Thor has very limited ESP, enough that he can see astral projections and, yes, tell when people are poking around in his brain. He has no psychic defenses to speak of, so there's nothing to stop Charles from scanning him, but when he realizes he's being scanned, he will confront Charles and ask him to stop. Politely--at least the first time. Repeated psychic intrusions will be construed as an insult and Thor will respond with force.
That said, Thor's mind is a place of Incorruptible Pure Pureness (http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/IncorruptiblePurePureness), and 616 Chuck is one of the people who's vouched for that in canon. He's just touchy about what he sees as his integrity--physical and mental--being... well, being violated.
Ricochet is a mutant! But he's never been an X-Person and is not particularly fond of the group. I've essayed about why here (http://2nd-slinger.livejournal.com/8531.html) and here (http://2nd-slinger.livejournal.com/9831.html), but the short version stems from two reasons. First, he doesn't buy the idea that mutants need to band together apart from (or against!) the world in order to prove themselves to the world, as the X-Men do. And second, the most prominent X-Man of all, Wolverine, killed his best friend while under the influence of mind-control, and Rico's still a little hung up about that. So, sorry, Professor--you're gonna have a belligerent smart-ass on your hands instead of an eager recruit.
Mullin is just your average failtastic piece of cannon fodder wracked with self-doubt and borderline PTSD. Nothing special to report here, Prof.
no subject
Date: 2011-07-10 11:02 pm (UTC)That said, Thor's mind is a place of Incorruptible Pure Pureness (http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/IncorruptiblePurePureness), and 616 Chuck is one of the people who's vouched for that in canon. He's just touchy about what he sees as his integrity--physical and mental--being... well, being violated.
Ricochet is a mutant! But he's never been an X-Person and is not particularly fond of the group. I've essayed about why here (http://2nd-slinger.livejournal.com/8531.html) and here (http://2nd-slinger.livejournal.com/9831.html), but the short version stems from two reasons. First, he doesn't buy the idea that mutants need to band together apart from (or against!) the world in order to prove themselves to the world, as the X-Men do. And second, the most prominent X-Man of all, Wolverine, killed his best friend while under the influence of mind-control, and Rico's still a little hung up about that. So, sorry, Professor--you're gonna have a belligerent smart-ass on your hands instead of an eager recruit.
Mullin is just your average failtastic piece of cannon fodder wracked with self-doubt and borderline PTSD. Nothing special to report here, Prof.