In these movies what have you, you don't get someone that's incredibly persuasive in their efforts to show people the value of redemption, but just being a symbol for the idea that you don't have to resort to such terminal methods to save the people. The idea is a dilemma between effectiveness and appropriateness and he has to show them that the latter can be honored while still achieving the former. I get that there's merit to the literary devices you speak of. But I feel that in this story he is fighting also to sustain his genuine status as a symbol. He's a humble man of the people all the same with his experience growing up as a man, it's a significant part of his triple persona.Nobody700 wrote: ↑Wed Aug 14, 2019 9:47 pmFrom how it’s presented, Superman is probably thinking that because people are scared and angry, they want a simple solution over the REAL solution. I mean, this is something that the comics has done but Superman was able to convince Atomic Skull to finally become a good guy, and now he’s a warden for the jail and it’s stuck. Plus, because he’s not a famous villain, this is something that could stick for a long while before some hack writer rewrites him to being a villain. Superman was able to turn a mass murdering psycho into someone who protects others and sympathies. The Elite erases that opportunity. They don’t solve problems. They kill it.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Wed Aug 14, 2019 7:13 pmIn this though, there's a conundrum in that the people he's trying to inspire are unilaterally deciding that they want him to be more effective as they see from The Elite.. I think it comes more down to Superman's own code as far as how he's trying to handle the situation.Mecha82 wrote: ↑Wed Aug 14, 2019 5:25 pm Thing about Superman that everyone who argues how he should kill tends to ignore is that that he is supposed to bring hope and inspire people to be better, not be judge, jury and executioner. When you want Superman who kills and rules over humanity you get one from Injustice video games were he brutally murders people over things like not agreeing with him like he did to Shazam who let me remind everyone is actually just a kid in adult body when he transforms.
I just think you're making an argument for how effective his methods can be and how smart it can be in-universe and with the writing, while I think the plot more involves him trying to prevent the people from losing their heart, as humans. His reveal at the end is giving nuance to his holistic virtue of needing to show people how whole he is and what the difference is between that and someone that is empty. Like he explains how he didn't put anybody in harm's way, and showed how terrified people were when he did succumb to what they were trying to pressure into.