Lunncal said:
I've never watched Avatar, but going by the information you've supplied, I'd agree with the "Equalists" entirely. Also, that world sounds messed up. "Special" people born with the power to enslave unwilling people, or destroy entire nations like some kind of living nuke? Definitely wrong, and both unfair and dangerous for those without these powers. Even if the current ruling "benders" happen to be relatively benevolent, there is no guarantee that this would remain the case, and it would only take one extremely powerful bender or group of benders to impose their will on the entire world. If there is a way to remove these powers without a mass genocide or other serious negative effects, then I would say it is only right to do so.
Don't listen entirely to the OP. He's ridiculously biased and doesn't have his facts straight. Allow me to straighten some of them for you.
First off I'd like to note that the "special" people actually make up a sizable portion of the population. They aren't a majority, but it's not like there's only a few of them. Additionally, they're ordinary people in every other respect. They have no greater tendency to be "evil" than non-benders.
In regards to the power grabs by a single bender or group of benders, there
are other benders who wouldn't want to see such people taking power. And if they fail then the avatar can almost certainly step in and prevent it. In fact, the entire first series is pretty much devoted to the avatar doing just that.
The ability to "enslave" people (bloodbending) is illegal and incredibly rare. There are very few even capable of the feat, let alone know how to do it and are willing to use it. Doing it under any circumstance warrants swift and harsh punishment under the law.
The comet that give firebenders immense power only comes around every 100 years and only lasts a few hours. To destroy a nation with it takes immense numbers and years of planning and it has only been done once against a nation that had no formal military of any sort.
Finally, I'd like to note that there is no real evidence of a correlation between bending ability and political power. There are only two roles that require bending, which are the Fire Lord, who is leader of the Fire Nation, and membership on any of the Air Nomad councils (which doesn't really count since all Air Nomads were naturally benders anyway). Every other nation has no bending requirements for any position. In fact, during Avatar Aang's time, the Earth King and both of the Northern and Southern Water Tribe chiefs were non-benders. Also there have been at least two non-bender council members in the United Republic's brief history. There have quite likely been more that we don't know of yet.
TL;DR: Benders aren't that bad, Lunncal. You're just being misled by a biased OP.
P.S. You should watch A:TLA and LOK. They're some of the greatest animated shows out there.