why Snape is not my favorite character

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1. He unnecessarily bullied students to the point where he was Neville's boggart. I mean come on? He may have had an awful childhood, and ran with a bad crowd, but nothing gave him the right to take up a position of authority and use it to torment children. I mean nothing gives him the right he is an adult for crying out loud and they are children and as a teacher, his students should not be afraid of him that badly to the point where their bogart is Snape does. A boggart takes the shape of the one thing you fear the most, and Neville chose Snape as the thing that he fears most That even though there was a mass murderer who ran a terrorist organization around, a suspected mass murderer who just broke out of Azkaban, and a Death Eater who tortured his parents to insanity. Nope, he was afraid of Snape above all of those things.

2. He may have secretly been on the right side, but he only came back from it when the love of his life was murdered. Snape was dutifully working for Voldemort right up until he found out that the prophecy he overheard meant that Lily would be killed. He never became a double agent or switched sides out of loyalty to justice to Dumbledore—rather, he did it because didn't want one person to die. Who cares about the hundreds of lives that were lost due to the terrorist organization that he was a part of? Whatever. Why should that be his problem? Then, he went on to imply that Dumbledore failed him and that Dumbledore should have saved Lily in return for Snape coming back to the good side.

3. He didn't care about Lily enough to save her husband and son who shoves enough to die for them loved her husband and son more than life its self and would rather die than have any harm come to them. he only wanted her to survive to him it didn't matter if her husband the man she loves or her son died long as she lived not even thinking about the fact that if she lost the love of her life and her CHILD should want to die as well and would be depressed and unhappy, or even if that doomed her to a life of misery. He literally could've told the order about peter being the traitor or about  Voldemort knowing where the potters were and was planning to kill them and then they would have been able to move them, but instead he requested that only his teenage infatuation be saved. Who cares if she doesn't have her chump husband or her only son?

4. He called his best friend the worst racial slur in the wizarding world, and then acted wounded when she would no longer speak to him. In the heat of the moment, he referred to Lily as mud-blooded. He then tried to tell her that he was sorry and that her blood status should not matter, even though his best friends and the organization he was a part of believed exactly the opposite tests no wonder she left him; no true friend does that. mean come on.

5. In the "Deathly Hallows" film, he completely ignores James's body and Harry crying in his crib to clutch Lily's corpse There's nothing else to add to this except that it's horrifying meaning who ignores a crying baby who is crying for there Dead paren who witness their death mean I cay see why he would ignore James because they didn't get along they were in Friends but I mean who in their right mind can I ignore a crying baby in that situation.

6. His Patronus was a doe, which is the same as Lily. JamePatronusus, on the other hand, was a stag. While James and Lilly complemented one another perfectly, Snape's on the other hand was also a doe she is mimicked Lily Patronus's was only a doe because was infatuated with Lilly. He was so infatuated with her that didn't notice wasn't a good match for her or that she wasn't for him, In my opinion, whenever would have worked out as a couple would have broken up and she would have eventually married James they never would have lasted as a couple.

7. He broke into Harry's mind repeatedly and grew furious when Harry defended himself. This is ludicrous for multiple reasons. First off, he gave Harry no warning of g what he was about to do and no way to defend himself except to close his mind. Instinctively, Harry used his wand and involuntarily saw shapes' worst memory. Because he is the bigger person, obviously, Snape then refused to give Harry lessons ever again and threw him out of his office. How very Mature of him I mean come on.

8. Snape was head of the Slytherin house and showed favoritism towards his students (namely, Draco) to an abhorrent degree. While he would punish Gryffindors for even the slightest misstep, he would allow students of his house to get away with bullying, snark, sarcasm, and even outright degradation towards their classmates. Or like hi ow in the goblet of fire when Draco and Harry were both dulling and one of  Draco's curses hit Hermione and snape turns a blind eye and only harry and Hermione got in trouble and Draco and the other Slytherin get off scot-free and this is one of many reasons Slytherin house gets a bad reputation that not all Slytherins deserve.

9 . He threatened to expel a student who made a ruckus in his class. Granted, Hermione had been stealing ingredients from his private stores at the time, and Harry had been selected to create a diversion. A dung bomb in a cauldron seems to be a slight misdemeanor unworthy of expulsion, however, er I do believe that they should have gotten in trouble for what they did was wrong be granted they were 12 for crying out loud, and yet again snape used his possession the f power to instill fear into children he is an adult they are children 12 that's how old he is 32 I mean how immature you have to be to treat children that way.

1 0. He made fun of Hermione's appearance and intelligence in front of the entire class on multiple occasions. I mean how why there I can't even I have nothing more to say on that one I mean come on. What kind of adult does that to a child.

1 1. In "Prisoner of Azkaban," Snape substitute teaches for one of Remus Lupins Defense Against the Dark Arts classes. Despite the instructions left by Remus, and the help of Hermione to explain to Snape where the class left off and the agreement confusion of the rest of the class, Snape dives headfirst into the werewolf section. This is problematic mainly because it was not for the fact his students are aware of the danger but intended that a student would discover Remus's true identity. In doing so, he also revokes Lupin's right to teach his class about werewolves and to view them as people with furry little problems rather than as monsters, as Snape chooses to present. I mean how immature.

And that's all y have to say on that matter?

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