How would: Superheros work in the future? (a fun experiment)

Before you read!
The purpose of this Article: This is a how would take on how can superheros work in the future.

Why is this important? Well this mostly isn't important for legal terms but it is a fun thought experiment to get people thinking.

Disclaimer: The author does not condone for superheros to be real within the future at all this is just a thought experiment.

At the moment
In america it will be the worst area for superheroes to exist in the near future and for a viable reason; the main laws of justifiable for self-defense are as so in most states in the land of freedom is as such, "In the U.S., the general rule is that "a person is privileged to use such force as reasonably appears necessary to defend him or herself against an apparent threat of unlawful and immediate violence from another. In cases involving non-deadly force, this means that the person must reasonably believe that their use of force was necessary to prevent imminent, unlawful physical harm."- Wikipedia Basically random peeps can't show up and defend people it would be better to call professionals such as the police.

How can it occur?
One thing that can allow widespread of superheros is "drafting" which is a system that makes civilians into the army after basic training. These civilians then could be trusted of the law and maybe just maybe the law makers would have enough trust to allow civilians basic rights to enforce the law. However really depends on what caused the need to draft and how well the civilians did.

If done how would it change the world
This would actually "heavily" change the world in terms of self-defense law and law enforcement. Based on my "somewhat plausible" scenario above based on whatever the law was police brutality can plummet or skyrocket. It can add more safety since people have the right to enforce more or add as uncertainty if anyone uses those rights to harm others however the latter will probably be taken care by the police since I don't imagine lawmakers being that stupid.

Conclusion = barely predictable at the current state of law