Perhaps I should elaborate on my views.
Chemista did not do anything other than put and established character, ourselves, in a new role. She took a hero and made it fight humans and oter heroes instead of monsters and villains. Her intent was to show that hero how violent, facshist and bllodthirsty the heroes were. And she succeeded, not only because we saw the brutality towards monsters, but also because we saw our own actions. Think about it, if we were sneaking not into the HEROES asylum, but into an evil base, and inside we saw a little monster girl whose mother our underling brutally murdered in front of her very eyes, waiting to be brainwashed, would we kidnap her? No, we would have killed her, because it is easier. What if an overlord would have kidnapped our magical girl side-kick and tortured her on video? We would have raided his base and built mountains out of the corpses of everybody we found there - civilians, scientists, janitors - everyone. When a hero does not fight monsters, it is blatantly evident that he, himself, is a monster. We exemplify the failures of the heroes' system, and, if we have any speck of normal, human soul inside our chest, we should make it our life's mission not to fight monsters for humans, or fight humans for monsters, but to make sure that people like us will stop appearing from this sea of blood and violence and that murderers are seen for what they are.