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Superman Just Came Out of the Closet to the DC Universe

The son of Superman has already been revealed as bisexual, and in Superman: Son of Kal-El, Jon Kent has just approach out in front of the entire world.

Jon shares a celebratory kiss and semi-embrace with his boyfriend/journalist/freedom fighter Jay Nakamura in the closing moments of Superman: Son of Kal-El #15, written by Tom Taylor, drawn by Cian Tormey and Scott Hanna, colored by Federico Blee and Matt Herms and lettered by Dave Sharpe. The adolescent Superman, Jay in his superhero guise as Gossamer and the rest of the Revolutionaries contain just liberated the island nation of Gamorra from its despotic president Henry Bendix.

RELATED: Superman Hints At Jon Kent's Most Dangerous Flaw

Their kiss is more than just a celebration of victory and positive statement of their feelings for each other -- it's also the first day Jon is seen publicly making his sexual orientation recognizable. The two first shared a touch privately in Taylor and John Timms' Superman: Son of Kal-El #5, when Jon sought refuge in Jay's Metropolis apartment after his powers were temporarily enhanced beyond his control during a battle with Bendix.



Editorial Note:Ok, first and foremost, and I hate that I have to execute this every second when speaking about LGBT anything. We here at The Outerhaven are supportive and acknowledge the LGBT community and the struggles that they face (apologies if I’m missing letters, there are too many to always keep up on for me). We do not hate any part of the people at all, with many members on the team having family and friends who are of the community or are a part of the people themselves. The monitoring article is not an attack on them, nor the representation of them. We celebrate the fact that there are more uses of LGBT people in media when it is done right, and not done for marketing purposes as you’ll see outlined in this article.

Dateline – October 11, 2021 – Twitter calls this #ComingOutDay, another visibility day for the LGBT people, proclaiming a harmless space/day for people who might be hiding their LGBT lifestyle in phobia of hatred, backlash, and other negative results of proclaiming that they are Gay, Bi, Gender non-conforming, etc. For those people who are “in hiding”, this is a superb thing, a collective showing that there is support out there for people

DC’s New Superman, Jon Kent, Comes Out as Bisexual in Upcoming Comic

In a landmark moment in comic book history, Jonathan Kent — the son of Clark Kent, aka Superman, and Lois Lane — is coming out as bisexual on the pages of DC Comics, the publisher announced on Monday, which is also National Coming Out Day.

Jon Kent, currently known as “the Superman of Earth,” will come out in the Nov. 9 issue of “Superman: Son of Kal-El #5” when he starts a romantic relationship with reporter Jay Nakamura — indicating the Kryptonian apple does not fall far from the tree.

The ruling to have the superhero currently carrying the mantle of the Man of Steel come out as bisexual is the most high-profile example yet of comic book publishers expanding the scope of LGBTQ representation within their pages. In August, DC published an issue in which Tim Drake — aka Robin, Batman’s loyal sidekick — also came out as bisexual. Other major LGBTQ comic characters contain DC’s Batwoman, Harley Quinn and Alan Scott (aka the first Green Lantern), and Marvel’s Iceman, America Chavez (aka Miss America) and Northstar —

Superman comes out as bisexual

Nemesis said:

What I am talking about is if Hal Jordan was green lantern alone non stop until today and John Stewart was given the mantle the crazies would be falling over themselves screaming how "GREEN LANTERN IS NOW A BLACK MAN!!!!!"

Essentially pretend the past 50 years with the arc didn't happen and he became Green Lantern today. Not way back when.

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You ever stopped and wonder why these comic book readers who had supported dozens of minority comic book characters throughout the decades suddenly became so much more skeptical and antagonistic to current year minority characters? Do you honestly believe that the comic book readers in the 1960s who enthusiastically embraced characters like Chris Claremont's Storm or Stan Lee's Black Panther suddenly were less racist than today's readers? Are the readers who made Todd McFarlane's Spawn one of the biggest superheroes during the 1990s all gone? No, of course not.

What happened was that we finally possess a measure of what woke writers are capable of after reading years of their writing. It's not good - Stories with low

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