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Justice Guild of America

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Justice Guild as shown in the Justice League series
Justice Guild as shown in the Justice League series

The Justice Guild of America are a superhero team featured in the Justice League animated series two-part episode Legends, a homage to the Golden Age Justice Society of America.

At the climax of a fight with a giant robot, the Flash, Green Lantern John Stewart, Hawkgirl and J'onn J'onzz end up on a parallel Earth (existing in a different vibrational frequency from the JL's own) in a idyllic 1950s locale, Seaboard City, that more than a little resembles Pleasantville or other such havens.

There they meet the Justice Guild of America members Tom Turbine, the Streak, the Green Guardsman (not to be confused with Green Guardsman of Amalgam Comics), Black Siren, Catman, and his sidekick Ray Thompson. These were comic book characters on the Justice League's Earth about whom Green Lantern read as a child. Tom Turbine hypothesises that the JGA writer was psychically tuned in to their Earth during flashes of "inspiration"; this is a nod to the explanation Gardner Fox provided for the JSA/JLA link in his September 1961 story Flash of Two Worlds in which the Barry Allen Flash of Earth-One encounters Jay Garrick, his Earth-Two counterpart.

Probing deeper into inconsistencies found in the "perfect" Seaboard City, the Leaguers find that the JGA actually died in a 1945 nuclear holocaust that ravaged the city. The only reason for the time warp is the manifestation of Ray Thompson's psychic abilities (triggered by the holocaust); deformed by the explosion and with a distorted view of reality, he re-created the world of his childhood and resurrected the heroes he worshipped.

The JL confront the JGA with this knowledge; shocked, the JGA deny that their existence is a mere illusion. Ray Thompson, however, goes on a rampage and tries to shatter reality, attacking both the JL and the JGA. Finally, the JGA decide that they can forfeit their false lives to re-build Seaboard City as it genuinely is, reasoning that if they could sacrifice themselves once for the citizens, they can do so again.

The Justice League members return to their own Earth using a space/time machine Tom Turbine was working on before his death; meanwhile, in Seaboard City, the inhabitants work to accept their reality, freed from a web of lies, and return their home to normalcy.

On his own Earth, John Stewart ponders on how much the JGA comics meant to him when he was young and the impact the comics' cancellation in 1945 (the year the actual team died) had on him. He remarks to Hawkgirl that the JGA taught him the meaning of the word hero, a commentary on the bright, optimistic Silver Age's contrast to the Modern Age's grittiness and angst.

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