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[QUOTE=Agent Z;4193724]In Tower of Babel, a villain steals BatmanÂ’s secret contingencies against superheroes leading to the heroes getting caught off guard because they were unaware these contingencies even existed.
In Infinite Crisis, Brother Eye, an computer spy network created by Batman goes rogue and kills numerous people and the League is blindsided by this because they didnÂ’t even know Bruce had this thing running.
IÂ’d say that BruceÂ’s attempts to single-handedly police the entire superhero community with no oversight or input from anyone else have twice screwed everyone else over is very relevant to this discussion. Again, the issue isnÂ’t about contingencies against the League but how Bruce goes about it and that he thinks he alone should be the one keeping the League in check.
BruceÂ’s plans werenÂ’t designed to fight evil clones of the Justice League, they were designed to fight the League themselves.
The difference is the Amazons donÂ’t hide the fact that they have an army in the first place.
Could you list those instances? Because right now I can think of way more instances where BruceÂ’s contingencies ended up getting more people killed than a possessed team mate.[/QUOTE]
Superman had a robot double that killed Donna Troy, but nobody hates on Clark. Not to mention when Clark had his brain swapped out but some nut who tried to beat Donna to death back in the Byrne run.
Amazons Attack? Circe mind-twists the resurrected Hippolyta into slaughtering her way through Washington? Blackest Night is rife with possessed heroes causing carnage.
Thats without me thinking hard or using Google...
And let's not forget the REASON Bats created Brother Eye was Zatanna and other Leaguers doing secret stuff.
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[QUOTE=brettc1;4193747]Superman had a robot double that killed Donna Troy, but nobody hates on Clark. Not to mention when Clark had his brain swapped out but some nut who tried to beat Donna to death back in the Byrne run.
Amazons Attack? Circe mind-twists the resurrected Hippolyta into slaughtering her way through Washington? Blackest Night is rife with possessed heroes causing carnage.
Thats without me thinking hard or using Google...
And let's not forget the REASON Bats created Brother Eye was Zatanna and other Leaguers doing secret stuff.[/QUOTE]
The Superman robot wasn't a possessed team mate. And even then Clark still got criticized over it by Starfire. And the guy who swapped brains with Clark didn't kill anyone IIRC.
Hippolyta is also not a member of the Justice League.
The only one of these that fits the argument you're making is Blackest Night and where were Bruce's contingencies then?
In fact, it's quite telling that Bruce spends more time preparing for the possibility that the League ''might'' go evil than than he does finding ways to keep villains he knows are dangerous from breaking out of Arkham and killing people. Where are the contingencies against the likes of Joker, Bane, Ivy, Two-Face and the Al Ghuls?
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[QUOTE=Agent Z;4193777]The Superman robot wasn't a possessed team mate. And even then Clark still got criticized over it by Starfire. And the guy who swapped brains with Clark didn't kill anyone IIRC.
Hippolyta is also not a member of the Justice League.
The only one of these that fits the argument you're making is Blackest Night and where were Bruce's contingencies then?
In fact, it's quite telling that Bruce spends more time preparing for the possibility that the League ''might'' go evil than than he does finding ways to keep villains he knows are dangerous from breaking out of Arkham and killing people. Where are the contingencies against the likes of Joker, Bane, Ivy, Two-Face and the Al Ghuls?[/QUOTE]
So may hairs being split here.
If you count up the times over the decades the League was in danger of being killed by a possessed team mate and in danger of being killed by Batman's contingency plans, the danger posed by possession if much more likely.
The reason Brother Eye went back was that it was hacked by Max Lord, who also hacked Superman's brain. If the League had not shown they were untrustworthy, Brother Eye would not have existed. Essentially, Batman was right in anticipating the Leaguers would begin to act as a law unto themselves.
Batman builds a robot that that gets hacked and kills people, and he gets hated. Superman builds a robot and leaves it lying around and it kills people, he gets[B] criticized[/B]. There's a clear disconnect here.
Batman's contingencies for the Joker are the same as Wonder Woman's contingencies for Cheetah. Both characters are written the same in that way, with the same long term results.
Ironically, the personal feelings of other heroes had led to Bruce's contingency plans being mothballed by the time Blackest Night came around, just when they would have done the most good.
Contingency plans, people. Because you just never know...
[video=youtube;lZp4Yg4rpco]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZp4Yg4rpco[/video]
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Finally, it is also well worth pointing out that in [B]JLA:A League of One[/B], Wonder Woman comes up with AND USES her own plans to neutralize the Justice League, based on their particular weaknesses and psychological pressure points. She deliberately puts members of the JLA [B]in mortal danger[/B] just to force Superman into a moral crisis and get him out of the way.
Funnily enough, nobody in the JLA votes for her to get thrown out afterwards.
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[QUOTE=brettc1;4193780]So may hairs being split here.
If you count up the times over the decades the League was in danger of being killed by a possessed team mate and in danger of being killed by Batman's contingency plans, the danger posed by possession if much more likely.[/QUOTE]
People have been in danger of being killed by a possessed team mate. However, far more people have been [I]killed[/I] by Bruce’s contingency plans.
[QUOTE]The reason Brother Eye went back was that it was hacked by Max Lord, who also hacked Superman's brain. If the League had not shown they were untrustworthy, Brother Eye would not have existed. Essentially, Batman was right in anticipating the Leaguers would begin to act as a law unto themselves. [/QUOTE]
If Bruce had reason to believe the League was untrustworthy, why not blow the whistle on them? Alert every Bat member, government agency and superhero who wasn’t associated with the League that they were starting to cross the line. It isn’t like it would be hard to find allies to combat a corrupt Justice League. Why did he feel it was best to go at this alone? Especially given how badly it turned out the last time?
Again, the issue isn’t the idea of anti-League contingencies but that feels that he can operate without accountability and oversight and refuses to learn from his mistakes.
[QUOTE]Batman builds a robot that that gets hacked and kills people, and he gets hated. Superman builds a robot and leaves it lying around and it kills people, he gets[B] criticized[/B]. There's a clear disconnect here.[/QUOTE]
Starfire physically attacked Superman over the mess with the robot. Bruce got off lucky by comparison. He quit the League on his own accord and Brother Eye was forgotten about almost immediately after Infinite Crisis.
[QUOTE]
Batman's contingencies for the Joker are the same as Wonder Woman's contingencies for Cheetah. Both characters are written the same in that way, with the same long term results.[/QUOTE]
I’m calling B.S on this. You can’t make a big deal about how Batman is about making plans to neutralize threats and then ignore it when he doesn’t apply this methodology to actual, known threats. At best this is screwed up priorities, at worst it’s hypocrisy at its height.
[QUOTE]Ironically, the personal feelings of other heroes had led to Bruce's contingency plans being mothballed by the time Blackest Night came around, just when they would have done the most good.
Contingency plans, people. Because you just never know...
[video=youtube;lZp4Yg4rpco]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZp4Yg4rpco[/video][/QUOTE]
Didn’t have an issue with Ollie using a Kryptonite Arrow in that crossover. Because unlike Bruce, he did a good job of keeping it from being stolen.
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[QUOTE=brettc1;4193785]Finally, it is also well worth pointing out that in [B]JLA:A League of One[/B], Wonder Woman comes up with AND USES her own plans to neutralize the Justice League, based on their particular weaknesses and psychological pressure points. She deliberately puts members of the JLA [B]in mortal danger[/B] just to force Superman into a moral crisis and get him out of the way.
Funnily enough, nobody in the JLA votes for her to get thrown out afterwards.[/QUOTE]
They weren't in mortal danger. She had Arthur restrained by a few nymphs, locked J'Onn, Wally and Kyle in space pods and subdued Bruce. And she didn't even hurt Superman. Her methods in League of One were far less likely to kill the League than Bruce's methods were even if you buy into the claim that Batman's contingencies were supposed to be non-lethal.
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All of these elaborate contingency plans, though, are now moot as of Batman:Endgame and the creation of the Justice Buster armor.
Batman spent billions of dollars to create a powered suit designed to react as fast as the Flash in order to personally take down the entire JL should they go bad.
Might be nice to use it to fight villains?
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[QUOTE=Agent Z;4193904]People have been in danger of being killed by a possessed team mate. However, far more people have been [I]killed[/I] by Bruce’s contingency plans.
If Bruce had reason to believe the League was untrustworthy, why not blow the whistle on them? Alert every Bat member, government agency and superhero who wasn’t associated with the League that they were starting to cross the line. It isn’t like it would be hard to find allies to combat a corrupt Justice League. Why did he feel it was best to go at this alone? Especially given how badly it turned out the last time?
Again, the issue isn’t the idea of anti-League contingencies but that feels that he can operate without accountability and oversight and refuses to learn from his mistakes.
Starfire physically attacked Superman over the mess with the robot. Bruce got off lucky by comparison. He quit the League on his own accord and Brother Eye was forgotten about almost immediately after Infinite Crisis.
I’m calling B.S on this. You can’t make a big deal about how Batman is about making plans to neutralize threats and then ignore it when he doesn’t apply this methodology to actual, known threats. At best this is screwed up priorities, at worst it’s hypocrisy at its height.
Didn’t have an issue with Ollie using a Kryptonite Arrow in that crossover. Because unlike Bruce, he did a good job of keeping it from being stolen.[/QUOTE]
So your issue ISNT that the writers decide that Bruce has plans, it’s that the writers use them as a plot point to cause problems.
Starfire [B]attacked[/B] Superman? He just stood there unmoving while she starbolted him. She might as well have thrown a glass of water in his face. And nobody else did anything.
Villains steal and the misuse things that duper heroes have all the time. Is it Supermans fault if Kryptonisn tech from his Fortress is stolen and weaponizes? Is it Wonder Woman’s fault that Genocide stole her lasso and used it to torture people?
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[QUOTE=Agent Z;4193912]They weren't in mortal danger. She had Arthur restrained by a few nymphs, locked J'Onn, Wally and Kyle in space pods and subdued Bruce. And she didn't even hurt Superman. Her methods in League of One were far less likely to kill the League than Bruce's methods were even if you buy into the claim that Batman's contingencies were supposed to be non-lethal.[/QUOTE]
No, I’ve read the story. She only lures Superman away from Earth because the space pods have limited air. That’s what she tells him, and we know she can’t lie. She forces Clark to make the choice between staying on a Earth or saving their lives.
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Batman tied Wonder Woman with her own lasso in Red Son but they didn't show how.
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I remember in an old JMS written issue of Spider-Man Pete told MJ that he had plans to take down other heroes if he had to. He didn't specify whether or not he had them written down, but he did say most (if not all) heroes had take down plans for the others and it was something of an unspoken thing between all of them.
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[QUOTE=Amazon Swordsman;4191923]Oh sure, bats is ALWAYS right because he’s the rational one. He’s the human one with no superpowers. He’s the one who doesn’t trust anyone. God forbid if he ever lost control. Oh no, that would never happen because he has the sheer willpower that would put the entire GL Corp to shame.[/QUOTE]
It's a good thing Batman doesn't have any villains that can control or alter his mind. I mean, if he had to fight people like Poison Ivy, Mad Hatter, or Scarecrow or somebody like that then the entire Justice League could really be in danger.
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[QUOTE=Alan2099;4194921]It's a good thing Batman doesn't have any villains that can control or alter his mind. I mean, if he had to fight people like Poison Ivy, Mad Hatter, or Scarecrow or somebody like that then the entire Justice League could really be in danger.[/QUOTE]
The same could be said of any hero who know another's secret identity. But essentially you are arguing that it's too dangerous for the heroes to let Batman live. Even if he hadn't already created a plan, he could come up with one.
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Lex has a suite that can fix Superman. So technically Batman making a suite is already done.
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[QUOTE=AmiMizuno;4195190]Lex has a suite that can fix Superman. So technically Batman making a suite is already done.[/QUOTE]
What troubled me the most is that he flat out stated that he spent billions to make a suit, not to stop crime or to save people, but solely as a means of stopping his friends and fellow heroes should they go bad. It's a ridiculously wasteful contingency; to leave this superspeed suit that is armored against Superman's blows in the closet just in case something should happen with the Justice League.