You're just mad because he revealed Magneto's lapsed ideals and terrorism for what they really were (and I say that as a huge fan of the character).
@WhenWeWereKings That's probably about the list of notable X-Runs from the last 20 years (haven't read Bunn's Magneto nor do I feel inspired to, and Kyle/Yost's works are prime examples of the retreat into an overly dark "hated, feared, and hunted" narrative that I find stultifying), but I would also add Tischman/Macan/Kordey's Cable and Soldier X runs, if only for effectively writing a post-Soviet comic in any kind of mainstream comics context, as well as effectively exploring what happens when a character with no real internal motivation for his goals actually achieves that goal. In a lot of ways (particularly how mutant culture is/can be integrated with consumer captialism and geopolitics), it's very much the flip side to Milligan/Allred's X-Force/X-Statix run.
In other words, Jemas-era Marvel was probably the last time mainstream comics were fresh, inventive, and consistently entertaining.