Yes. But my point has always been that Steve Rogers is not Antifa except in the broadest possible terms.
He's not complaining about Cap opposing fascism, but about the (supposed, I haven't read the comic) support for Antifa. Let's not build strawmen.
That was your original claim where you first started defending the Neo-Nazi complaining about the comic.
Then you moved onto this:
I think you're trying to cram a square peg into a round hole. AFAIK, Cap's never been a member of a vigilante group whose primary purpose was direct action against fascism. I don't think he ever joined a group that had "anti-fascist" or a variation in its name.
And as we have tried to point out repeatedly, Cap has been in vigilantee groups, several of them, that fought against Fascism. For some of those groups it was in fact the primary purpose.
He's a Nazi?
But anyway, are we still talking about his resistance to the registration act? Because in my opinion, you undermined your point with this:
So, Lana... Are you familiar with the Civil war storyline in Marvel or not? Because one of the main motivations for Cap to oppose the registration is that he saw where that kind of thing leads to. Concentration camps and lists of people is literally what the Nazis did, it's what the US did to Japanese-Americans and it's close enough to Fascism for him.
The Japanese-American internment was awful, but it was not done by fascists. When you brought it up, you essentially admitted that authoritarian and/or discriminatory acts are not solely performed by fascists. Internment camps and the like have been used by many different governments of many different ideologies. They could be found in many different colonial entities (the British put Boers in concentration camps), and in communist countries. Hell, the registration act drew comparisons to Maoist China and the Soviet Union. Should we say Cap's opposition to it was anti-communist?
And I never moved any goalposts.