Mr. Superhero
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But you must be inherently insane to even consider doing some of the stuff that Joker does.That's ridiculous. That would seem to mean that I could do damn near whatever I want and get off with insanity. But let me ask you...if I am in full awareness of what I am doing, and fully capable of stopping myself, and I plan this thing, and do it anyway...even if I am branded "insane"...does that mean I actually am insane?
"It's not who you are underneath; it's what you do that defines you."
This is an awesome line in Begins. You can blabber on about how the Joker knows what he is doing, but what you fail to see is how that tiny bit of rationality is completely outweighed by his own personal mentally deranged view on the world. Damn, personally, I wouldn't even say that this guy has an ounce of rationality left in him, and there is no evidence to suggest otherwise.
Let me ask you something: why does Joker specifically try to drive Gordon to "madness" in TKJ? Because he knows that through insanity comes the lust to perform evil deeds. That's exactly where the Joker draws his evil nature from. I mean, before the chemical bath, the Joker was never as evil as he was after the accident. And what is that? It's because the chemical bath accident drove him insane. It knocked him senseless. He was horrified to the point of insanity. His viewpoint of the world completely changed. He became totally irrational, which, ironically enough, is a synonym for "insane".
The Joker's action are that of an insane man. Check the dictionary defintions. If the Joker isn't "insane", then are you implying that he is "sane", like you and me?
Please, name these people, because I guarantee that they killed due to being either corrupt by power, or for some kind of material possession. The Joker is completely different in the sense that he doesn't kill for any material possessions -- he kills for his own personal amusement. What's the difference between the Joker before the chemical bath, and the Joker after the chemical?Where is this written? Some of the most evil people in history were completely logical, extremely intelligent, and in full control of their faculties. Their ACTIONS being less than normal doesn't make them insane by itself.
Why is the Joker more "evil" after his accident at the chemical factory? Because he was driven insane, just as the Joker points out in TKJ. His evil stemmed from his own insanity, and that's what he tried to rub off on Gordon, obviously.
The day I enjoy picking up a knife and stabbing people; the day I take pictures of a dying person and show those pictures to that dying person's parents; is the day that I develop a "mentally deranged" view on the world. And I haven't even elaborated on the other dictionary definitions yet, so reply at your own peril...
You can call it what you like; it's a synonym for "insane", and you're the one claiming that he isn't insane.Again, that's a really broad definition. Senseless in what regard?
And he is senseless in the sense that he doesn't give a crap about his own personal well-being. He is completely out-of-touch with rationality to the point where if you spike him with fear gas, he will just laugh in your face. He is totally senseless to the point where he shows no regard for others. He shows no regard for rationality. He shows no regard for anything other than creating chaos.
The Joker may develop intelligent plans and what not, but the ultimate goal of that plan -- the meaning of that plan -- is usually to create something of pure insanity. The motives behind that plan are driven through the Joker's insanity. And that insanity was developed after the Joker realized that he had permanently bleached skin. As he points out in TKJ, he had one bad day, but chose to "let go" and became totally nuts.
And I take it that's DC canon?That just shows that he's not affected by fear gas. You know why? Because he's not affected by any mood altering gas. You know why? Because he made himself impervious to his own Joker gas/venom/toxin early in his career as The Joker. It's been mentioned once or twice before in the comics.
You keep saying that the Joker is in "control", yet his actions suggest otherwise, something you keep missing. Hell, even Batman attempts to "rehabilitate" the Joker at the end of TKJ; he offers him helf. He makes it perfectly clear that the Joker can seek help for his insanity, but the Joker refusis, because it is "too late" to make a man, who has craved as much chaos as he has, rational once again.I mean, you'd be "cruel" and an "*******, but "insane?" Depends on your state of mind at the time, and if you knew what you were doing and were in control of it. Maybe you just intended to be cruel.
He is outweighed by his own insanity -- his own mentally deranged view of the world.
AND TO ENJOY KILLING OF CAUSING PAIN, YOU MUST INHERENTLY BE MENTALLY DERANGED!!! YOU MUST INHERENTLY BE COMPLETELY IRRATIONAL!!!Uh...no. You just have to be antisocial and find some joy in the idea of killing or causing pain.
Good God...where you pull this belief from I do not know.
Exactly!! And what rational and sane person do you know who kills endlessly for their own personal pleasure?And that is? Isn't amusement its own kind of pleasure?
And what is the slogan for The Killing Joke, may I ask?
"Beyond evil there is insanity, beyond insanity there is Joker."
Your argument has been all but destroyed.
But you keep babbling on about how, secretly, the Joker is in complete control and could stop at anytime, yet his actions suggest otherwise, and this is what Batman has picked up on.That's what Batman may think. That doesn't make it so. And he figures it out at the end for sure.
"I've always known...there's nothing wrong with you that I can't fix with my own two hands".
He even pretty much points out to The Joker that he knows it isn't all some cosmic fate thing, and that The Joker has essentially decided to become what he did.
Beyond insanity is the Joker, The Guard.
I guess that simply makes him evil, right...?
Of coarse the Joker failed, because Gordon was strong enough and rational enough to stay within the realms of reality.And The Joker FAILS miserably, and Batman quickly realizes that people don't just go insane when something bad happens. What does that tell you about The Joker and his insanity, at least as far as Batman is concerned?
"Maybe it was just you, all along"
There's a hidden meaning there. Batman doesn't just mean "Maybe you're the only one who went insane. Maybe it was just you. Maybe this is just what you wanted, and you did it."
"Every man has a breaking point", and Gordon's wasn't breached -- and hell, maybe Gordon would have gone insane if Batman hadn't have showed up. Two-Face had one bad day, and was driven insane. The entire Joker characterization is based around the power of insanity; TKJ attempts to make us understand the reasons for why Joker does the things that he does. It isn't a story about how the Joker is simply "evil" -- it's about the chemical bath accident, and how the evil that he craves is driven through memories and one bad day, to which the Joker chose to drown out by falling out of touch with rationality and, ergo, was consumed with pure insanity.
Even the slogan of the damn book suggests as much...



Wasn't there an arc a while back where a lawyer was trying to say that the Joker was only pretending to be insane in order to avoid the death penalty?
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