That was JoeZhang who said that, not me.
Fucking vBulletin. I hate when it misattributes quotes like that. :-/
I like the idea of Dick staying Batman permanently, Batman becoming a legacy hero.
Dick remaining Batman does seem to be an element of Morrison's masterplan. The Damian-Batman of the future worries that he won't be able to live up to the standards of Batman set by Bruce
and Dick.
Honestly, I wouldn't have minded if they'd let Bruce stay dead forever, along with Barry Allen, Hal Jordan, Bucky, and all the rest.
Unlike the three characters you named, Batman has never been dead.
Which, to me, is the most offensive thing that could possibly be done to Batman's character.
It works in context of
Batman #702. (I thought it also worked in the context of
Final Crisis #6. But
Batman #702 retells the incident from Batman's perspective, while he still understands it.) And it's not any bullet, and it's not any gun. It's an archetypal bullet and an archetypal gun, because it's a weapon to be used against a god that Batman, as a human being (albeit perhaps the most perfectly honed human being in existence,
ever), cannot fully understand. Darkseid operates on an entirely
different plane of reality. Batman is to Darkseid not unlike what an ant is to you or I. The point of the story, as I understood it, was that man must kill his gods, and Batman, as the most perfect example of humanity, is the only human being who can do that. And the bullet Batman shot Darkseid with, because it's the archetypal bullet, is the bullet that John Wilkes Booth used to kill Lincoln, the bullet that Joe Chill used to kill Thomas and Martha Wayne. It's every bullet at every time and it exists everywhere and everywhen and thus Batman creates himself.
Good grief, that's even more disgusting.
Have you actually
read Batman #702 and have an informed opinion on what the issue says, or are you criticizing the issue solely on hearsay? I ask because I know you and I can't imagine you running off with an uninformed opinion.
What you're describing, elevating guns to some supreme cosmic archetype -- it puts Batman beneath the gun. It makes the gun superior to him, some ultimate cosmic force that he has to subsume himself to. That's incredibly demeaning to the character. It makes a mockery of his whole history.
Have you actually read
Batman #702?
Christopher, there has always been a great disconnect between the Batman of Gotham City, where's he's a street-level character who dispenses vigilante justice to petty thugs, and the Batman of the Justice League, where he deals with alien invaders on a nigh-regular basis and he's just a man surrounded by people who wield powers far beyond his own meagre abilities.
I would argue that
Batman: RIP (the original six-issue story arc,
Final Crisis #6, and the two epilogue storylines in
Batman #687-8 and
Batman #701-2) finds a unique intersection between the two approaches. It's the ultimate expression of the "Batman thinks of/plans for everything" ethos that Grant Morrison introduced to the character back in
JLA, an element that has informed Batman's characterization both in Gotham City (such as
War Games) and on the wider Justice League sphere (such as Mark Waid's
Tower of Babel storyline, where Batman's contingency plans to take down the Justice League are used against him). If Batman equally has plans to take down The Riddler and Superman, why wouldn't this consummate planner have plans for taking down Darkseid? Going back to
War Games, Batman's plans aren't
offensive plans, Batman doesn't implement them proactively (which is why the
War Games plan failed spectacularly when Stephanie implemented it). Batman doesn't shoot Darkseid with the archetypal bullet because he's run out of options and he's backed into the corner, Batman doesn't shoot Darkseid with the archetypal bullet because he can't think of anything else to do, Batman shoots Darkseid with the archetypal bullet because it's the coldly calculated plan he's formulated and he knows it will work. Batman's not a totalitarian fascist, he knows exactly what he's doing, and he even
says that he doesn't use guns, but in this one instance he's willing to make an exception.
Batman #702 shows us
why he makes that exception. It's because, by putting himself on the archetypal plane of the gods, Batman can see the whole of time, space, and creation, and he understands that he
has to do this, that the very existence of the universe -- and his whole identity as Batman -- rests upon it.
It's all there in
Batman #702.