
Unpopular Opinion
Welcome to the Unpopular Opinion community!
How voting works:
Vote the opposite of the norm.
If you agree that the opinion is unpopular give it an arrow up. If it's something that's widely accepted, give it an arrow down.
Guidelines:
Tag your post, if possible (not required)
- If your post is a "General" unpopular opinion, start the subject with [GENERAL].
- If it is a Lemmy-specific unpopular opinion, start it with [LEMMY].
Rules:
1. NO POLITICS
Politics is everywhere. Let's make this about [general] and [lemmy] - specific topics, and keep politics out of it.
2. Be civil.
Disagreements happen, but that doesn’t provide the right to personally attack others. No racism/sexism/bigotry. Please also refrain from gatekeeping others' opinions.
3. No bots, spam or self-promotion.
Only approved bots, which follow the guidelines for bots set by the instance, are allowed.
4. Shitposts and memes are allowed but...
Only until they prove to be a problem. They can and will be removed at moderator discretion.
5. No trolling.
This shouldn't need an explanation. If your post or comment is made just to get a rise with no real value, it will be removed. You do this too often, you will get a vacation to touch grass, away from this community for 1 or more days. Repeat offenses will result in a perma-ban.
6. Defend your opinion
This is a bit of a mix of rules 4 and 5 to help foster higher quality posts. You are expected to defend your unpopular opinion in the post body. We don't expect a whole manifesto (please, no manifestos), but you should at least provide some details as to why you hold the position you do.
Instance-wide rules always apply. https://legal.lemmy.world/tos/
Harvey was wrong; that doesn't make murder right.
To the writer's credit, this is a great moral dilemma directly showing the results of Harvey's choices.
In the end, neither one was right, and Batman is (laudably) attempting to resolve it.
With Wayne money, city beaurocracy, and Dent's law skills, he's untouchable. Murder was the only remaining option for justice.
Murder is still murder, you're just justifying it for your own feelings.
'You're only allowed to fight oppression through electoralism, the Warsaw ghetto uprising was morally wrong! John Brown was evil for his actions! How dare you, Sir!"
that’s not such a popular take any more. luigi shows that murder is not the worst, it just depends on who and why
Almost no one says murder is the worst crime. (There's a reason murderers aren't as scared of their fellow prisoners as child molesters.) The person above is saying murder is still murder, regardless of justification, which is true. However, many, if not most, people will say there are circumstances which justify murder. Not to make it not murder, just make it ethically acceptable.
murder is murder, the implication of the post was that there was no justifying it. but that is not the popular opinion.
It is right and just to destroy men who have sold their souls to evil.
That was probably the last show that consistently had morally grey situations that children could understand. Entertainment is so black and white now with clear good and bad. It creates the expectation that people are only good or bad and one bad choice forever dooms a person to being bad. "Good" becomes an unattainable goal that fewer and fewer people can become until people stop trying.
Batman was one of the few shows that explored the consequences and recovery after bad choices.
You should watch Infinity Train. It's an animated series from 2019 about a train. I'd say more, but it's best to go in blind. And it shows the recovery after bad choices.
it's generally the archetype that villains are right, some just do messed up things while at it
Especially in Batman: TAS.
Likewise, Magneto was right about humans and mutants.
I liked the episode, but it was unrealistic even by animated superhero standards.
The realistic version would have had Ivy going to Bruce long before construction began and proving the field had to be saved.
Now you've got a love triangle. Bruce is one of the few [the only?] guy she's met who takes her seriously and never looks below her eyeline. She's nuts about him, and hates Harvey, who is smitten.
And then Harvey's face gets burned...
Ivy is more and more an overt antihero. She basically, lowkey, always was.