At the end of the day, did he really do anything wrong?
At the end of the day, did he really do anything wrong?
Is that light?
Yes
He is canonically correct from a utilitarian point of view, no matter how contrived you may think it. That's sort of the point.
Though utilitarianism is crock of shit, obviously.
Murdering a bunch of people to stroke his ego-boner, some of whom were not actual criminals
Well I dont think he was. On paper maybe, but he became kind of sick in the sense he would kill some innocent people also.
Lose
Kira killed 120k criminals and 10k innocents in his lifetime.
Kira saved 350k innocents per year for 6 years.
Kira saved 2.1 million innocent people in total.
Make your own conclusion
In 2020, L would be more invested in leaking Trump's tax returns instead of catching Kira.
Based
That's what I said, jackass.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions
>never got to see his little sister pee or shower with all those hidden cameras
I'm still mad
The moment he killed Naomi was when I wanted to see him lose.
He didn't just kill murderers, at some point he started killing people who used the restroom and forgot to wash their hands
More importantly, huge riots would break out all over the world because a mysterious white supremacist asian was killing all the dindu nuffin niggers in otherwise civilized countries.
She was hot, but the scene was so tense and interesting it was worth it.
Also
I genuinely thought Misa was hot
Fight me
>Though utilitarianism is crock of shit, obviously.
What do you suggest instead? Fucking virtue ethics?
Gothic lolita girls are my weakness so I loved Misa too.
No one has the right to take another's life no matter what. And don't say they were criminal's lives. They are people too and deserve life just as much as anyone else.
Throwing your hands up, giving ethics the middle finger, and settling for "what's best? whatever works best lmao" with no framework for establishing just what that is in neither past, present, nor future tense, nor any practicable direction is not a foundation for an ethics system, it's a goddamn tautology you'd expect from a snotty second grade child. It's not an answer to anything, it's nothing more than dodging the question.
It's also arbitrary, volatile, and just downright stupid.
Misa is hot, she's just also annoying as piss
Nigga what the actual fuck do you seriously believe this bullshit you just wrote
If Kira only killed specific people for specific crimes and had thought deeply about the world he wanted to make, the same ethicsfags would hate him more despite being more in line with what they say they care about in deciding things.
Regardless of whether or not his intentions were noble, he let his pride get in his way. He was doomed to failure the instant he let his bruised ego rule him and rose to L's initial challenge on national TV.
As he should.
Is this actually Canon or your headcanon?
How should they have done her to keep her not annoying, but still existent?
Ova? Spinf-off?
When I first watched the show, I didn't think much about him killing prisoners in jail. But thinking about it now, sometimes a completely innocent person gets sent to jail because of a faulty trial, or people that are in jail for pretty harmless crimes like smoking weed. Light might have killed someone that didn't do anything wrong, both legally or morally. I mean, he kinda did start killing innocent people blatantly and outright when they started getting too close to uncovering the truth, like Ray Penber, or Naomi Misara.
I'v never made it past 2-3 episodes the Nier kid is introduced. and I've watched it 3 times.
Should I just bite the bullet and keep watching?
I disagree. One of the things that made death note so thrilling was that Light and L had an equal chance of winning and the story could have ended with either of them being the winner or loser.
Yes, if anything the voice acting is fenominal especially in the last episode.
"Maybe if I were his dad, I should've been able to get him to study law at Notre Dame, so that he would've been a real cop, instead of causing a lot of deception here and there."
yes. he killed people that were not under his jurisdiction.
Alright, what episode does Near enter so I know where to start.
maybe I should just re-watch the whole thing actually. I wanna see the loli imouto again.
also does the one cop marry her? I feel like I've heard that somewhere
I think he appears in episode 27 but you could just re-watch the whole series sence it has great pacing.