I could say the same about you. If it was removed, how was it done and more than once? If you drain the gamma radiation from Banner, he is unable to turn into the hulk for a limited time (I think), which is when you can kill banner. One of his main enemies, drained him and then beat him unconscious. If I wrote a comic and said that the hulk could fly by picking his nose, would that make it so?
In canon, it's a linear progression. If it happened once, and then LATER is written out, then the character in it's current state doesn't have that weakness. Why is this hard to grasp? It's like saying you could kill Captain America without his shield because he didn't get his shield until later, thus his weakness is that he is defenseless. That doesn't make any sense. Further still, even if the Hulk
was still susceptible to having his gamma drained, it was never touched on whether that actually meant he was gone for good, and given that he later came back would indicate that The Hulk was never gone, so I don't know why you're focused on this point because I've proven it's irrelevant multiple times and you're just sitting there repeating yourself.
You also don't know for sure what you are even talking about. Why are you still trying? If Banner is killed, the Hulk still lives, they are separate entities. There are several instances where The Hulk and Banner are separated, as well. It's been said many times in this thread that Banner could die and he would just turn in to the Hulk permanently. Also, anything you wrote wouldn't matter because it's not official published canon, that's not how it works. If that were the case, I would just write that any character could be destroyed by my will and then suddenly all characters are weak.
If his limits are never touched, than we are to assume he has none.
Also, no where can I find anything about the hulk being immune to reality warping.
Uh, no. If his limits are never touched upon, then you assume you don't know what they are. That's like saying, "I've never seen any instances where Spider Man
hasn't been able to fly, therefore we must assume he can fly and simply hasn't done it yet." You are using backwards logic. Also, read harder, I've already provided citations which are freely available on the internet.
Okay, so you disintegrate him, he comes back, you do it again, repeat, etc. Eventually, he'll take the weapon apart, atom from atom. Then what are you going to do? Hell, the weapon could lose power or something.
You still don't get it. If the disintegration effect is continuous, he couldn't
come back in the first place. Coupled with Tachyon interference, Doctor Manhattan would be rendered physically non-existent and time-confused.
Yes and no. If you kill Banner when he is unable to transform into the hulk, then the hulk would die too.
False. You still don't demonstrate a single solid shred of knowledge about the Hulk and his story. Go back and google some more, maybe?
But you see, Dr Manhattan, could just remove the flash's powers or something. No more...flashy-ness.
Doctor Manhattan doesn't have this ability. He's not a god, his powers are limited to control over matter. I think you are far over reaching with your assumptions about him. This is why he can't stop Laurie from vomiting when they teleport, or why he can't control the emotions of people surrounding him, because his abilities don't reach that far.