Guardian (James Hudson; also known as Weapon Alpha or Vindicator) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by John Byrne, the character made his first appearance in The Uncanny X-Men #109 (February 1978) which was co-plotted by Byrne and his long-time collaborator Chris Claremont.[1]

The character is a founding member and leader of Alpha Flight. He was designed to be the Canadian equivalent of Captain America, hence his costume markings are modeled after the Canadian flag. Guardian is often confused with Captain Canuck, another Canadian-themed superhero with similar costume and superpowers.[2]


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However, Hudson's girlfriend, Heather MacNeil, uses political connections in the Canadian government to persuade Am-Can to waive the charges against him. As a result, Department H is formed, a secret branch of the Canadian Department of National Defence, and Hudson is named as head of operations. Inspired by the debut of the Fantastic Four, James Hudson planned to create a superhero team for Canada.[6] He started out with a prototype superhero team called the Flight which had Wolverine as one of its members.[7]

Following his prototype team the Flight, Hudson forms Alpha Flight as a superhero team for the Canadian government and develops his exoskeleton into a battle suit. As Weapon Alpha, Hudson sought to capture Wolverine, who had left Canada and joined the X-Men. He accidentally injured Moira MacTaggert in the process.[6] He then led Alpha Flight in battle against the X-Men to capture Wolverine.[8] After that mission failed, he made no further attempts to forcibly return Wolverine to Canada.

He's aided by a group of boys known as the Newsboy Legion, to whom he is, literally, a guardian, having volunteered to take them in rather than allowing them to be sent to prison; he does so on the grounds that they're basically good kids who just needed a chance.[5] The Legion grows up to become the heads of the Cadmus Project, subsequently saving Harper's life by transferring his mind from his old, dying body into a younger clone of himself.[1]

Science Police team leaders DuBarry and Daniels, along with several prison guards, are killed during the events of New Krypton when a team of Kandorians led by Commander Gor assault Stryker's Island and demand custody of Parasite.[12] The Science Police Control 'Rachel' tasks Guardian to act as a liaison between the Metropolis Police Department and a coalition of superheroes in bringing justice for the fallen science police officers and prison guards.[13] After the Kandorians leave Earth, Guardian is appointed Field Commander of the Science Police, as replacement for DuBarry and Daniels, due in part to his cloned memories of Jim Harper as a police officer and Guardian as a superhero.[14] He is asked by Superman to help Mon-El, offering him a job with the Science Police and mentoring him on how to be a hero.

Dark Guardian is a community activist in Staten Island, New York City. He is the founder of the New York Ronin, as well as a member of the Guardian Angels, and has been known to work with other superheroes to keep the streets safe. He appears to be inactive.

\"The idea is to teach martial arts and self-defense but also to teach heroic ideas and values at the same time,\" Pollak told ABC News on Wednesday. \"Whether that's how to deal with bullies or how to help other people in the community, there will be a whole big curriculum to teach those things and we'll use superheroes to help learn lessons in the classroom.\"

Pollak, 29, is no stranger to vigilante crime-fighting. As the Dark Guardian, he has spent one to two nights a week for 10 years doing \"superhero\" acts in New York, from patrolling tough neighborhoods at night while wearing a bulletproof vest to walking around handing out food and money to the needy.

\"I think it's something I got when I was a young kid,\" Pollak said. \"I didn't have a lot of positive role models, and looked up to superheroes and what they stood for, how they go out of their way to help somebody or save somebody. I wanted to emulate that in real life.\"

Pollak is part of a group of like-minded fighters known as the New York Initiative, and two fellow superheroes known as \"Zero\" and \"Spider\" will help Pollak run the superhero school, he said. The group hopes to open the school in Brooklyn sometime in early 2014, and is currently fund raising through Indiegogo to help fund it.

Pollak is not the first to adopt a superhero persona in order to fight crime; a group known as the Rain City Superhero Movement in Seattle, Wash., grew to fame last year after a member known as \"Phoenix Jones\" used pepper spray on a group dancing.

The Guardian is a superhero legacy that is notorious for its many clones. The Golden Age Guardian was Jim Harper, a police officer in Metropolis' Suicide Slum, friend and ally of the Newsboy Legion. He was a member of the war-time All-Star Squadron. He is the great-uncle of Roy Harper, Jamie Harper and "Famous Bobby" Harper.

Pollak, dressed in a homemade superhero costume of a black and red leather jacket and pants and a bulletproof vest, has been a one-man band tackling the city's seedy underbelly for more than a decade.

First conceptualised in 2006 as a community project by a group of Tokusatsu fans who envisioned their own local superhero, the idea has since transformed into a universe of colourful characters on screen and on print, now collectively known as the Sacred Guardians Universe, with Singa as its flagship character.

Borrowing genre conventions and employing special effects filming techniques from classic Tokusatsu shows with the rich culture and mythology of the Southeast Asian region, Singa aims to deliver a heartwarming, imaginative and action-packed modern superhero story to viewers of all ages.

Give a child, or two, a gift that they will play with and pray with. This adorable Catholic Company exclusive bear will teach children to ask their guardian angel for help and protection in times of need. A mask and cape are included to transform the bear from ordinary to superhero. The child's name comes embroidered onto the bear's stomach, so you won't forget whose is whose!

But of course, where would a superhero be without their trusty sidekicks? Every immunity instigator needs a few faithful partners to assist them on their mission to prevent sickness invaders! As well as Captain Antibody and General T-Cell, there is the Guardian of the Vials. Without them, no immunity victory parade would ever commence.

After revealing his identity during Reign's terraformation of Earth, James soon became a deputized superhero of the National City Police Department. He resigned from CatCo when its new owner, Andrea Rojas, started diminishing the importance of journalism. James moved back to Calvintown and used a loophole in the contract that kept him from being a reporter to purchase the local newspaper, The Calvintown Gazette, and become its publisher. He now uses the paper to fight against the town's corrupt justice system.

During his time at the Daily Planet, James once climbed a bridge spire to take photographs of a tanker fire. However, he soon became light-headed from the smoke and lost his footing. As James plummeted to the ground, he prayed for a miracle to save him. Superman then showed up and grasped James' hand, saving his life, which was the first time James met the superhero.[9] Superman eventually entrusted James with his secret identity, Clark Kent. Clark allowed James to take the 1st photo of Superman,[8] for which the latter won a Pulitzer and soon gained public recognition for being friends with Superman.[4]

After one of their usual night patrol, Winn noticed that James was hurt as the suit hadn't protected him fully which made Winn a little hysterical as he had to fix it on top of making Mon-El a suit. James was surprised that Mon-El actually wanted to be a superhero but Winn told him that he had enough with the secrets and that they should tell Kara but James was adamantly against it. However, seeing Winn becoming so shaken up after their close calls, he thought that it might be time to tell Kara the truth. He called her to talk but Kara was a little hysterical herself with the apparent jailbreak of Livewire. He tried to calm her by reminding her that she wasn't the only hero in National City anymore, which did calm her, though she said that he was right as she now had Mon-El which made him a little angry. When they saw that Livewire was attacking some officers, they both took off independently to stop her. As Guardian, he arrived when Kara was fighting apparently two Livewire like metahumans and Mon-El were trying to shield the police.

Jim Harper is a police officer in Metropolis' Suicide Slum who becomes a vigilante to catch crooks that the law could not prosecute, describing himself as guarding society from criminals. He was trained to fighting condition by ex-boxer Joe Morgan (the same man who trained two other mystery men, Wildcat and the first Atom). He doesn't have superpowers, but he carries a bulletproof shield. He's aided by a group of boys known as the Newsboy Legion, to whom he is, literally, a guardian, having volunteered to take them in rather than allowing them to be sent to prison; he does so on the grounds that they're basically good kids who just needed a chance. The Legion grows up to become the heads of the Cadmus Project, subsequently saving Harper's life by transferring his mind from his old, dying body into a younger clone of himself. It's later revealed that Jim Harper is the great-uncle of Roy Harper, who becomes Green Arrow's sidekick under the name of "Speedy". Other relatives include his niece Roberta "Famous Bobby" Harper, who is briefly a member of the second Newsboy Legion and Jamie Harper, his grandniece working for the Gotham City Police Department. She works as Robin's personal contact in the GCPD, similar to the role Commissioner James Gordon plays for Batman. After helping Robin and Jason Bard expose two dirty cops in the GCPD, Jamie Harper is promoted to Detective Specialist and transfers to the Metropolis Science Police. Following Infinite Crisis, the Guardian clone's backstory was retconned. As Dubbilex explains to Jimmy Olsen, Jim Harper was not killed in the line of duty, but shot by Cadmus' first head of security, Jonathan Drew, upon discovering the clone was already being created. It's also revealed that the original Guardian clone had left Cadmus early on, and was now living in the town of Warpath on the Mexican border, where he assisted Sheriff Greg Saunders. Subsequent appearances of the Guardian had been new clones, each of which died within a year. The original Guardian clone has decided to move to Metropolis with Gwen, his adopted daughter (in fact, an adolescent female clone of himself that he rescued), during the New Krypton storyline. Science Police team leaders DuBarry and Daniels, along with several prison guards, are killed during the events of New Krypton when a team of Kandorians led by Commander Gor assault Stryker's Island and demand custody of Parasite. The Science Police Control 'Rachel' tasks Guardian to act as a liaison between the Metropolis Police Department and a coalition of superheroes in bringing justice for the fallen science police officers and prison guards. After the Kandorians leave Earth, Guardian is appointed Field Commander of the Science Police, as replacement for DuBarry and Daniels, due in part to his cloned memories of Jim Harper as a police officer and Guardian as a superhero. He is asked by Superman to help Mon-El, offering him a job with the Science Police and mentoring him on how to be a hero. ff782bc1db

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