The Republic of California did not include all of San Diego, Tijuana, or the other major cities around them upon original formation. Those cities had fallen into civil war as the Mexican Drug Lords took advantage of the Second Great Depression to shatter the local governments’ internal controls. There were numerous military bases in the area though, including the largest American port on the western coast. They served as good bases for security and police forces to operate from, but a lack of Federal funding greatly reduced their reach. It was the wild wild west outside their security corridors, and Republic forces tried very hard not to spend much time in them. Note that there were a number of military housing neighborhoods that were basically extensions of the bases, and the Drug Lords did not enter those areas. Well. They didn’t enter twice. And those who wanted to live learned from the examples of those who tried once and didn’t walk in their very bloody shoes.
The Republic of California was born in rebellion and anarchy during the Second Great Depression. The big cities were drowning beneath the weight of homelessness, rampant diseases, and drugs wars that shattered the minds and bodies of their residents. City and State budgets alike completely collapsed, and the inland rural sections of the State simply walked away. When city or State forces tried to bring them into line, they got shot. Or they turned. Some of the cities managed to maintain order, but the majority of them fragmented and millions of people were displaced in the economic chaos that followed. A combination of inland counties and major Indian Tribes worked together to promote law and order. They had little coastal presence, as they didn’t consider the Left Coasties to be rational enough to live with by then. Though they were happy to accept the various military bases around San Diego in their little alliance of order that eventually formed the Republic of California that Jack grew up with.
The transformation of Old Texas was greatly different than what happened in California. Yes, there were big city bastions like the tri-border El Paso-Juarez-Las Cruces and the more central Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex that were worlds onto their own, but Texas still had a strong rural tradition and the two worlds had not yet gone to war with each other over the future of the State. Perhaps that is because they had a common enemy in the Mexican Drug Lords that they continued to fight. Big city central police forces and distant county sheriffs worked together on a daily basis to interdict powerful drugs and sex trafficking rings. There were many other reasons of course, but the combined result was that Texas did not break up the way California did. They did break up, but it was a far more political break up than a societal one. More than one of the new Texan States came into existence simply because they wanted a pair of Federal Senators that represented only them, in fact. Not that they admitted it at the time. That would have been an overabundance of political honesty, you know.
“You should have been raised by a loving mother and father, not some scientists in a lab.” The enduring lesson of The Boys.
I would like to say that Amazon Prime has created a fresh, new world for their recent superhero mini-series, but I can’t. Well, it IS a new world, but it is hardly fresh. It is filled with the same villains as most major movies and series of the last few decades. Selfish heroes, greedy corporations, and hypocritical Christians. Otherwise known as the Hollywood Trinity of Villainy.
Now I understand. Hollywood has been Weinsteining themselves for so many decades that they simply don’t understand John Waynes, John Carters, or Luke Skywalkers anymore. Look at how badly they wrote even Superman in the recent reboots. They can’t seem to understand what a healthy family is, or how people can be nice to each other. They haven’t seen that in Hollywood for decades, and they write what they know. Even if that is exactly the opposite of what most normal people in America know.
I will note that the MCU has been a rare exception, actually showing us real heroes in action that we could cheer for without reservation. And the movies were just fun to watch. A sideline studio came out of nowhere with second-line heroes and made so much money that their style of fluff and fun became a standard against which other movies were measured. They were successful at building a billion-dollar movie franchise out of almost nothing. Then Disney decided to buy them out. I greatly hope Disney doesn’t take the MCU in the same direction they took Star Wars.
But back to The Boys.
On the one side, we have a sociopath not-Superman, not-Batman, not-Wonder Woman, not-Aquaman, not-Flash, not-Invisible Man, and not-Stargirl. Basically the not-Justice League. Though the major difference is that they have contracts with a major corporation which they work for it and it negotiates contracts for them to go to cities all over America and protect them from criminals or other bad things.
Supes (yes, they don’t have an r in there) have TV shows and movies. They run charities and rescue organizations. Most of them don’t even wear masks. They are a central part of American society, and are pitched as really nice people. They have agents who handle them and speechwriters to tell them what to say. They are basically spokesman for the corporation or whatever charity or organization they run. Spokesman who can go out and throw a truck or stop a missile or whatever when the time comes.
On the other side, we have the people who were injured themselves, or had loved ones killed by Supes who didn’t care enough to not injure or kill people. The catalyst of this story is exactly that. A Supe runs through a nice girl and explodes her while she’s holding hands with her boyfriend/fiance and keeps going. He had something important to do, you see. And later he lies to say that she stepped out in front of him, so it wasn’t really his fault. That sets the kinda/sorta/notreally hero up to be recruited to try and prove to everyone just how sociopathic and nasty all those Supes really are.
And on another side, we have some Hollywood Christians doing there thing. I say Hollywood Christians because they are Christians that act the way Hollywood says they act. And let me say, I grew up in the Pentecostal movement that these guys are patterned after. I’ve been to the tent revivals, I’ve been to churches where people dance in the aisles, and all that stuff. I have never been someplace where the speakers make the kind of teachings and preachings that they did on this show. I would go as far as to say that the Hollywood Christians portrayed on this show run so hamfistedly counter to what the Bible really says, and what is actually taught in the Pentecostal movement as to be really bad parodies.
Of course they are portrayed with straight faces as if that is what the writers THINK Christians act like. I’ll also note that they very slightly renamed one of the most famous Christian charities in a way to leave no question at all who they are using, and them make them a central part of one of the major corrupt conspiracies the entire story is built on. So close that if I was that charity, I would be talking to my lawyers to see if there is a libel case to be made. I know in America those are hard to bring, but it really is that close.
The rest of the series would be something I could see coming from Quintin Tarantino. Violence. Language. Sexual situations. Darkness and humor mixed into a stew of dark humor and violence that left me feeling depressed with humanity when I was done. I went to see what other people thought of it, and the most common refrain I heard is that it was like what heroes would be like in the real world. Which I think says something really dark about the worldview of the people saying that.
Me, I went and watched Good Omens to renew my faith in humanity. Yes. A story about Armageddon and the Anti-Christ was more joyful and fun to watch than The Boys. Of course, Neil Gaiman did have a part in writing it, so there’s that. He makes stories about dead people funny and joyful.
Do I recommend the series? Well, if you really like dark and “realistic” stories, you will probably like it. It’s well acted, and the special effects are movie quality. And there was some great care taken in crafting it. It is a well-made series. Myself, I don’t want to see it again. And I most likely will not watch the series when it comes back for season 2. I will probably read the cliffnotes to see what dumpsters they go down next time. I simply don’t want to watch shows were bad and angry people do bad things to other bad and angry people.
I want to see heroes doing great things and winning. That’s why I like the Star Wars trilogy and the books that followed it. Why I like Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica (the original), and Buck Rogers. It’s why I write my stories that way. I want to put goodness into the world with my creative endeavors. And I want to watch stories that do the same.
The Boys is simply not for me. If it is for you, I hope you like it. But for me, I give it two thumbs down.
The dissolution of Old California was an unfriendly slide. California had been suffering from decades of one party rule that emptied the State treasuries and dumped most of their water reserves straight into the ocean. Crops were dying in the fields and several major cities suffered from plagues thought lost to the Dark Ages. Add a combination of natural and manmade fires burning down forests the size of other States, assorted other natural disasters, or nearly weekly stories about another manmade mass casualty event or domestic terror attack, and people were comparing California to the Biblical stories about Egypt back in the time of Moses. Leaders in the big cities looked down on the country bumpkins as too deplorably stupid, racist, and backwards to have any say in how they lived. And those outside the big cities were just plain done with being told how they were going to be allowed to live. The divorce between urban and rural districts, when it happened, was not a peaceful one. And as often happens in cases like that, the suburbanites got pulled along for the slide into chaos. It was not a fun time to be a Californian.

Forge of War on Amazon
Angel Flight on Amazon
Angel Strike on Amazon
Angel War on Amazon
Wolfenheim Rising on Amazon
Wolfenheim Emergent on Amazon