Doghead Thirteen has done some things worth reading, and much of his writing seems to be part of one larger multicrossover universe - but I dropped it pretty much entirely partway through the series which begins with "Headmaster's Socks", on about the fifth time Harry argued in support of slavery (and related indicia) and won.
That wasn't the sole reason for dropping it, but it was closely related to all of the others; I don't have a problem with a good-guy character starting out with that kind of position, or even necessarily (in the right circumstances) with their staying that way... but these were definitely not the right circumstances, and far from Harry being pulled around to another perspective on the matter, he seemed to successfully be arguing (and/or "decreeing by superior firepower") other people over to his position.
Combine that with the author's statement that he intends this version of Harry to be, in his own way, worse than Voldemort, and it just doesn't seem worth it to keep reading...
That wasn't the sole reason for dropping it, but it was closely related to all of the others; I don't have a problem with a good-guy character starting out with that kind of position, or even necessarily (in the right circumstances) with their staying that way... but these were definitely not the right circumstances, and far from Harry being pulled around to another perspective on the matter, he seemed to successfully be arguing (and/or "decreeing by superior firepower") other people over to his position.
Combine that with the author's statement that he intends this version of Harry to be, in his own way, worse than Voldemort, and it just doesn't seem worth it to keep reading...