Alternatively, is it that he simply wants to keep fighting with the Avengers because he has nothing else tying him to the modern world, not because of any particular desire for combat? Given that Steve Rogers lost pretty much everything after waking up from the ice, maybe he feels that there's nothing left but Captain America and the mission. All in all, is Steve Rogers a true hero whose virtue and goodness compel him to always help those in need, or is he simply a (borderline) Blood Knight who needs to feel validated by fighting whenever possible and hiding behind a smokescreen of morality (or perhaps some combination of the two)? in the process and creates a real necessity for the Avengers. In Captain America: The Winter Soldier, just when Cap is thinking about getting out of the military life, he not only declares war on HYDRA, but he destroys S.H.I.E.L.D. It also throws some of Cap's previous actions into question. That might also be a way of making Captain America: Civil War less morally one-sided than the original comic indicated. As such, his anger at finding out Tony was building Ultron is significantly built on how wrong it turned out but maybe also seeing Tony's motive (releasing his friends from the burden of Earth's only defense) as Tony taking his one reason to live away from him and making him obsolete.
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