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It's not the first time a comic character has been fed up with being seen as part of U.S. policy. In the 1970s, Marvel Comics' Captain America -- aka Steve Rogers -- gave up his famed suit and shield and adopted the identity Nomad around the time the Watergate scandal began heating up. News of the Superman decision has drawn critical comments in blogs and online forums, but DC Comics says it not about criticizing the U.S. In fact, the publisher says, the Man of Steel remains as American as apple pie, baseball and small-town life. "Superman is a visitor from a distant planet who has long embraced American values," DC's co-publishers Jim Lee and Dan DiDio said Thursday in a statement. "As a character and an icon, he embodies the best of the American Way." And, they added, Superman, like his U.S. citizen alter-ego, Clark Kent, remains, "as always, committed to his adopted home and his roots as a Kansas farm boy from Smallville." ___ Online:
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