed his own sake for the good of others? Others, not Kara. We know that he loves Kara and he, I genuinely believe, would do anything for her. He gave himself up to his parents just to save her life. But that does not make him a HERO. It makes him selfless where she is concerned because HE loves her and HE cannot lose her. Mon-El wouldnât be as selfless if he were forced to sacrifice himself for a stranger, as Kara has done hundreds of times. (How many Daxamites were killed when he blew a hole in the side of a spaceship to save Kara?)
Heâs taking away from other beloved relationships
My biggest qualm with Mon-El is that Kara seems to have no identity outside out of him anymore. Where she goes, he follows, and itâs the SuperFriends who suffer. James has been relegated to being a background character. Jâonn hardly had a line each episode. And you canât tell me that a year ago Alex âmy sister is my lifeâ Danvers would let Mon-El take her unconscious sister out of her sight. Alex went into Karaâs Hell last season to save her and now weâre left to believe that she leaves that âsavingâ up to Mon-freaking-El? Rao no.
Instead of cute SuperFriends game nights on the show, every episode of Supergirl begins and ends with Mon-El. Enough is enough.
Mon-Elâs Defense
In last weekâs episode, âStar-Crossed,â Mon-El wasnât painted in the best light. Yet, I want to make clear that my dislike of the character actually has very little to do with his flashbacks to the escape from Daxam. Was he a pampered sleaze? Sure, but his escape was chaotic. As asteroids fell to the earth, waking him from sleep, his guard wrenched him from bed and then thrust him into a shuttle. I can hardly make coffee 30 minutes after waking, so I can forgive his leaving Daxam how he did. I can also forgive him initially hiding his identity from Kara and the DEO. He didnât know them. He had no reason to trust them. As royalty, it was safest for him to keep quiet. And I can understand his hesitation in telling her the truth after learning they were trustworthy. He had, in his mind, shed his royal ways and begun a new path on a new world.
However, as soon as invaders started asking for him and threatened Earth, he should have spoken up. By not telling the truth, he endangered everyone. I will concede that Mon-El clearly grew up in an abusive household. His father is an entitled slave-owner and his mother suffers from some Pillars of the Earth-style son obsession that clearly isnât healthy. However, weâve watched Lena Luthor, a character who also grew up in a very manipulative environment, become a hero in her own right, not because she wanted to win Karaâs heart, but because it was the right thing to do.
Even though I compare Mon-El and Lenaâs backgrounds, none of this is intended to contribute to the ship war between Karamel and Supercorp. While Iâm an avid shipper of the latter, Iâd be just as happy if Kara were with James again or if she stayed single. However, if the writers are adamant that Mon-El is here to stay, there needs to be some serious changes.Â
The Redemption Arc
None of this is to say that Mon-El and the TV Douchebag trope cannot be redeemed. Goodness knows TV and movies love trying to prove to viewers that jerky boyfriends are just waiting to blossom into the âgood guyâ underneath. Steve, from Stranger Things, proved to viewers that being a douchebag is not an incurable disease. Now, Steve suffered more from having a poor choice in friends than he did from being a spoiled jerk, but he still had his issues in the early episodes of Stranger Things. And while Steve and Mon-El arenât the same (Steve never pressured Nancy into sex, never made fun of her friends, and never manipulated her into staying together with promises of being better), thereâs enough similarities that I can say with hope that Mon-El can be rehabilitated. However, it requires the same treatment Steve received in Stranger Things: Mon-El needs to learn to live without Kara.
Hereâs the thing: for all Mon-Elâs flaws, of which there are many, how many of them are actively improving as he spends time with Kara, reaffirming his love for her?
Iâll tell you: none.
Because Mon-El has no real reason to change, no reason to improve. Kara broke up with him and less than 24 hours later, they were back together. Despite his ridiculous actions, Kara has defended Mon-El at every turn. She followed him onto an unknown warship. She stood up to his parents. She faced Kryptonite, TWICE. Through it all, Kara has been his biggest advocate, because thatâs who she is. But if Mon-El wants to be better for her, if Mon-El wants to earn her love, he has to leave her and see who he is outside of Kara Danvers. He needs to clean up the messes he makes, not because Kara is watching, but because itâs the right thing to do. And right now, I donât think he has that kind of selflessness in him.
(This is not my work I found it and I thought I should share it)
















