I just now read the first part of the comic -- "Treason on U-238." I took a few notes as I went along, which I will now flesh out a bit.
I agree with the previous comments in this thread about how it was aimed at a very young audience and so we shouldn't expect much subtlety. Even judged by that standard, it's not nearly as engaging as some of the old Carl Barks "Uncle Scrooge" stories I've read in reprints, but it's not a bad job.
Although I was very worried before I finished reading the block of text in the bottom right corner of the
first panel, because the writer couldn't even make up his mind about how many "worlds" there were in our solar system! In the
first sentence, the asteroid belt was described as including "small worlds." So far, so good.
In the
second sentence, however, we are told: "On one of the largest of these asteroids named U-238 is the only uranium refining plant of the world!" In context, that obviously doesn't mean: "the only such plant on that particular large asteroid!" I think the author meant: "the only such plant which is used by the people of Planet Earth," but instead he uses "the world" as if it were synonymous with "the entire solar system." (Hint: It
ain't the same thing!
)
And in the
third sentence. the author assures us that the aforementioned plant is "the source of all the world's power" and that Captain Tootsie and his Secret Legion will "speed to save the world." In this instance, I think "world" simply means "Planet Earth." I get the impression that the author was either schizophrenic or else (more likely) hammered out this script in a terrible hurry and didn't bother to do any proof-reading to see if he was being terribly inconsistent about such points as "does anything in the solar system besides Earth really qualify as a 'world'?"
Fortunately, he generally did better in expressing himself later on in the story; I'd been afraid this confusion was a
fair sample of what would happen on every page!
(I did find myself wondering: "If the fuel produced by this plant is so vital to modern civilization, why not have at least two or three of those plants running, each located at least fifty million miles away from Earth and from any other plant, so that if something bad happens to one location, others can pick up the slack? There's an old saying about not putting
all your eggs in one basket . . ." But I can accept that in a children's comic, whereas I would be more disappointed by it in a science fiction novel written for adult readers.)
Moving along . . . on the off chance that I ever decide to sabotage a spaceship so that it explodes right after takeoff, I probably won't be right there by the landing field as it blows up. Or, assuming for the sake of argument that I am there, I definitely won't laugh about it with my fellow conspirator in the presence of other witnesses who are almost sure to put two and two together.
On the other hand, I was mildly impressed by the way Captain Tootsie decided to pretend he wasn't going to do anything about this perplexing case, and then revealed to the kids that this deception was performed because of his strong concerns about security leaks.
And a bit later, when the good guys said the "magnetic torpedo" was coming straight at them, I had a
very strong suspicion of what would happen next. When Captain Tootsie assured the kids he had a special protection against magnetic torpedoes, my suspicion crystallized into certainty.
Sure enough -- I was right!
Now I wonder: Could this be the
very first time that any science fiction story in any medium showed the hero avoiding impending doom by "reversing the polarity" in the proverbial nick of time? Thereby launching what has become a venerable cliche in modern pop culture? Have I just witnessed how it all
started? (Probably not, but I can dream, can't I?)