You meant Light, right?JimmerDunda said:I think people miss the point L was the bad guy of the entire series. It shows how power can corrupt those with good intentions. He got power hungry and died like a *****.
I think they did at first, then it was like "so you get it? He kills people who are evil" and it focused on the drama with L and Near instead.ReincarnatedFTP said:Eh, I only watched the show and one thing bothered me.
They don't always define what the criminals he killed did.
#1, he didn't kill just anyone who broke a law, only the people he felt were deserving of death.ReincarnatedFTP said:Eh, I only watched the show and one thing bothered me.
They don't always define what the criminals he killed did.
1)Light seems to think that if they broke the law, it's ok to kill them.Not all crimes are violent, there are bullshit laws.
2)Not to mention, he killed wanted suspects or wanted for questioning, who might have been innocent. Innocent until proven guilty damn it!
3)Even disregarding the previous 2, he became a hypocrite in many ways. A)He broke the law he so revered by killing, and many other acts. B) He becomes the very monster he hates and kills innocents to save his own ass.Including his father.
Sure he culls the crime rate, but so would genocide or secret police.
So, he was intelligent, but ethically retarded and a bastard on par with Charles Manson or Dahmer.
L and Light's father seemed like the only lawful good characters, and even L came dangerously close to crossing the line when he detained Misa. Near and Mello veered into vigilante territory just as Light did, to catch his ass.
So I guess the ultimate lessons are, "Stare into the abyss and it stares right back into you", "Nothing lasts forever", "Might makes right", and "Fight fire with fire".
i think he was perfectly aware that he was becoming the murderer, but he saw it as a necisary evil, and that someone had to do it, for the better goodcanadamus_prime said:I think what Light did is a textbook example of the saying "The road to hell is paved with good intentions." Not to mention "Absolute power corrupts absolutely." His intentions were sorta noble, in a way. What irritated me the most about Light is the guy was obviously a frickin' genius, much smarter then I could ever hope to be, but for all his brains he failed to notice that he was becoming and eventually became the very thing he was determined to eliminate.
It makes people think. Plain and simple. "What would I have done?" " Ha! What a dumb move! If it were me, I'd (insert answer here)"Laur Farren said:Dude, the series wasn't even very good, I don't know why people get so worked up about it
no unmade arguments with the rest of your post, but...ReincarnatedFTP said:2)Not to mention, he killed wanted suspects or wanted for questioning, who might have been innocent. Innocent until proven guilty damn it!