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Ink (Eric Gitter)

The Religious Affiliation of
Ink
Eric Gitter

Religion: manifestly non-religious CBR Scale: U

Name: Ink

Alter Ego: Eric Gitter

Classification: hero hero  

Publisher(s): Marvel

First Appearance: Young X-Men #1 (June 2008): "Final Genesis"

Creators: Marc Guggenheim, Yanick Paquette, Ray Snyder

Super? (Has Super Powers/Special Abilities/Technology): Yes

Number of Appearances: 12

Teams/Affiliations: Young X-Men

Race: white

Gender: male

Excerpts

BELOW: Anti-mutant villain Donald Pierce points out Eric Gitter's "mercenary" nature. Gitter (a.k.a. Ink) has captured two innocent young women and delivered them to a killer, purely for money.

Anti-mutant villain Donald Pierce points out Eric Gitter's mercenary nature. Gitter (a.k.a. Ink) has captured two innocent young women and delivered them to a killer, purely for money.

Source: Young X-Men #3 (Aug. 2008): "LifeDeath", panel 3. Written by Marc Guggenheim. Art by Kris Justice, Ray Snyder, Yanick Paquette. See also: love of money; mercenary; manifestly non-religious; Ink (Eric Gitter)

BELOW: When the fledgling superhero Eric Gitter ("Ink") is first introduced, his foul language, unprovoked attack on police, and theft of a woman's car all demonstrate his manifestly non-religious nature.

When the fledgling superhero Eric Gitter (Ink) is first introduced, his foul language, unprovoked attack on police, and theft of a woman's car all demonstrate his manifestly non-religious nature.

Source: Young X-Men #1 (June 2008): "Final Genesis", pg. 14-15. Written by Marc Guggenheim. Art by Ray Snyder, Yanick Paquette. See also: vulgar language; stealing; manifestly non-religious; Ink (Eric Gitter)

BELOW: The manifestly non-religious nature of Eric Gitter ("Ink") is clearly evident here as he delivers innocent mutants Danielle Moonstar and Blindfold to the anti-mutant villain Donald Pierce. With his own words Ink acknowledges his morally questionable nature. But Ink refuses to kill the young women he captured, claiming, "Whatever else I am, I'm no killer." Although Ink won't kill them himself, he knows that Pierce might kill them.

The manifestly non-religious nature of Eric Gitter (Ink) is clearly evident here as he delivers innocent mutants Danielle Moonstar and Blindfold to the anti-mutant villain Donald Pierce.

Source: Young X-Men #3 (Aug. 2008): "LifeDeath", pg. 2, panels 2-5. Written by Marc Guggenheim. Art by Kris Justice, Ray Snyder, Yanick Paquette. See also: murder; manifestly non-religious; Ink (Eric Gitter)


This character is in the following 15 stories which have been indexed by this website:
Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus #1 (Nov. 2009): "Utopia: Conclusion" (2-panel cameo)
Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia #1 (Aug. 2009): "Utopia: Part 1" (1-panel cameo)
X-Men: Gold (vol. 2) #19 (Mar. 2018): "The Negative Zone War: Part 4"
Young X-Men


Suggested links for further research about this character and the character's religious affiliation:
  - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ink_(comics)
  - http://www.marvunapp.com/master/iniint.htm
  - http://www.marvunapp.com/master/gigk.htm
  - http://www.marvunapp.com/master/yfyz.htm