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Beginning with House of Xand Powers of X, and culminating in the Fall of X, the ersatz utopian nation of Krakoa has serious elitist undertones. Where once mutants could be seen as the underdog’s representative of real-world minority groups, in Krakoa they are the ones oppressing others.
Krakoa Preaches Mutant Superiority

From the very beginning, there were concerns about the establishment of Krakoa and its mutant elitist policies. After decades of mistreatment, Professor X and the rest of the X-Men had had enough of humanity’s bigotry. Where once Professor X preached the virtues of peaceful coexistence, he began to advocate for separatism. This represented a capitulation to the position that Magneto had always advocated, and which was a primary source of the conflict between Professor X and his X-Men and Magneto and his minions.
Upon the creation of Krakoa, almost every mutant on the planet relocated to the island for their safety. However, the government of Krakoa was not content with representing only those who had relocated to the island. It declared that all mutants everywhere are, by reason of their genetics alone, superior and citizens of Krakoa who are entitled to diplomatic immunity. A consequence of this doctrine appears in the murder trial of the vicious killer Sabertooth in the United States. After he was arrested, Emma Frost, acting on behalf of Krakoa, barged into the middle of the trial and demanded the release of Sabretooth, proclaiming his immunity and the natural superiority of mutants over humanity. She threatened to kill everyone in the courtroom if Krakoa’s demands for Sabretooth’s release were not met. Thus, by reason of its doctrine, Krakoa determined that it had the unilateral right to interfere with a foreign court system and to free a murderer, on the grounds that he and, by extension, all other mutants, are above human laws due to their genetic superiority.
The situation in Krakoa itself isn’t any better. Only mutants are permitted to enter the country freely. Ordinary people are either banned or need sponsorship by a mutant — and even then, are the target of intense questioning by Krakoan authorities. These isolationist and discriminatory immigration policies make Krakoa appear less a sanctuary for an oppressed minority than an apartheid concentration of power based on genetic superiority. Magneto even proclaims to a group of human world leaders that they “have new gods now.” And, based on the demonstrated abilities of Krakoan mutants, there may be some truth to what Magneto says. The mutants of Krakoa instantly can create life-saving medicines, terraform Mars, and even resurrect the dead.
It is worth noting that Krakoa is acknowledged to be a morally dubious dystopia. Even Professor X admits that he made a mistake in creating an isolationist mutant nation. Moreover, Krakoa’s isolationism and its elitist embrace of the idea of mutant superiority only worsened over time. The first law of Krakoa became to “make more mutants” by encouraging mutants to have more children. Anyone who objected to this law was quickly thrown into The Pit of Exiles, a hellish prison from which there was no escape. While the leaders of Krakoa claim that the law is to “replenish the mutant population,” it obviously has an unsettling parallel to government-enforced reproduction programs to produce children with genetic superiority. In trying to create a utopia, Professor X made an elitist mutant dictatorship.









