The film Supergirl presents a figure whose very existence provokes disquiet among those who still believe that power must answer to law. Endowed with capacities that place her beyond the reach of ordinary sanctions, she nevertheless pursues her ends through the familiar channels of personal grievance and calculated deception. In her rivalries, no external authority intervenes to impose proportion or restraint; the scale of her strength converts every slight into an existential threat that others must simply endure.
Her status compounds the hazard. As an alien whose arrival and continued presence in the American republic lack any lawful warrant, she embodies the precise category of criminal presence that sovereign authority exists to exclude and, where necessary, to expel. Yet the mechanisms of denaturalization and deportation, already strained in lesser cases, collapse entirely before her. No power on Earth can compel her removal, however manifest the violation of the nation’s fundamental right to determine its own membership.
What remains is a condition in which the most volatile human impulses—envy, vengeance, and duplicity—operate without the customary brakes of custom, statute, or superior force. Citizens who have long relied on these brakes to preserve a tolerable peace now confront their absence in the person of one who cannot be disciplined and cannot be sent away. The screen offers not diversion but a stark image of authority’s final abdication before strength joined to foreign allegiance and unchecked will.
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