Death Note Chapter 63 Discussion

  • Thread starter kagenatsu
  • Start date
  • #1
Read the topic about Death Note Chapter 63 Discussion
 
  • #2
----------------------------------------

                        This is proving to be an interesting arc.







 
  • #3
User-Name said:
OgaZoSo said:


I mean... He's only human. Plus, he's the kind of person that can't sacrifice one for the sake of many, that's just who he is. He strictly follows the law. follow the law including handing mass-death killing machine aka death note?

Following the law to a fault, meaning no one should die. He can't knowingly let people die, even if it's one vs a million, so it becomes a painful dilemma, which he clearly knows. Especially since the one in this case is his daughter. He's not cold and calculating. And that's why:


He later quits the police force, since he doesn't feel he deserves to be an oficer, knowing he may let something like it happen again.
 
  • #4
User-Name said:
OgaZoSo said:
User-Name said:
OgaZoSo said:


I mean... He's only human. Plus, he's the kind of person that can't sacrifice one for the sake of many, that's just who he is. He strictly follows the law. follow the law including handing mass-death killing machine aka death note?

Following the law to a fault, meaning no one should die. He can't knowingly let people die, even if it's one vs a million, so it becomes a painful dilemma, which he clearly knows. Especially since the one in this case is his daughter. He's not cold and calculating. And that's why:


He later quits the police force, since he doesn't feel he deserves to be an oficer, knowing he may let something like it happen again.you still don't seem to get it.

imagine USA kidnapping japan prime minister daughter and threatens that they will kill her if japan won't release 20 serial killers...

I do get it, but I'm talking about Soichiro as a character/person. Not everyone can easily make the most convenient and/or moral choice when it comes to life and death, especially with family involved, and he definetely can't. He was a police officer, in Japan of all places (there are massacres, but kidnapping cases are rare in comparison), for most of his life, he never was as important nor got the training of a prime minister so that he would know what to do in that kind of situation, even under pressure. What I'm saying is that I get why he did what he did in that situation, that's all.
 
  • #5
OgaZoSo said:


I mean... He's only human. Plus, he's the kind of person that can't sacrifice one for the sake of many, that's just who he is. He strictly follows the law. follow the law including handing mass-death killing machine aka death note?
 
  • #6
OgaZoSo said:
User-Name said:
OgaZoSo said:
User-Name said:
OgaZoSo said:


I mean... He's only human. Plus, he's the kind of person that can't sacrifice one for the sake of many, that's just who he is. He strictly follows the law. follow the law including handing mass-death killing machine aka death note?

Following the law to a fault, meaning no one should die. He can't knowingly let people die, even if it's one vs a million, so it becomes a painful dilemma, which he clearly knows. Especially since the one in this case is his daughter. He's not cold and calculating. And that's why:


He later quits the police force, since he doesn't feel he deserves to be an oficer, knowing he may let something like it happen again.you still don't seem to get it.

imagine USA kidnapping japan prime minister daughter and threatens that they will kill her if japan won't release 20 serial killers...

I do get it, but I'm talking about Soichiro as a character/person. Not everyone can easily make the most convenient and/or moral choice when it comes to life and death, especially with family involved, and he definetely can't. He was a police officer, in Japan of all places (there are massacres, but kidnapping cases are rare in comparison), for most of his life, he never was as important nor got the training of a prime minister so that he would know what to do in that kind of situation, even under pressure. What I'm saying is that I get why he did what he did in that situation, that's all.now i understand you, sorry.
 
  • #7
This arc is more interesting in the manga than the anime.



5/5
 
  • #8
OgaZoSo said:
User-Name said:
OgaZoSo said:


I mean... He's only human. Plus, he's the kind of person that can't sacrifice one for the sake of many, that's just who he is. He strictly follows the law. follow the law including handing mass-death killing machine aka death note?

Following the law to a fault, meaning no one should die. He can't knowingly let people die, even if it's one vs a million, so it becomes a painful dilemma, which he clearly knows. Especially since the one in this case is his daughter. He's not cold and calculating. And that's why:


He later quits the police force, since he doesn't feel he deserves to be an oficer, knowing he may let something like it happen again.you still don't seem to get it.

imagine USA kidnapping japan prime minister daughter and threatens that they will kill her if japan won't release 20 serial killers...
 
  • #9
Near has 0 motor skills lol at the darts on the floor

GoldenDevilGamer said:
This arc is more interesting in the manga than the anime.



5/5

For real!

User-Name said:
sochiro make the worst mistake of his life valuing his daughter over the thousand of life the death note could kill...

I mean... He's only human. Plus, he's the kind of person that can't sacrifice one for the sake of many, that's just who he is. He strictly follows the law.
 
  • #10
sochiro make the worst mistake of his life valuing his daughter over the thousand of life the death note could kill...
 
You must be logged in to reply here. Register an account to get started.