84 posts, I can't believe nobody mentioned this yet:
In the comics, Ra'sh Al Ghul killed the Joker. AND BATMAN BROUGHT HIM BACK TO LIFE WITH A LAZARUS PIT. That's how anti-killing he is! Hardcore.
No, he almost broke the Joker's neck but couldn't quite bring himself to do it. The Joker then finished the job by breaking his own neck, knowing Batman would be blamed for it.
Please don't refer to the movies (Nolan or otherwise) when discussing Batman's moral code. He's constantly killing villains (and civilians; how many people died due to the countless automotive accidents he's caused alone?) whether directly or indirectly. He's little more than a psychopath, just one focused on taking out other psychopaths rather than innocent civilians.From Batman Begins: "I don't have to save you."
Batman didn't kill Ra's, but as he said, he didn't have to save him. Letting a criminal die is not the same as killing him.
It's like trying to say that a lie of omission isn't really a lie at all, even though it most certainly is.
For some of us (and I'd daresay the vast majority of the general public), the movies and TV shows/cartoons are our only point of reference. I don't read the comics.Please don't refer to the movies (Nolan or otherwise) when discussing Batman's moral code.
Except that's not what the phrase refers to. It refers to intentionally leaving an important detail out that would influence the person/people you're talking to. It's exactly the same thing as lying; purposeful deceit.It's like trying to say that a lie of omission isn't really a lie at all, even though it most certainly is.
No, it isn't. Everyone omits something every time they speak, because no conceivable utterance can comprise the totality of information. So by "lie of omission" standards every utterance is a lie.
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