Franklin Richard said:
How can he be a paragon when he's already morally bankrupt from compromising his "solemn vow"?
Because he defeated Evil Itself through completely human means?
Why does no one ***** about
Superman killing Darkseid? Or Superman killing
Mandrakk? (twice!) Or Captain Marvel and the entire Supermen of the multiverse burning the **** out of vampire Ultraman with heat vision? Oh wait, vampires don't count but...metaphysical gods...do?
Please don't pretend this is anything about actual morality. You haven't said a single thing to contest the morality of the situation beyond incongruously absurd straw men boiling down the situation to a bland, zero-dimensional loophole that has nothing to
do with moral relativism, much less with Batman. Dr. Doom? General Custer! lolwtf. You haven't been contesting the moral righteousness of Batman shooting Darkseid to save all creation because there is nothing
to contest about that. You haven't bothered telling anyone
why "the ends justifying the means" is particularly wrong about that situation or why Batman would think it was wrong, other than perhaps some axiom about "Batman would always find another way" that
in itself is devoid of moral context. Why exactly would he find another way if the way he had was just fine?
This isn't about that. This is about your preconceived
and inaccurate idea of what a character has to be irrelevant of context, and being affronted when a writer challenges that and
challenges it well in context.